climbing
Is it normal that my toddler isn't climbing yet?
Climbing usually appears between about 14 and 24 months, but the normal range is wide and temperament matters — a cautious toddler is not a delayed one. As long as your child is walking, squatting and exploring, a later interest in climbing is generally fine. Arrange a check if there's no independent walking by ~18 months, very stiff or floppy limbs, a strong one-sided preference, or any loss of skills. This is reassurance, not a diagnosis.
If you're watching the other toddlers scramble up the sofa while yours stays happily on the floor, your noticing is a good and caring thing.
In short
For most toddlers, climbing emerges somewhere between about 14 and 24 months — but there is a wide, perfectly normal range, and not every child takes to it at the same pace. Some toddlers are simply more cautious by temperament, or have had fewer chances to practise. As long as your child is moving in other ways — pulling up, cruising, walking, squatting and standing — a slightly later interest in climbing is usually well within normal. What matters more is steady, overall progress rather than any single skill on a fixed date.What to watch
Climbing is one thread in your toddler's gross-motor story (ICF domain d4, mobility). It's reassuring when you see the building blocks even if climbing itself hasn't arrived:- Walking and balance — walking steadily by ~18 months, beginning to run, squatting to pick things up.
- Strength and coordination — pulling to stand, getting on and off low furniture, pushing and pulling toys.
- Curiosity to try — reaching up, attempting steps with a hand held, wanting to explore higher places.
Gentle reasons to arrange a check: not walking independently by ~18 months, very stiff or very floppy limbs, strongly favouring one side, or losing a movement skill your child once had. These are reasons to look closer — never a diagnosis.
The science
Gross-motor milestones like climbing depend on strength, balance and confidence, all of which grow with safe practice. Children given low, supervised surfaces to clamber on tend to develop the skill naturally. Temperament plays a real part too — a careful child is not a delayed one.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 online list. If you'd like reassurance, our team can map your child's climbing and overall motor progress, and our occupational therapy clinicians can build playful, strength-based support if needed.Trusted sources
WHO Nurturing Care framework on early development; American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) on gross-motor milestones; CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" milestone guidance.Next step — Trust your instinct. Book a developmental check so your toddler's movement is reviewed with warmth and clarity.
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
Reassuring signs: walking steadily by ~18 months, squatting and standing, pulling up, getting on and off low furniture, curiosity to reach higher. Arrange a check if there's no independent walking by ~18 months, very stiff or floppy limbs, strong one-sided preference, or loss of a movement skill once present.
Try this at home
Offer safe, low surfaces to clamber on — a firm cushion pile, a low step or a sturdy box — and stay close to cheer attempts. Practice and encouragement build both strength and confidence faster than waiting alone.
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 my toddler start climbing?
Most toddlers begin climbing somewhere between about 14 and 24 months, but the normal range is wide. Some cautious children take longer simply by temperament or for lack of practice, which is usually fine.
Should I worry if my toddler walks but won't climb?
Not on its own. If your child walks steadily, squats, stands and explores, a later interest in climbing is generally within normal range. Watch overall progress rather than one skill.
When should I get a developmental check?
Arrange a check if there's no independent walking by around 18 months, very stiff or very floppy limbs, a strong one-sided preference, or any loss of a skill your child once had — these warrant a closer look, not a diagnosis.