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not following instructions at 3y6m

My 3.5-year-old doesn't follow instructions — should I worry?

At 3.5 years most children follow simple two-step instructions, but many still need repetition or gestures — which is normal. Watch the whole picture: hearing, understanding, attention and play. A consistent pattern of not understanding everyday requests is a good reason for a friendly developmental and hearing check, never a diagnosis on its own.

My 3.5-year-old doesn't follow instructions — should I worry?
Not Following Instructions at 3.5 — Should You Worry? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When a child doesn't seem to listen, every parent's heart skips — but "not following instructions" is something we can understand and gently support.

In short

At 3.5 years, most children can follow a simple two-step instruction like "pick up your shoes and bring them here" — but plenty still need it repeated, broken down, or paired with a gesture, and that alone is not cause for alarm. What matters is the whole picture: does your child understand language at other times, hear well, point and show you things, and join in play? If you're noticing a consistent pattern of not understanding everyday requests, it's worth a friendly developmental check — early support works beautifully, and worry is simply a good reason to look, not a diagnosis.

What this can mean at 3y6m

"Not following instructions" can come from several ordinary places, and a clinician's job is to tell them apart:
  • Hearing — even mild or fluctuating hearing loss (often from glue ear) makes instructions hard to catch. This is the first thing worth ruling out.
  • Understanding language (receptive language) — your child may hear fine but still be building the meaning of words and sentences.
  • Attention and engagement — a busy, distracted three-year-old may simply not be tuned in when you speak.
  • The instruction itself — long, multi-part, or abstract instructions are genuinely harder; "Get your cup" lands better than "Before lunch can you tidy up and wash your hands?"

When to seek a check

Book a developmental check if, across different days and people, your child rarely responds to their name, struggles with simple one-step requests, isn't combining two or three words, or seems not to understand familiar everyday language. A quick hearing test plus a structured developmental look will usually bring real reassurance — or an early, gentle plan if support would help.

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 form or this page. We start by understanding your child's pattern of not following instructions at 3y6m, check hearing and understanding, and where helpful build a speech and language therapy plan you can follow at home. Curious where your child stands today? Here's how the AbilityScore is established.

Trusted sources

WHO guidance on early childhood development and nurturing care; American Academy of Pediatrics developmental milestone guidance via HealthyChildren; ASHA resources on receptive language in young children.

Next step — Bring your worry to a clinician who can check hearing and understanding together — book a developmental assessment.

What to watch

Across different days and people: rarely responds to name, struggles with simple one-step requests, isn't combining two or three words, or seems not to understand familiar everyday language.

Try this at home

Get down to eye level, say your child's name first, then give one short instruction at a time — "Get your cup" — paired with a gesture. Praise any response, even a partial one.

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 3.5-year-old to ignore instructions sometimes?

Yes — many three-year-olds are easily distracted and may need an instruction repeated, simplified, or paired with a gesture. What matters is whether they understand everyday language at other times and respond when truly tuned in. An occasional lapse is normal; a consistent pattern of not understanding is worth a check.

Could a hearing problem be the cause?

Absolutely, and it's the first thing to rule out. Even mild or fluctuating hearing loss — often from glue ear — can make instructions hard to catch. A simple hearing test is a sensible early step before anything else.

How many instructions should a 3.5-year-old follow?

Most children at this age can follow a simple two-step instruction such as "pick up your shoes and bring them here." Long, multi-part or abstract instructions are genuinely harder, so try one short step at a time.

When should I see a professional?

Book a developmental check if, across different days and people, your child rarely responds to their name, struggles with one-step requests, isn't combining two or three words, or doesn't seem to understand familiar language. Early support works well and a check often brings reassurance.

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