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ball catching

When should a frontline worker escalate a ball-catching delay?

Catching a ball develops gradually — a large tossed ball by about 3–4 years, a smaller catch by 5–6 years. A frontline worker should escalate not for ball-catching alone, but when the lag is well past the expected age and travels with broader motor delay, loss of a skill, stiffness or floppiness, or delays in language and social skills. A single delay with everything else on track means reassure and review. Escalation is for early review, never a diagnosis.

When should a frontline worker escalate a ball-catching delay?
Ball-Catching Delay: When to Escalate — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

A child who can't yet catch a ball is rarely a worry on its own — but knowing when to look closer is exactly the frontline skill that changes lives.

In short

Catching a ball is a coordination skill that develops gradually — most children manage a large, gently tossed ball by around 3–4 years and a smaller, more accurate catch by 5–6 years. As a frontline worker, escalate for a developmental check when a child misses catching well beyond the expected window AND shows other motor or developmental flags — not when ball-catching is the only lag. The aim is calm, early review, never alarm.

What to watch before you escalate

Ball-catching needs vision, timing, balance and two-handed coordination working together, so a single delay is usually benign. Escalate to a medical officer or developmental check when ball-catching lag travels with any of these:
  • Broader motor delay — not walking steadily, frequent falls, can't kick or throw, struggles with stairs or running.
  • Hand-use difficulty — can't hold a spoon, stack blocks or scribble at expected ages.
  • Loss of a skill the child once had — always needs prompt review.
  • Stiffness, floppiness or one-sided weakness — refer for medical assessment, not therapy first.
  • Delays alongside it — few words, poor eye contact, not following simple instructions.

If catching is the only concern and everything else is on track, reassure the family, share simple play ideas, and review at the next visit.

When to act

Escalate now if the child is well past the expected age with additional motor or developmental flags, if a skill has been lost, or if the parent is worried — parent instinct is valuable screening information. Use your routine growth-and-development contact to flag, document and route.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a screening list. Our clinicians look at the whole picture of a child's coordination and strengths. Learn more about ball catching and how our occupational therapy team supports motor coordination through play.

Trusted sources

WHO ICF activity-and-participation framework (domain d4, mobility); CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early"; American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on gross-motor development and developmental surveillance.

Next step — Trust what the family has noticed. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a calm, clear review of the child's motor milestones.

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

Escalate when ball-catching lag is well past the expected age AND travels with broader motor delay (not walking steadily, frequent falls, can't kick or throw), difficulty with hand-use, loss of a previously held skill, stiffness, floppiness or one-sided weakness, or delays in talking, eye contact or following instructions. If catching is the only concern and all else is on track, reassure and review next visit.

Try this at home

Try a large, soft ball rolled or gently tossed from close range, with the child's arms out like a basket. Note whether they track the ball with their eyes, bring both hands together, and react in time — these details help a clinician far more than 'can't catch'.

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

At what age should a child be able to catch a ball?

Most children catch a large, gently tossed ball by around 3–4 years and manage a smaller, more accurate catch by 5–6 years. Skills develop at different paces, so a slight lag alone is usually nothing to worry about.

Should I escalate if catching is the only delay?

Usually no. If the child is steady on their feet, uses their hands well and is developing language and social skills, reassure the family, share simple play ideas and review at the next visit. Escalate when the lag travels with other motor or developmental flags.

What signs alongside poor catching need a medical referral?

Stiffness, floppiness, one-sided weakness, frequent falls, or loss of a skill the child once had need prompt medical review rather than therapy first. Flag these to a medical officer without delay.

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