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Down Syndrome

Can My Next Child Also Have Down Syndrome?

For the common form of Down syndrome (trisomy 21), the recurrence chance in a future pregnancy is usually only about 1% above age-related risk. The main exception is the rarer translocation type, where a parent may carry a balanced rearrangement that raises the odds, so genetic testing and counselling give the only accurate, personalised numbers. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

Can My Next Child Also Have Down Syndrome?
Can My Next Child Also Have Down Syndrome? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Hearing this question usually means you carry both deep love for one child and quiet worry about the next — and that is completely understandable.

In short

In most families, having one child with Down syndrome only slightly raises the chance for a future pregnancy — for the common type (trisomy 21), the recurrence chance is usually around 1% above your age-related risk. The one important exception is a rarer translocation type, where one parent may carry a balanced rearrangement that meaningfully changes the odds. The only way to know your family's true picture is a simple genetic test and counselling, which can give you clear, personalised numbers before you plan again.

Understanding the science

Down syndrome happens when there is an extra copy of chromosome 21. There are three main forms, and they carry different recurrence chances:
  • Trisomy 21 (about 95% of cases) — usually a one-off event at conception, not inherited. Recurrence is typically around 1% on top of the chance that comes with maternal age.
  • Translocation Down syndrome (about 3–4%) — here, extra chromosome 21 material is attached to another chromosome. In some of these families, a parent silently carries a balanced translocation. If so, the recurrence chance can be considerably higher, so testing the parents matters.
  • Mosaic Down syndrome (about 1–2%) — also generally a chance event with low recurrence.

This is why the single most useful step is karyotype testing of your child (and, if a translocation is found, of both parents). A genetic counsellor can then translate the result into clear odds for your situation — replacing worry with facts.

What this means for planning

Please know that nothing you did caused Down syndrome, and the vast majority of families face only a small increase in chance. If you are planning another pregnancy, ask your paediatrician or obstetrician for a referral to genetic counselling. Options such as prenatal screening and diagnostic testing can also be discussed, so you can plan with confidence and support.

The Pinnacle way

This is general guidance — it is not a diagnosis or a genetic risk figure for your family. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, and recurrence odds come specifically from genetic testing and counselling with your medical team. For your child with Down syndrome, we can support development and daily-living skills today — explore our early intervention and developmental therapy and understand your child's strengths through the clinician-administered AbilityScore®. You can also begin [here](/) to see how we walk alongside families.

Trusted sources

WHO ICD-11 classification of chromosomal conditions; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) guidance on Down syndrome and family planning; Indian Academy of Pediatrics resources for families; CDC developmental guidance for early support.

Next step — Want to support your child's development while you plan ahead with your doctor? Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.

What to watch

Note which type of Down syndrome your child has (trisomy 21, translocation or mosaic) from their karyotype report — the translocation type is the one where parental testing matters most before planning another pregnancy.

Try this at home

Before your next pregnancy, ask your paediatrician or obstetrician for a referral to a genetic counsellor, and bring your child's chromosome (karyotype) report to that appointment — it makes the conversation far more precise.

Trusted sources

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

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

What is the chance my next baby will also have Down syndrome?

For the common trisomy 21 type, the recurrence chance is usually about 1% above your age-related risk. The translocation type can carry higher odds if a parent is a balanced carrier, which is why genetic testing gives the only accurate figure for your family.

How do I find out which type of Down syndrome my child has?

A karyotype (chromosome) test on your child shows whether it is trisomy 21, translocation or mosaic. Ask your paediatrician for this report — it determines whether parental testing is also needed.

Did I do something to cause Down syndrome?

No. Down syndrome arises from an extra copy of chromosome 21 at conception. Nothing a parent did or did not do causes it, and in most families it is a chance event.

Should I see a genetic counsellor before my next pregnancy?

Yes, this is the most helpful step. A genetic counsellor uses your child's karyotype and, if needed, parental testing to give clear, personalised recurrence odds and discuss prenatal screening options.

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