12-to-18-month-old
Is My 12-to-18-Month-Old Developing Normally in Thinking and Cognition?
Between 12 and 18 months, healthy cognitive growth shows as searching for hidden objects, using everyday items correctly, copying simple actions, and exploring cause and effect. There is a wide range of normal, and children master skills in their own order. Seek a gentle developmental check if, by around 18 months, your child shows little curiosity about how things work, doesn't look for hidden toys, isn't imitating, or has lost a skill. This is reason to observe early, not a diagnosis.
Watching your one-year-old work out how a toy fits, or search for something you hid — that quiet problem-solving is their thinking brain blooming.
In short
Between 12 and 18 months, most toddlers are busy learning that objects exist even when hidden, copying what you do, and beginning to use things for their proper purpose — a spoon to feed, a cup to drink. There is a wide, healthy range of normal, and children master these in their own order and pace. If by 18 months your child shows little curiosity about how things work, doesn't look for a toy you've hidden, or isn't imitating simple actions, a gentle developmental check is wise — not as a worry, but because early observation gives early opportunity.What healthy cognitive growth looks like at 12–18 months
Cognition at this age is hands-on thinking — your toddler experiments, watches, and figures out the world through play. Reassuring signs include:- Looking for hidden things — searching under a cloth for a toy they saw you hide (object permanence growing strong).
- Using objects correctly — bringing a phone to the ear, brushing with a toy brush, stacking or banging two blocks together.
- Copying you — imitating waving, clapping, stirring, or wiping with a cloth.
- Cause and effect — pressing buttons to make sounds, dropping things to watch them fall, repeating actions that get a fun result.
- Following simple ideas — handing you a named toy, pointing to show you something interesting.
Children do these in their own time, and a single "not yet" rarely means anything. It's the overall pattern across weeks that matters.
When a gentle check is wise
Consider a calm developmental review if, by around 18 months, your child rarely explores how toys work, doesn't search for hidden objects, isn't copying simple actions, doesn't point to share interest, or if you've noticed a loss of a skill they once had. Trust your daily instinct — what you see at home is valuable information, and asking early is good parenting, never overreacting.The Pinnacle way
This is general guidance, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care. Our clinicians watch how your child plays, problem-solves and connects, then shape support around their strengths. You can explore our [child development programmes](/) and how our occupational therapy team nurtures thinking through play.Trusted sources
CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" milestone checklists for 12 and 18 months; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance (healthychildren.org) on cognitive and play development in the second year; WHO Nurturing Care framework on early childhood development.Next step — Trust what you notice each day. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a warm, clear review of your toddler's thinking and milestones.
What to watch
By around 18 months, seek a developmental check if your toddler rarely explores how toys work, doesn't search for hidden objects, isn't copying simple actions like waving or stirring, doesn't point to share interest, or has lost a skill once had. A single 'not yet' is rarely a worry — it's the overall pattern across weeks that matters.
Try this at home
Play simple hide-and-seek with a favourite toy under a cloth, then wait and watch — does your toddler look for it? Naming what you do as you do it ("I'm stirring!") gives them rich ways to copy and learn through everyday play.
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
What cognitive skills should a 12-to-18-month-old have?
Most toddlers this age search for hidden toys, use objects for their purpose (a cup to drink, a phone to the ear), copy simple actions like clapping or stirring, and explore cause and effect by pressing buttons or dropping things. They mature in their own order and pace, so a single 'not yet' is rarely a concern.
Is it normal for my toddler to be slower than others at problem-solving?
Yes — there is a wide, healthy range of normal at this age, and children master skills in different orders and timings. What matters is the overall pattern of curiosity and learning across weeks, not a comparison with another child on any single day.
When should I get my 12-to-18-month-old's thinking checked?
Consider a calm developmental review if, by around 18 months, your child rarely explores how toys work, doesn't look for hidden objects, isn't copying simple actions, doesn't point to share interest, or has lost a skill once had. This means early observation is wise — not that anything is wrong.