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How Walking Is Scored on the AbilityScore

Walking is scored on the AbilityScore® as part of your toddler's gross-motor profile — not pass or fail, but a clinician's structured read of how your child walks (balance, gait, confidence, functional movement) against their own baseline and age milestones. Only a Pinnacle clinician can confirm what it means.

How Walking Is Scored on the AbilityScore
How Walking Is Scored on the AbilityScore — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Watching those first wobbly steps turn into confident strides is one of childhood's great milestones — and there's a warm, structured way to understand exactly where your toddler stands.

In short

Walking is scored on the AbilityScore® as part of your child's gross-motor profile — but not as a simple pass or fail. A Pinnacle clinician observes how your toddler walks (balance, posture, foot placement, confidence, ability to start, stop, turn and carry an object) against typical milestones for their age, and turns that into a clear picture of strengths and next steps. It is always measured against your child's own baseline, never a single number from a checklist.

How walking is actually looked at

For a toddler (roughly 12–36 months), a clinician reads walking through real, everyday movement rather than one test:
  • Onset and independence — is your child pulling to stand, cruising along furniture, taking steps with help, or walking unaided?
  • Quality of gait — balance, width of stance, heel-to-toe pattern, and how smoothly they move.
  • Functional walking — can they stop, turn, change direction, walk while holding a toy, or manage small steps and uneven ground?
  • Confidence and recovery — do they fall often, and can they get back up and keep exploring?
  • The wider motor story — sitting, crawling, squatting and core strength all feed into how walking develops.

This is gathered through play and observation, so your child stays relaxed while the clinician builds an accurate, warm picture.

When to seek a look

If your child is not walking independently by around 18 months, walks persistently on tiptoe, tires very quickly, or seems to lose skills they once had, a gentle professional look is worthwhile now. Early support protects confidence and movement.

The Pinnacle way

The AbilityScore® is a clinician-administered structured assessment that places your child against their own baseline, drawing on 2.5 billion+ data points and 25 million+ therapy sessions across 70+ centres. For walking, our clinicians pair it with occupational therapy and motor support. Learn more about Walk and what the AbilityScore is and how it's calculated.

Trusted sources

CDC and HealthyChildren (AAP) gross-motor milestone guidance; WHO motor development windows; ICF framework for neuromusculoskeletal and movement functions (b7).

Next step — Understand your toddler's movement with calm, expert eyes. Book an AbilityScore assessment with a Pinnacle clinician today.

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

Seek a professional look if your child is not walking independently by around 18 months, walks persistently on tiptoe, tires very quickly during movement, falls far more than peers, or appears to lose a walking skill they previously had.

Try this at home

Give plenty of safe, barefoot floor time and low furniture to cruise along. Let your toddler practise standing, squatting to pick up toys and walking while carrying something — these everyday moments build the balance and core strength that confident walking needs.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 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

Is walking given a single score or a pass/fail on the AbilityScore?

No. Walking is read as part of your child's gross-motor profile, looking at quality, independence and function — not a single pass-or-fail number. The clinician builds a picture against your child's own baseline.

At what age should my toddler be walking independently?

Most children walk unaided somewhere between about 12 and 18 months, though there is a wide normal range. If your child is not walking by around 18 months, a gentle professional check is worthwhile.

Who decides the AbilityScore for walking?

Only a qualified clinician at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre forms a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis, through observation and a structured assessment — never an online figure or checklist.

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