eye contact
When to escalate if a child cannot make eye contact
Fleeting eye contact emerges by 6–8 weeks and social, shared gaze is established by 3–4 months. A frontline worker should escalate when a child consistently does not make eye contact by 4 months, or shows reduced gaze alongside no social smile by 3 months, no response to name by 6–9 months, or no pointing or shared attention by 12 months. Always rule out hearing and vision issues first. This is a reason for an early developmental check, not a diagnosis.
A baby who meets your eyes and holds your gaze is doing quiet, beautiful developmental work — and as a frontline worker, your watchful eye is the first safety net a family has.
In short
Eye contact (ICF d7, interpersonal interactions) usually emerges by around 6–8 weeks for fleeting gaze and is well established for shared, social looking by 3–4 months. Escalate to a medical officer or developmental check when a child consistently does not make or hold eye contact by 4 months, or shows reduced eye contact alongside not responding to name, no social smile by 3 months, or limited shared attention by 9–12 months. This is not a diagnosis — it is a reason for a calm, early developmental review, where early support works best.What to watch and when to escalate
Eye contact rarely tells a story on its own — look at the whole pattern:- By 3 months — no social smile, no settling gaze toward a caregiver's face. Note and re-check.
- By 4 months — consistently does not follow a face or make brief eye contact. Escalate for a developmental check.
- By 6–9 months — does not turn or look when name is called, no shared looking between an object and a person. Escalate.
- By 12 months — no pointing, no showing, very little eye contact in play or feeding. Escalate promptly.
- Red flag at any age — loss of eye contact, smiling or babble a child once had. Refer the same day.
Always check hearing and vision first — a child who cannot hear or see well may seem not to engage. Use the route: observe, document, counsel the family gently, escalate to the medical officer or nearest developmental service, and follow up.
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 checklist in the field. Your structured observation gives the clinician a head start. Learn more about eye contact as an early social skill and how our speech therapy and developmental teams nurture it through play.Trusted sources
WHO ICF framework for interpersonal interactions (d7); CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" developmental milestones; American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on social-emotional milestones and developmental surveillance.Next step — Trust your field observation. Counsel the family warmly and book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a clear, early review.
What to watch
Escalate if a child consistently makes no eye contact by 4 months, or shows reduced gaze with no social smile by 3 months, no response to name by 6–9 months, or no pointing or shared attention by 12 months. Refer the same day if a child loses eye contact, smiling or babble once had. Always check hearing and vision first.
Try this at home
When observing, hold the baby at arm's length facing you in good light and speak warmly — note whether the child finds and briefly holds your gaze. Record the age in months and whether name-response, social smile and shared looking are present, so the medical officer gets a clear picture.
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 is eye contact normally established?
Brief, fleeting eye contact appears by around 6–8 weeks, and steady social, shared gaze toward a caregiver's face is usually well established by 3–4 months. By 9–12 months a child typically uses eye contact for shared attention — looking between an object and a person.
Should a frontline worker escalate on eye contact alone?
Eye contact is most meaningful read alongside other cues. Escalate when reduced gaze appears with no social smile by 3 months, no response to name by 6–9 months, or no pointing or shared attention by 12 months. Consistent absence of eye contact by 4 months also warrants a developmental check.
What should be checked before escalating?
Always consider hearing and vision first — a child with a hearing or vision difficulty may appear not to engage. Counsel the family calmly, document the observation with the child's age in months, and escalate to the medical officer or nearest developmental service.
Is reduced eye contact a diagnosis of autism?
No. Reduced eye contact is one observation, not a diagnosis. It is simply a reason for an early, calm developmental review. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.