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Fine Motor Delay

Fine Motor Delay: what to do after your child's AbilityScore®

An AbilityScore® band is a starting point, not a verdict. Whatever the number, the next step is to sit with your clinician, understand which fine motor skills need support, and begin a targeted, play-based occupational therapy plan — then re-measure against your child's own baseline.

Fine Motor Delay: what to do after your child's AbilityScore®
Fine Motor Delay: your next step after the AbilityScore® — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

An AbilityScore® gives you a starting line, not a verdict — and for fine motor skills, the next steps are wonderfully practical.

In short

Your child's AbilityScore® is a structured snapshot of where their fine motor skills sit today — the small, precise hand-and-finger movements behind holding a crayon, doing up buttons, using cutlery or building with blocks. Whatever the band, the next step is the same and the hopeful one: sit with the clinician who measured it, understand which skills need support, and begin a targeted plan. A lower band means more support now; a higher band means fine-tuning — neither is a ceiling on what your child can grow into.

What the next steps look like

Fine motor skills build in a known order — first whole-arm and shoulder stability, then wrist control, then the fine pincer and finger movements. A good plan works with that sequence:
  • Read the score together — your clinician explains which specific skills (grasp, hand strength, in-hand manipulation, bilateral coordination) are emerging, and which need scaffolding.
  • Start play-based therapyoccupational therapy turns goals into games: threading, playdough, tearing paper, peg boards, scooping and pouring. Skills grow fastest when practice feels like fun.
  • Build it into home routines — fine motor practice hides in everyday life: zipping a bag, peeling a banana, squeezing a sponge in the bath.
  • Re-measure — your child is compared to their own baseline over time, so even quiet progress becomes visible and the plan adapts.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — never from an online form or a number alone. Across [70+ centres](/) and 700+ therapists, our occupational therapists translate your child's score into a clear, play-based plan and walk it with you. The number is simply where the conversation begins — not where your child's story ends.

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics developmental guidance (healthychildren.org); CDC developmental milestones (cdc.gov); American Occupational Therapy guidance via ASHA-aligned consensus; Pinnacle Blooms Network clinical studies.

Next step — Bring your AbilityScore® to a Pinnacle occupational therapist and leave with a plan you can start this week. Book your assessment review.

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 for everyday wins between sessions — a firmer crayon grip, managing a button or zip, scooping food independently. Flag to your clinician sooner if your child avoids hand-use entirely, tires very quickly with small tasks, or markedly favours one hand before about 18 months.

Try this at home

Hide fine motor practice in daily routines: let your child squeeze a wet sponge in the bath, tear lettuce for dinner, or post coins into a piggy bank. Short, playful bursts beat long drills — celebrate every attempt.

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

Is a low AbilityScore® band a diagnosis?

No. The AbilityScore® is a structured, clinician-administered snapshot of your child's current skills — a starting point for planning. A diagnosis is only ever formed by a qualified clinician at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, considering your child as a whole.

Which therapy helps with fine motor delay?

Occupational therapy is the main support for fine motor skills. It uses play-based activities — threading, playdough, peg boards, pouring — to build hand strength, grasp and coordination in the natural sequence that skills develop.

How soon will we see progress?

Fine motor growth comes in spurts and plateaus, so a steady week is normal. You'll usually notice everyday wins first — a better grip, managing a zip — while re-measurement against your child's own baseline confirms progress objectively over time.

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