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The Picture Exchange Communication System (Pecs)

How PECS Helps a Child Develop

The Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) teaches a child to communicate by exchanging a picture card for a desired item. It develops intentional, child-initiated communication, builds vocabulary and early sentences, reduces frustration, and often acts as a bridge towards spoken language — making it a valuable support for children who are not yet speaking or whose speech is limited.

How PECS Helps a Child Develop
How PECS Helps a Child Develop — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When a child hands you a picture and you understand exactly what they want — that small exchange can open a whole world of connection.

In short

The Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) is a structured, evidence-informed way of teaching a child to communicate by exchanging a picture card for something they want or need. It helps a child develop by giving them an immediate, reliable voice — even before spoken words arrive — and by building the core skill of initiating communication with another person. Far from replacing speech, PECS often supports and encourages talking as a child learns that communication brings results.

How PECS helps a child develop

PECS is taught in gentle, structured phases. It begins with the simplest, most powerful idea: a child picks up a picture of something they like, hands it to a person, and receives that item in return. From this single exchange, several developmental threads grow:
  • Intentional communication — the child learns that their actions can reach another mind and change what happens. This is the foundation of all language.
  • Initiation, not just response — crucially, PECS teaches the child to start the interaction themselves, rather than only replying when prompted.
  • Vocabulary and sentence-building — over the phases, children move from single pictures to combining them ("I want" + "biscuit"), building early grammar and richer requests.
  • Reduced frustration — when a child can ask clearly, the distress of not being understood often eases, supporting calmer behaviour and emotional regulation.
  • A bridge to speech — many children begin to vocalise or speak alongside their picture exchanges, as communication becomes rewarding and meaningful.

PECS is most often used with children who are not yet speaking or whose speech is limited, including some autistic children, and it works best when families and therapists use it consistently across home, therapy and everyday routines.

When to consider it

If your child is finding it hard to use words to ask for what they want, points or pulls you towards things instead of speaking, or becomes frustrated when not understood, a speech-language assessment can help decide whether PECS — or another approach — is the right fit. The aim is always to match the method to your child, not the other way round.

The Pinnacle way

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. Our speech therapy team assesses how your child communicates today and, where suitable, introduces PECS in careful phases alongside other [communication support](/) — building from a single picture exchange towards richer, more confident communication.

Trusted sources

The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) and picture-based systems; the American Academy of Pediatrics on supporting communication development in young children.

Next step — If your child struggles to use words to ask for what they need, book a speech-language screening to see whether PECS could help open up their communication.

What to watch

A child who finds it hard to use words to ask for things, who points or pulls you towards what they want instead of speaking, who becomes frustrated when not understood, or whose speech is very limited for their age.

Try this at home

Keep a few picture cards of your child's favourite snacks or toys within easy reach, and gently wait for your child to hand you a card before offering the item — this rewards their initiative and shows that communication works.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Will using PECS stop my child from learning to talk?

No. PECS is designed to support communication, not replace speech. Many children begin to vocalise or speak more as they discover that communicating brings real results, and therapists actively encourage spoken words alongside picture exchanges.

What age is PECS suitable for?

PECS can be introduced in early childhood and is matched to a child's communication needs rather than a fixed age. A speech-language therapist assesses your child first to decide whether PECS is the right approach for them.

Is PECS only for autistic children?

No. While PECS is often used with autistic children, it can help any child who is not yet speaking or whose speech is limited, including those with other developmental or communication differences.

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