Tourette Syndrome
How Tourette Syndrome Changes as a Child Grows Older
For most children, Tourette Syndrome tics begin around age 5–7, peak in the early teens (about 10–12), and then ease for the majority through later adolescence into adulthood. Tics naturally wax and wane, so a bad week is not a bad future. Supporting alongside features like anxiety or attention differences, plus a calm home and school, helps a child thrive.
Many parents fear tics mean a lifelong worsening — for most children, the truth is far more hopeful.
In short
For most children, Tourette Syndrome follows a reassuring pattern: tics usually begin around age 5–7, tend to peak in intensity in the early teens (around 10–12), and then ease for the majority through later adolescence and into adulthood. By their late teens and twenties, many young people find their tics have become much milder, more manageable, or have largely faded. This is the natural course — not a sign of decline, but of a developing brain learning greater control.How tics tend to change over time
- Early childhood (5–7): Tics often start as simple motor tics — eye-blinking, head jerks, facial movements — that come and go in waves.
- The peak years (10–12): Tics may look their busiest here, sometimes adding vocal tics or new movements. This is usually the hardest stretch, and also where it most often turns the corner.
- Adolescence onward: For roughly two-thirds to three-quarters of young people, tics reduce noticeably or become easy to live with by adulthood.
- Tics naturally fluctuate — they wax and wane, worsen with excitement, tiredness or stress, and ease with calm focus or sleep. A bad week is not a bad future.
What often matters more day-to-day are the things that can travel alongside tics — attention differences, anxiety, or obsessive features. Supporting these, plus a calm and understanding environment at home and school, helps a child thrive regardless of where their tics sit.
When to seek support
Reach out if tics are causing pain, distress, social difficulty or interfering with learning — or if your child seems anxious, low, or struggles to concentrate. Helpful, evidence-based supports exist, and the earlier the understanding, the calmer the journey.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online article or form. Our team looks at the whole child, not just the tics, so support fits your family's real life. Explore more about Tourette Syndrome, see how behavioural therapy can build tic-management skills, and understand what the AbilityScore® is and how it is established.Trusted sources
Guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the US CDC describes Tourette Syndrome typically emerging in early childhood, peaking in the early teens, and improving for most by adulthood; the WHO ICD-11 classifies it among neurodevelopmental conditions.Next step — If your child's tics are worrying you, book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for clear, caring guidance.
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.
What to watch
Watch for tics that cause pain, distress, social difficulty or interfere with learning, and for accompanying anxiety, low mood or trouble concentrating — these are signs to seek supportive guidance.
Try this at home
Try not to draw attention to a tic in the moment — calm, well-rested, low-pressure days tend to ease tics, while reminders to stop often make them worse.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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
At what age does Tourette Syndrome usually start?
Tics most often begin in early childhood, around age 5 to 7, frequently starting with simple motor tics such as eye-blinking or head movements that come and go in waves.
Does Tourette Syndrome get worse as children get older?
Tics often look busiest in the early teens, around 10 to 12, but for most young people they ease noticeably from later adolescence onward, with many finding their tics become mild or manageable by adulthood.
Will my child's tics ever go away completely?
Many children see their tics fade substantially or become easy to live with by their late teens and twenties. Tics also naturally wax and wane, so quieter and busier periods are both normal.
What matters most in supporting a child with Tourette Syndrome?
Often it is supporting the things that travel alongside tics — anxiety, attention differences or obsessive features — together with a calm, understanding home and school. A Pinnacle clinician can assess the whole child and guide support.