Hearing Impairment
If one child has hearing impairment, can my next child have it too?
Whether a sibling can also have hearing impairment depends entirely on the cause in the first child — genetic causes may carry a recurrence chance, while infection-, prematurity- or birth-related causes are generally not inherited. A newborn hearing screen for every baby, plus genetic counselling where a genetic cause is suspected, is the most empowering step. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
If one child has a hearing difference, it's natural to wonder about the next — and the honest, reassuring answer is: it depends on the cause, and there is a great deal you can do early.
In short
Sometimes hearing impairment can run in families, and sometimes it doesn't — it depends entirely on the cause in your first child. Many cases are not inherited at all (for example, those linked to infection, prematurity or birth events), while some are genetic and may carry a chance of recurring. The most empowering step is a newborn hearing screen for every baby and, where a genetic cause is suspected, a conversation with a clinician about genetic counselling. Early knowledge means early support — and excellent outcomes.Understanding the chances
- Genetic (inherited) causes — some hearing differences are passed on through genes. If both parents carry the same recessive gene change, future children can have a higher chance of being affected, even when parents hear typically. Other patterns carry different odds. Only genetic counselling can estimate your family's specific chance accurately.
- Non-genetic causes — hearing impairment can also follow events such as infections during pregnancy, very premature birth, jaundice needing treatment, certain medications, or ear infections after birth. These are generally not inherited, so they do not raise the chance for a sibling in the same way.
- Why a diagnosis of the first child matters — knowing why your first child has a hearing difference is the single most useful piece of information for understanding your next baby's outlook. Your paediatrician and an audiologist can help identify the cause.
Whatever the cause, a hearing difference is not your fault, and it is not a closed door — with early identification and the right support, children develop rich language and thriving futures.
What to do for your next baby
- Ensure your newborn has a hearing screen (OAE/ABR) in the first weeks of life — this is the gold standard and catches differences early.
- If a genetic cause was found in your first child, ask your clinician about genetic counselling before or during a future pregnancy.
- Track listening and language milestones — responding to sound, turning to voices, early babble — and seek a check promptly if anything seems different.
- Remember: even if a sibling does have a hearing difference, early-identified children do beautifully with timely amplification, communication support and therapy.
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 app, a quiz or a family history alone. If you have concerns about a child's hearing or language, our team can guide listening, communication and speech and language therapy, shaped by a structured clinician-administered AbilityScore® profile. You can also learn more about how we [support families across our network](/).Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 classification of hearing impairment; CDC Learn the Signs. Act Early. milestone and early-hearing guidance; Indian Academy of Pediatrics newborn screening recommendations; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) guidance on newborn hearing screening and early intervention.Next step — Wondering about your next baby's hearing, or want your child's listening checked? Book a developmental and hearing-readiness assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.
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 a new baby's responses to sound — startling to loud noises, turning towards voices by a few months, and early cooing or babble; seek a hearing check promptly if these seem absent or if there's a known family history of hearing difference.
Try this at home
Find out the cause of your first child's hearing difference from your paediatrician — that single piece of information is the most useful guide to what it means for your next baby, and it shapes whether genetic counselling would help.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · 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
Is hearing impairment always inherited?
No. Many hearing differences are caused by non-genetic factors such as infections during pregnancy, very premature birth, severe jaundice or certain medications — these are generally not passed on. Only some causes are genetic. Knowing the cause in your first child is the key to understanding the chance for a sibling.
How can I know my family's specific chance?
Genetic counselling is the most accurate way. A clinician can review your first child's diagnosis and, where a genetic cause is suspected, estimate the chance for future children and explain testing options. This is best done with your paediatrician and an audiologist or geneticist.
What should I do for my next baby?
Make sure your newborn has a hearing screen (OAE or ABR) in the first weeks of life, track their listening and language milestones, and seek a prompt check if anything seems different. Early identification leads to excellent outcomes.
If my next child also has a hearing difference, what does that mean for their future?
Children whose hearing differences are identified early do wonderfully — with timely amplification, communication support and therapy, they develop rich language and thriving futures. Early knowledge is a strength, not a setback.