Distress With Haircuts
Is Distress With Haircuts Normal in Child Development?
Distress with haircuts is, for most children, a normal and common part of development, driven by sensory load, loss of control and unfamiliarity, and it usually eases with gentle preparation and time. It only warrants a closer look when it is part of a wider pattern of strong reactions to everyday sensory experiences. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
When the scissors come out and your little one melts down, it can feel alarming — but for most children, this is a very ordinary part of growing up.
In short
Yes — distress with haircuts is, for most children, a normal and very common part of development. A haircut bundles together everything a young child finds hard: an unfamiliar setting, a stranger close to their face, buzzing or snipping sounds, tiny hairs tickling the skin, being held still, and not understanding what is happening or when it will end. For toddlers and preschoolers especially, big feelings about haircuts usually settle with time, patience and gentle preparation. It only needs a closer look when the distress is part of a wider pattern of strong reactions to everyday sensory experiences.Why haircuts are genuinely hard
- Sensory load — clippers vibrate and hum, scissors snip near the ears, cut hairs prickle the neck and face, and a cape feels restrictive. That is a lot for a developing nervous system.
- Loss of control — being held still by someone they cannot see (behind or above them) is unsettling for many young children.
- The unknown — little ones do not yet understand that a haircut is quick, painless and temporary.
- Temperament — some perfectly typical children are simply more cautious or sensitive than others, and that is part of who they are.
Most children grow more comfortable with each calm, predictable experience. Letting them watch a sibling or parent get a trim, practising with toy scissors at home, choosing a quiet time of day, and offering a favourite toy or screen can all make the next haircut easier.
When a gentle check helps
Distress with haircuts on its own is rarely a worry. Consider a developmental check if it sits alongside a broader pattern — for example, your child is also very distressed by tooth-brushing, nail-cutting, certain clothing textures, loud sounds or messy hands, or strongly avoids many everyday sensations in a way that disrupts daily life. In that case a look at how your child processes sensory information can be reassuring and genuinely helpful.The Pinnacle way
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. If sensory sensitivities affect daily life, our occupational therapy team can help your child build comfort and confidence step by step. You can learn more [about Pinnacle](/) and how a clinician-led assessment builds a picture of your child's strengths.Trusted sources
CDC "Learn the Signs. Act Early." milestone and behaviour guidance; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) on temperament and sensory sensitivities; WHO child development resources.Next step — If haircut distress is part of a wider pattern of sensory sensitivity, book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.
What to watch
Watch for whether haircut distress stands alone or sits within a wider pattern — strong reactions to tooth-brushing, nail-cutting, clothing textures, loud sounds or messy textures that disrupt everyday life.
Try this at home
Prepare gently: let your child watch a parent or sibling get a trim, practise with toy scissors at home, pick a calm time of day, and offer a favourite toy or comfort item during the cut.
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
Why does my toddler cry so much during haircuts?
Haircuts combine many things young children find hard at once — buzzing clippers, prickly cut hairs, being held still by someone they cannot see, an unfamiliar place and not understanding when it will end. This is a very common and usually normal reaction that eases with calm, repeated experiences.
At what age do children usually get more comfortable with haircuts?
There is no fixed age, but many children grow more settled through the preschool years as they understand what a haircut involves and that it is quick and painless. Gentle preparation and predictable routines help most children adjust faster.
When should I be concerned about haircut distress?
Distress with haircuts alone is rarely a worry. Consider a developmental check if it is part of a wider pattern — for example strong distress with tooth-brushing, nail-cutting, certain clothing textures, loud sounds or messy hands that disrupts daily life.
How can I make haircuts easier for my child?
Let your child watch a parent or sibling get a trim, practise with toy scissors at home, choose a quiet time, sit them on your lap, and offer a favourite toy, snack or screen for distraction. Praising small successes builds confidence over time.