doesn't make eye contact
My child doesn't make eye contact — should I be worried?
Reduced eye contact on its own is rarely cause for alarm — children look away when shy, tired, focused or by temperament. What matters is the bigger picture of social connection: shared attention, responding to their name, pointing, social smiles and back-and-forth. If reduced eye contact persists alongside other communication differences, a gentle developmental check is wise. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
A baby who looks away, a toddler busy with their world — eye contact can come and go, and on its own it rarely tells the whole story.
In short
Not making eye contact, on its own, is not a reason to panic — many children look away when shy, tired, deeply focused, overstimulated, or simply by temperament. What matters more is the bigger picture: how your child shares attention, responds to their name, points, smiles back, and connects in other ways. If eye contact is consistently reduced alongside other differences in communication or social connection, a gentle developmental check is the wise, caring next step — early support is always a strength, never a label.What the bigger picture looks like
Eye contact is just one thread in the rich fabric of social communication. Rather than watching that single thread, notice how the whole pattern is woven:- Shared attention — does your child look between you and a toy, or follow where you point?
- Responding to their name — do they turn or glance when you call (when not absorbed in play)?
- Social smiling and back-and-forth — smiles, babble, gestures, taking turns in little games.
- Pointing and showing — bringing things to show you, pointing to share interest (typically emerging around 12–18 months).
- Comfort-seeking — coming to you when upset, sharing joy when happy.
Many warm, connected children simply make less eye contact and are perfectly well. It is the combination — reduced eye contact together with limited gestures, delayed words, or little shared enjoyment — that is worth a closer, supportive look.
When a check is wise
Consider a developmental check if reduced eye contact comes with: not responding to their name by around 12 months, no pointing or showing by around 18 months, loss of words or social skills they once had, or a persistent sense that connecting is harder than you'd expect. Trust your instinct — you know your child best, and asking is always reasonable.The Pinnacle way
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, through a structured clinician-administered assessment rather than any app or checklist. Across [70+ centres](/) we walk beside families with warmth and precision; you can learn how our structured clinician assessment builds a clear picture, and how speech therapy and social-communication support are tailored to each child.Trusted sources
WHO and ICD-11 guidance on early child development and developmental difference; American Academy of Pediatrics family guidance (HealthyChildren.org) on developmental milestones and surveillance; CDC milestone guidance on early social communication.Next step — If your instinct says check, it's worth checking. Book a gentle developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.
What to watch
Watch the whole pattern, not just eye contact: not turning to their name by around 12 months, no pointing or showing by around 18 months, few gestures or social smiles, limited shared enjoyment, or any loss of words or social skills they once had. Reduced eye contact alongside these is worth a developmental check.
Try this at home
Get down to your child's eye level during play and follow their interest rather than demanding eye contact — share what they're looking at, name it warmly, and connection often grows naturally. Never force a child to look at you; gentle, joyful, side-by-side play builds the foundation.
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
Is it normal for a baby or toddler not to make eye contact all the time?
Yes — eye contact naturally comes and goes. Babies and toddlers look away when shy, tired, overstimulated or deeply focused on something, and some children simply make less eye contact by temperament. It's the overall pattern of social connection that matters most, not eye contact alone.
When should reduced eye contact prompt a developmental check?
Consider a check if reduced eye contact comes with other signs — not responding to their name by around 12 months, no pointing or showing by around 18 months, few gestures or social smiles, little shared enjoyment, or any loss of skills they once had. Trust your instinct; asking is always reasonable.
Does not making eye contact mean my child has autism?
No single sign means autism. Reduced eye contact can have many ordinary explanations and is only meaningful when seen alongside a wider pattern of social-communication differences. Only a qualified clinician, through a structured assessment, can form any diagnosis — never an app or a checklist.