newborn
Is my newborn developing normally in social skills?
In the first weeks, social development is quiet and simple — turning to your voice, brief face-gazing during feeds, and calming when held. The true social smile usually appears around 6–8 weeks, so its absence in a newborn is completely normal. There is nothing to diagnose at this age; this is the gentle beginning of connection. Mention it to your paediatrician only if your baby never reacts to sound, makes no eye contact by 4–6 weeks, has no social smile by 8 weeks, or feeds very poorly.
Watching your newborn's face for that first flicker of connection is one of the tenderest parts of early parenting — and noticing it matters.
In short
In the first weeks, "social" development looks quieter and simpler than many parents expect — and your newborn is almost certainly doing beautifully. At this age, social signs are about calming to your voice, gazing at your face, and gradually settling in your arms — not smiles-on-command or play. The first true social smile usually arrives around 6–8 weeks, so its absence in a brand-new baby is completely normal. There is nothing to diagnose now; this is simply the gentle beginning of a relationship.What social development looks like in a newborn
Newborn "social" behaviour is woven into feeding, soothing and being held. Lovely, age-appropriate signs include:- Turning towards your voice — babies prefer human sounds, especially a familiar parent's voice, from the very first days.
- Brief face-gazing — short bursts of looking at your face, best at about 20–30 cm, roughly the distance to your face during a feed.
- Calming to comfort — quieting when held, rocked or spoken to softly.
- Reflex smiles — fleeting smiles in sleep or drowsiness; the social smile that responds to you comes a little later, around 6–8 weeks.
- Periods of quiet alertness — short windows where your baby is calm, awake and taking in the world.
Newborns also sleep a great deal and have very short awake windows, so social moments are brief — that is exactly as it should be.
When to mention something
This is about gentle reassurance, not a checklist of worry. It is worth a word with your paediatrician if your baby does not startle or react to loud sounds, never makes eye contact during alert moments by around 4–6 weeks, has no social smile by about 8 weeks, feels persistently floppy or stiff, or feeds very poorly. These are reasons for a routine developmental check — not signs of any condition — because a calm early look is always the kindest path.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 and never this early in isolation. For newborns, our role is reassurance and gentle developmental monitoring, supported by [2.5 billion+ data points](/) and clinicians across 70+ centres. If you ever have questions about how your baby connects, communicates or feeds, our speech therapy team can guide early interaction and feeding cues.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on newborn behaviour and the social smile around 6–8 weeks; CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early" resources; WHO Nurturing Care framework on responsive caregiving in early infancy.Next step — Trust your instincts and enjoy these early gazes. For a calm, reassuring review of your baby's development, book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.
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
Age-appropriate signs include turning towards your voice, brief face-gazing during feeds, calming when held, and reflex smiles in sleep. The responsive social smile arrives around 6–8 weeks. Mention to your paediatrician if your baby does not startle to loud sound, makes no eye contact by 4–6 weeks, has no social smile by 8 weeks, feels persistently floppy or stiff, or feeds very poorly.
Try this at home
During feeds, hold your baby about 20–30 cm from your face, talk softly and let them gaze at you — this is your newborn's favourite distance and the natural cradle of early social connection.
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
When should my newborn first smile at me?
The first true social smile — one that responds to your face and voice — usually appears around 6–8 weeks. Earlier fleeting smiles during sleep are reflex smiles and are completely normal.
How can I tell if my newborn recognises me?
Newborns prefer familiar voices from the first days, turn towards your voice, and calm when held by you. Brief face-gazing during feeds is an early, lovely sign of connection.
Should I worry if my newborn doesn't make much eye contact?
Newborns have very short awake windows and only brief moments of gaze, so this is normal. It is worth a routine check if there is no eye contact during alert moments by around 4–6 weeks.