not imitating at 12m
My 12-month-old doesn't copy others — should I worry?
Imitation typically emerges between 9 and 12 months, but timing varies widely, so a 12-month-old not yet copying others is often simply on their own timeline. Watch it alongside other social signs like responding to their name, sharing attention and using gestures. A warm developmental check brings reassurance; only a Pinnacle clinician can assess.
When your one-year-old doesn't wave back or copy your peek-a-boo, it's natural to wonder — let's look at this together, calmly.
In short
Imitation — copying a wave, a clap, banging two blocks together — usually begins to emerge around 9 to 12 months, but the timing varies a lot from baby to baby. At exactly 12 months, a child who isn't yet copying others is often simply on their own gentle timeline, and many catch up within weeks. It is worth gently watching alongside a few other social signs, and a quick developmental check brings real peace of mind. Worry is a reason to look — it is not, by itself, a sign that anything is wrong.What to watch over the next few weeks
Imitation rarely arrives alone — it travels with other little social and communication skills. Around this age, you'd love to also see your baby:- Respond to their name by turning or looking
- Share attention — looking at a toy, then at you, then back
- Use gestures like reaching up to be picked up, or pointing at something they want
- Babble back and forth with you, almost like a conversation
- Enjoy social games such as peek-a-boo or pat-a-cake, even if they don't yet copy them
If your baby is warm, makes eye contact, and connects with you in other ways, a lone delay in copying is usually nothing to fear. If copying is missing and several of the above are also missing, that's simply your cue to book a friendly check — not a diagnosis.
When to seek a check
There is no harm and much reassurance in a developmental check around the first birthday — it is a routine, positive step. Speak to a professional sooner if your baby isn't responding to their name, makes very little eye contact, or has lost a skill they once had. These are watch points, not verdicts.The Pinnacle way
At this age the kindest, most accurate path is a warm developmental check — and a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or a checklist. We can gently explore your child's social and communication milestones and, if helpful, support early imitation and connection through play-based speech therapy. The aim is clarity and confidence, not labels.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on early social milestones (healthychildren.org); CDC developmental milestone resources on imitation and gesture around 12 months.Next step — For simple peace of mind, book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.
What to watch
Alongside copying, look for whether your baby responds to their name, shares attention by looking from a toy to you and back, uses gestures like pointing or reaching to be picked up, babbles back and forth, and enjoys social games like peek-a-boo. Several of these missing together is your cue to book a check.
Try this at home
Make copying playful and exaggerated — clap slowly with a big smile, wave with a sing-song 'bye-bye', or bang two blocks and pause to give your baby a turn. Babies imitate most when it feels like a warm, unhurried game with someone they love.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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
At what age should my baby start copying others?
Imitation usually begins to emerge somewhere between 9 and 12 months — copying a wave, a clap, or banging blocks. The exact timing varies a lot between babies, so a 12-month-old not yet copying is often simply on their own gentle timeline.
Does not copying at 12 months mean autism?
No. A single delay in imitation at 12 months is not a diagnosis of anything. It is one small signal worth watching alongside other social skills like eye contact, responding to their name and sharing attention. Only a qualified clinician can assess, and worry is simply a reason to book a friendly check.
What should I do if my baby isn't imitating?
Keep play warm and exaggerated, give your baby time to respond, and watch whether other social and communication skills are present. If copying is missing along with several other signs, book a routine developmental check — it brings clarity and peace of mind, not labels.