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Biting

Should I worry about biting in a 1-year-old?

Biting in a 1-year-old is very common and almost never worrying — it usually comes from teething, exploring, big feelings without words, or simply seeing a reaction. It fades as language and self-control grow. Respond calmly: a clear "no biting," redirect to a teether, name the feeling, and praise gestures and sounds. Seek a developmental check only if biting travels with delays in talking, eye contact, pointing or responding to their name — not because of the biting alone.

Should I worry about biting in a 1-year-old?
Biting in a 1-Year-Old: Should You Worry? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

A 1-year-old who bites is almost always exploring, teething or trying to tell you something they don't yet have words for — and that is part of normal toddler development.

In short

Biting at one year is very common and almost never a sign of anything worrying. At this age your little one bites to explore the world, to soothe sore teething gums, out of excitement, or simply because they cannot yet say "I'm tired," "I want that," or "move back." It usually fades as words and self-control grow. A gentle developmental check is only wise if biting comes alongside delays in talking, connecting or playing — not because of the biting itself.

Why one-year-olds bite

Biting at 12–24 months is a behaviour, not a diagnosis. The usual reasons are reassuringly ordinary:
  • Teething — sore gums feel better with pressure, so your child bites toys, fingers, even you.
  • Exploring — toddlers learn through their mouth; biting is part of "how does this feel?"
  • Big feelings, few words — excitement, frustration or overwhelm spill out as a bite because language hasn't caught up yet.
  • Cause and effect — your child notices a bite gets a big reaction, and repeats it to see what happens.
  • Tiredness or hunger — self-control dips when a toddler is sleepy or hungry.

Gentle, consistent responses work best: a calm, clear "no biting — biting hurts," redirecting to a teether, naming the feeling ("you're cross"), and lots of praise when your child uses gestures or sounds instead. Avoid biting back or harsh punishment — toddlers learn faster from calm modelling.

When a check is wise

The biting itself rarely needs assessment. Consider a developmental review if it travels with other things, such as: very few or no words by around 18 months, little eye contact or shared smiles, not responding to their name, not pointing or showing you things, or biting that is frequent, intense and seems disconnected from any trigger. These point to looking at overall communication and development — not at the biting alone.

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 list. If you'd like reassurance, our team can gently review your child's communication and play through a [developmental assessment](/), and our speech therapy team can help build the words and gestures that often make biting fade.

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on biting and toddler behaviour; CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early" resources for 1–2 year olds.

Next step — Trust what you see day to day. If biting comes with worries about talking or connecting, [book a developmental assessment](/) for a calm, clear review.

What to watch

Biting itself rarely needs assessment at this age. Seek a developmental check if it travels with very few or no words by ~18 months, little eye contact or shared smiles, not responding to their name, not pointing or showing you things, or biting that is frequent, intense and unconnected to any trigger.

Try this at home

Keep a chilled teether handy and notice the moment before a bite — tired, excited, frustrated or hungry? Naming the feeling and offering the teether before the bite, then praising any gesture or sound your child uses instead, helps biting fade.

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 biting normal for a 1-year-old?

Yes — biting is very common at this age. Toddlers bite to soothe teething gums, explore, express big feelings they don't yet have words for, or to see a reaction. It almost always fades as language and self-control grow.

How should I respond when my toddler bites?

Stay calm and clear: say "no biting — biting hurts," redirect to a teether, name the feeling ("you're cross"), and praise gestures or sounds your child uses instead. Avoid biting back or harsh punishment — toddlers learn fastest from calm, consistent modelling.

When should biting make me consider a developmental check?

The biting itself rarely needs assessment. Consider a check if it comes alongside very few or no words by around 18 months, little eye contact or shared smiles, not responding to their name, or not pointing — these point to reviewing overall communication, not the biting alone.

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