Tourette Syndrome
Is Tourette Syndrome Genetic or Hereditary?
Tourette Syndrome is strongly genetic and runs in families, but it is polygenic — many small genetic influences combine with developmental factors rather than one inherited gene. A family history raises the chance without guaranteeing it, and no parent causes it. Diagnosis is made only by a clinician, never from family history alone.
If tics run in your family, you may be wondering whether your child has "inherited" Tourette Syndrome — the honest answer is: genes matter, but they are not the whole story.
In short
Tourette Syndrome is strongly genetic — it tends to run in families, and a child with a close relative who has tics or Tourette Syndrome is more likely to have them too. But it is not inherited in a simple, single-gene way like eye colour. Many genes each contribute a small amount, and environmental and developmental factors interact with them. So Tourette Syndrome is heritable and familial, but not predictable — having a family history raises the chance, it does not guarantee it.What the science tells us
Studies of twins and families show that the tendency toward tics is largely passed down — identical twins share Tourette Syndrome far more often than non-identical twins. Researchers describe it as polygenic: dozens of small genetic influences add up, rather than one faulty gene being responsible. This is also why the same family can show a wide range — one relative may have brief childhood tics, another mild lifelong tics, and another fuller Tourette Syndrome. Boys are affected more often than girls. Importantly, no parent causes Tourette Syndrome through anything they did, and there is nothing a family did wrong; it reflects how a child's nervous system is wired as it develops.What this means for your family
- A family history is useful information for your clinician, not a sentence — most children with tics do well.
- Tics often begin between ages 5 and 7, peak in early adolescence, and frequently ease into adulthood.
- Tourette Syndrome commonly travels alongside ADHD, anxiety or obsessive features, so a whole-child view matters more than the genetics alone.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a family-history checklist or an online tool. Genetics tell us about chance; a structured, clinician-led assessment tells us about your child. We look at how tics, attention, learning and emotional regulation fit together, then build a plan around strengths. Explore more on Tourette Syndrome, understand our clinician-administered AbilityScore®, and see how behavioural therapy can help children manage tics with confidence.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 classification of tic disorders; US CDC information on Tourette Syndrome and its tendency to run in families; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance for parents on tics and development.Next step — If tics run in your family or you've noticed them in your child, book a Pinnacle developmental check for a clear, reassuring starting point.
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
Repeated, involuntary movements or sounds (tics) starting around ages 5–7 — eye-blinking, head-jerks, throat-clearing or sniffing that come and go, change over time, and aren't fully under your child's control.
Try this at home
Try not to draw attention to a tic or ask your child to stop — stress and focus often make tics worse. Calm routines, good sleep and a relaxed home help tics settle naturally.
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
If I have tics, will my child definitely get Tourette Syndrome?
No. A family history raises the chance because the tendency is heritable, but it does not guarantee it. Many children of parents with tics never develop Tourette Syndrome, and those who do often have only mild, temporary tics.
Is Tourette Syndrome caused by one gene?
No. It is polygenic — many genes each contribute a small amount, interacting with developmental factors. This is why severity varies so widely even within the same family.
Did I cause my child's Tourette Syndrome?
No. Tourette Syndrome reflects how the nervous system is wired as a child develops. Nothing a parent did or didn't do causes it, and there is no reason for guilt.
When do tics usually start?
Tics typically begin between ages 5 and 7, often peak in early adolescence, and frequently ease as children grow into adulthood. A clinician can assess the pattern and any conditions that travel with it.