6-year-old
Is my 6-year-old developing normally in thinking and learning?
At six, most children count, recognise letters and numbers, follow multi-step instructions, tell short stories and reason about cause and effect — but children develop at their own pace, so a few lagging skills is usually normal variation. Seek a calm developmental check if several thinking, attention or learning skills seem well behind peers, or if school is a daily struggle. A check brings clarity, not a label, and early support at this age works beautifully.
At six, your child is busy turning curiosity into thinking — counting, questioning, planning and remembering — and noticing how that's growing is wonderfully attentive parenting.
In short
Most 6-year-olds are blossoming cognitively — counting, recognising letters and numbers, telling simple stories, following multi-step instructions and beginning to reason about cause and effect. Children develop at their own pace, so a few skills lagging behind classmates is usually normal variation, not a worry. If several thinking, attention or learning skills seem well behind peers, or school is becoming a daily struggle, a calm developmental check is wise — early support at this age works beautifully.What cognitive development looks like at 6
By around six, many children are typically able to:- Count and quantify — count to 20 or beyond, understand "more/less", and begin simple addition with objects.
- Read and recognise — know most letters and their sounds, recognise their name and some sight words, and start sounding out simple words.
- Follow and remember — carry out two- or three-step instructions, recall events from earlier in the day, and stick with a task for several minutes.
- Reason and plan — sort by colour, shape or size; predict "what happens next"; ask lots of "why" and "how" questions; and engage in imaginative, rule-based play.
- Express ideas — tell a short story in sequence, hold a back-and-forth conversation, and use language to solve little problems.
Remember, this is a spread, not a checklist. A child who reads later but reasons brilliantly, or who counts well but is slower with letters, is simply developing in their own rhythm.
When a gentle check is wise
Consider a developmental check if you notice several of these together over time: real difficulty learning letters, numbers or new concepts despite practice; struggling to follow simple instructions; very short attention even for things they enjoy; trouble remembering routines or recently-learnt skills; or teachers raising concerns that school is hard going. Trust your instinct — what you and the teacher see every day is valuable information, and a check is for clarity, not a label.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 map your child's thinking, attention, language and learning strengths through a structured, play-based assessment and shape any support around what your child loves. Explore how we support cognitive and learning development and our special education team's school-readiness work, or [start here](/).Trusted sources
CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early" resources for 5–6 year olds; American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on school-age cognitive growth and developmental monitoring; WHO Nurturing Care framework on early learning.Next step — Trust what you've noticed. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a clear, reassuring picture of how your six-year-old is thinking and learning.
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
Consider a check if, over time, your 6-year-old has real difficulty learning letters, numbers or concepts despite practice; struggles to follow simple instructions; shows very short attention even for favourite things; forgets routines or recently-learnt skills; or teachers say school is hard going. Several of these together — not one alone — make a gentle review worthwhile.
Try this at home
Weave thinking into play: cook together (counting and measuring), play simple board games (turn-taking and planning), and ask "what do you think happens next?" during stories. Everyday talk and games build cognition more powerfully than worksheets.
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 6-year-old have?
Many 6-year-olds can count to 20+, recognise most letters and sounds, begin reading simple words, follow two- or three-step instructions, tell a short story in sequence, sort and reason about cause and effect, and ask lots of curious questions. This is a typical range, not a strict checklist — children develop at their own pace.
My child is slower at reading than classmates — should I worry?
Not necessarily. Reading emerges across a wide window, and a child can be slower with letters yet strong in reasoning or maths. Worry less about a single lagging skill and more about a pattern of several thinking, attention or learning difficulties together, or school becoming a daily struggle — that's when a gentle check helps.
When should I get my 6-year-old's cognitive development checked?
Consider a developmental check if your child has ongoing difficulty learning letters, numbers or new concepts despite practice, can't follow simple instructions, has very short attention even for enjoyable things, forgets routines, or if teachers are raising concerns. A check brings clarity and early support — it is not a diagnosis.