12-to-18-month-old
Is my 12-to-18-month-old developing normally in motor skills?
Between 12 and 18 months most toddlers move from cruising furniture to walking, and from a neat finger-and-thumb pinch to scribbling and stacking — across a wide, healthy range. Your child is very likely developing well. Seek a developmental check mainly if they are not walking by 18 months, cannot stand with support, strongly favour one side, feel very floppy or stiff, or have lost a skill. This is a reason to assess early, not a diagnosis.
Watching your toddler pull up, cruise the sofa and take those first wobbly steps is one of the great joys of this age — and noticing how they move is wonderful, attentive parenting.
In short
Between 12 and 18 months, most children move from cruising along furniture to walking independently, and from poking at toys to stacking and scribbling. There is a wide, healthy range here — some confident walkers at 11 months, some careful ones at 16. Your child is very likely developing well; a developmental check is wise mainly if they are not yet walking by 18 months, cannot stand even with support, or have clearly stopped doing something they could do before.What to watch at 12–18 months
Motor growth at this age comes in two streams — big-body (gross motor) and hands (fine motor). Reassuring signs you may already be seeing:- Gross motor — pulling to stand, cruising holding furniture, standing alone, then walking; squatting to pick up a toy; climbing onto low steps or sofas later in the band.
- Fine motor — picking up small things with thumb and finger (a neat pinch), banging two objects together, putting things in and out of containers, beginning to scribble and to stack a couple of blocks.
Gentle flags that deserve a clinician's calm look:
- Not walking, or not even trying to stand with support, by 18 months.
- Not bearing weight on the legs, or one side of the body used much less than the other (one hand or leg consistently favoured this early can be worth a check).
- Very floppy or very stiff — feeling unusually loose or unusually rigid when handled.
- Loss of a skill once mastered — walking, standing or grasping that fades.
- Hands not coming together at the middle, or no attempt to pick up small objects.
These are reasons to look closer, never a diagnosis. Early observation simply turns small questions into early opportunities.
When to act
If your child is not walking by 18 months, cannot bear weight or stand with help, strongly favours one side, feels very floppy or stiff, or has lost a skill, arrange a developmental check now rather than waiting. Premature or low-birth-weight babies are often gently judged by their corrected age — a few months' adjustment is normal.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. Our clinicians watch how your child moves, balances and uses their hands during play, and build support around your child's strengths. Our occupational therapy and physiotherapy teams help with strength, balance and fine-motor confidence, and you can begin any time at [Pinnacle](/).Trusted sources
CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early" guidance for 12- and 18-month motor skills; American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) on gross and fine motor development in toddlers; WHO motor development milestone study on the typical range and sequence of walking.Next step — Trust what you see every day. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a calm, clear review of your toddler's movement and milestones.
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
Arrange a developmental check if your child is not walking by 18 months, cannot bear weight or stand with support, consistently favours one hand or leg this early, feels very floppy or very stiff when handled, or has lost a skill once mastered. Adjust for prematurity using corrected age.
Try this at home
Give plenty of safe floor and barefoot play time — pushing a sturdy toy, climbing low cushions and dropping small (safe) objects into a cup all build the strength, balance and pincer grip your toddler needs.
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
My 15-month-old isn't walking yet — should I worry?
Not necessarily. Many healthy children walk anywhere between 11 and 16 months, and some a little later. As long as your child is pulling to stand and cruising along furniture, this is usually within the typical range. A developmental check becomes wise if there is still no independent walking by 18 months, or if your child cannot bear weight or stand even with support.
Is it normal for my toddler to walk on tiptoes?
Occasional tiptoe-walking is common in new walkers and often settles as balance matures. It is worth a clinician's gentle look if it is constant, your child cannot put heels flat on the floor, the legs feel very stiff, or it comes alongside delays in other areas.
Should I use my baby's corrected age if they were premature?
Yes. For babies born early, clinicians usually judge motor milestones by corrected age — your child's age from the due date rather than the birth date — for roughly the first two years. A few months' adjustment is entirely normal and expected.
My toddler favours one hand already — is that a concern this early?
A strong, consistent hand preference before 18 months can be worth a check, because true handedness usually develops later. If one hand or one side of the body is used much less than the other, mention it to a clinician for a calm, reassuring look.