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hits other people

My child hits other people — should I be worried?

Hitting is a very common phase in young children, usually because big feelings arrive before the words and self-control to manage them, and it fades with calm, consistent teaching. Seek a developmental check if it is frequent, intense, worsening with age, or paired with delayed speech or other worries. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

My child hits other people — should I be worried?
My Child Hits Others — Should I Worry? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When a little one lashes out with their hands, it is almost always a child reaching for the words they don't yet have — not a sign of a 'bad' child.

In short

Hitting is one of the most common things young children do, especially between roughly 18 months and 4 years, because big feelings arrive long before the words and self-control to manage them. In most cases it is a normal developmental phase that fades with patient, consistent teaching. It is worth a gentle developmental check if the hitting is frequent, intense, hard to settle, getting worse with age, or paired with other worries like delayed speech, limited eye contact or trouble with daily transitions.

Why young children hit

  • Big feelings, few words — frustration, tiredness, hunger or over-excitement spill out through the body when language can't yet carry them.
  • Testing cause and effect — toddlers are little scientists; a hit produces a big reaction, and that's interesting to them.
  • Overwhelm — too much noise, crowding or change can tip a child over; hitting is a release, not a plan.
  • Wanting something — a toy, attention, or space — and not yet knowing how to ask.
  • Copying — children mirror what they see at home, in play, or on screens.

None of these mean your child is aggressive by nature. They mean a skill — putting feelings into words and waiting — is still being built.

What helps, and when to seek a check

Stay calm and steady; a big reaction can accidentally reward the behaviour. Name the feeling for them ("You're cross — you wanted that toy"), keep everyone safe, and show the words or signs they can use instead. Notice the patterns — what happens just before a hit often reveals the trigger.

Consider a developmental check if your child is over four and still hitting often, if it is intense or hurting others regularly, if it appears alongside delayed talking, difficulty with eye contact or play, big struggles with change, or if it is leaving you feeling out of options. Asking for support early is a strength, not a failure.

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. If you'd like reassurance or a plan, our team can map your child's strengths and triggers and shape gentle, practical support. Explore our [home](/), understand our clinician-administered AbilityScore®, and see how behaviour and emotional therapy helps children turn big feelings into words.

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) guidance on toddler aggression and biting/hitting; CDC developmental milestones and positive parenting tips; WHO nurturing-care guidance on early childhood emotional development.

Next step — Worried or simply want peace of mind? Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.

What to watch

Watch whether hitting is frequent, intense or worsening past age four, and whether it appears alongside delayed talking, limited eye contact, difficulty with play, or big struggles with everyday change.

Try this at home

Stay calm, name the feeling out loud ("You're cross — you wanted that toy"), keep everyone safe, and offer the words or a sign your child can use instead — then notice what happens just before a hit to spot the trigger.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10

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 is hitting a normal phase?

Hitting is very common between roughly 18 months and 4 years, when big feelings arrive before the words and self-control to manage them. It usually fades with calm, consistent teaching as language and emotional skills grow.

How should I respond when my child hits?

Stay calm, keep everyone safe, and name the feeling for them. Avoid big reactions that can accidentally reward the behaviour, and show or teach the words or signs they can use to ask for what they want instead.

When should I be worried about my child hitting?

Consider a developmental check if hitting is frequent, intense or worsening past age four, hard to settle, or paired with delayed talking, limited eye contact, difficulty with play, or big struggles with everyday transitions.

Does hitting mean my child is aggressive?

No. Hitting almost always means a skill — putting feelings into words and waiting — is still being built. It is a phase of development, not a sign of a child's nature.

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