not waving bye at 12m
My 12-month-old doesn't wave bye-bye — should I worry?
Not waving bye-bye at exactly 12 months is usually not a worry on its own, as this gesture often appears anytime from 9 to 15 months. What matters most is the overall pattern of connection — eye contact, smiles, babbling, pointing and responding to a name. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle centre.
One missing wave at the first birthday is rarely the whole story — let's look at the bigger picture together.
In short
At 12 months, not yet waving bye-bye on its own is usually not a cause for worry. Waving is a learned social gesture, and many healthy babies start it anytime between about 9 and 15 months. What matters far more is the overall pattern — whether your baby is connecting with you in other ways: making eye contact, sharing smiles, babbling, pointing or reaching, and responding to their name. If those things are there, a late wave is very likely just timing.What is worth watching at 12 months
Gestures usually arrive together as a little family of skills. Rather than focusing on the wave alone, gently notice whether your baby:- Looks at you and smiles back when you smile or talk to them
- Babbles with sounds like "ba-ba" or "da-da"
- Responds to their name by turning or looking
- Points, reaches or shows you things they want
- Plays back-and-forth games like peek-a-boo or clapping
- Looks where you point or follows your gaze
If several of these are present, your baby is communicating well — the wave will likely follow. If most of these gestures are absent by 12 months, that is a gentle signal to have a general developmental check, simply to be sure. You can encourage waving naturally: wave warmly every time someone comes or goes, take their little hand and wave it together, and celebrate any attempt.
The Pinnacle way
A single missing gesture is never a diagnosis — and any clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, by qualified clinicians, never from an online checklist. If you'd like reassurance, a quick developmental check can map your baby's whole communication picture and tell you exactly where they stand. Explore more on why a wave may be late at 12 months and how early speech and communication support gently builds these skills.Trusted sources
WHO and AAP developmental guidance on early social communication milestones; CDC "Learn the Signs. Act Early." milestone framework, which lists gestures such as waving among 12-month social skills while noting wide normal variation.Next step — If you'd like a clear picture of your baby's communication, 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
Watch the whole picture, not just the wave: eye contact, smiling back, babbling, responding to name, pointing or reaching, and back-and-forth games like peek-a-boo. If several of these are present, a late wave is very likely just timing.
Try this at home
Wave warmly every time someone arrives or leaves, gently guide your baby's hand to wave along, and cheer every attempt — babies learn gestures best by copying you in real, happy moments.
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
Is it normal for a 12-month-old not to wave bye-bye?
Yes, it can be perfectly normal. Waving is a learned social gesture that many babies start anywhere between about 9 and 15 months. As long as your baby is connecting in other ways — smiling back, babbling, responding to their name and reaching for things — a late wave is usually just timing.
When should I be concerned about missing gestures?
It is worth a gentle developmental check if, by 12 months, your baby shows few or none of the early social gestures together — no waving, no pointing or reaching, little babbling, and not turning to their name. A pattern of several missing skills matters far more than one alone.
How can I help my baby learn to wave?
Wave clearly and warmly every time someone comes or goes, take your baby's hand and wave it together, and celebrate any attempt with a smile. Babies learn gestures by copying you repeatedly in everyday, joyful moments.