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Difficulty Sharing

Should I Worry About Difficulty Sharing in a 3-Year-Old?

Difficulty sharing is completely normal and developmentally appropriate at three — the brain skills for turn-taking, patience and seeing another's viewpoint are still developing and improve with gentle practice over the next few years. A 3-year-old saying "mine!" shows a healthy sense of self, not selfishness. A developmental check is only worth considering if difficulty sharing sits alongside other differences, such as little interest in other children, very few words, no pretend play, or meltdowns that are extremely hard to settle. This is about early reassurance and support, never a diagnosis.

Should I Worry About Difficulty Sharing in a 3-Year-Old?
Difficulty Sharing at 3: Is It Normal? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Wanting to know whether your little one's tug-of-war over toys is normal is exactly the kind of attentive parenting that helps children thrive.

In short

No — difficulty sharing is completely typical and developmentally appropriate at three. A 3-year-old is only just beginning to understand that other people have feelings and wants of their own, and the brain skills for turn-taking, patience and seeing another's point of view are still very much under construction. Sharing genuinely improves through gentle practice over the next two to three years. A developmental check is only worth considering if difficulty sharing sits alongside broader differences in talking, connecting or playing with others.

What's normal at three

At this age, "mine!" is a healthy sign your child has a clear sense of self — not selfishness. Most three-year-olds:
  • Find true sharing hard — they may take turns with a grown-up's help, but spontaneous sharing with peers is still emerging.
  • Play alongside more than truly with other children (parallel play), gradually shifting to cooperative play around 3–4 years.
  • Struggle to wait — patience and impulse control are early-stage skills.
  • Respond well to coaching — short turns with a timer, naming feelings, and praise for small acts of sharing all build the skill.

These are reasons to keep supporting and modelling, not to worry.

When a gentle check is wise

The sharing itself is rarely the concern — it's the company it keeps. Consider a developmental check if difficulty sharing travels with:
  • Little interest in other children at all, or no shared smiling, showing or pointing.
  • Very few words or trouble being understood by familiar people.
  • Big, frequent meltdowns that are extremely hard to settle and seem out of step with peers.
  • No pretend or imaginative play, or losing skills once had.

This is about early opportunity, never a diagnosis — what you notice every day is valuable.

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. Our team looks at the whole picture of how your child plays, connects and communicates. If you'd like reassurance or guidance, our occupational therapy and play-based behavioural therapy teams can show you simple ways to build turn-taking at home, and you can always start with a friendly developmental review.

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics guidance (healthychildren.org) on social-emotional development and learning to share in early childhood; CDC developmental milestone checklists for 3-year-olds; WHO nurturing-care framework on responsive, play-based early support.

Next step — Trust what you see. If you'd like a calm, clear picture of your child's social development, [book a developmental review](/) with a Pinnacle clinician.

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

Sharing trouble alone is normal at three. Consider a developmental check only if it travels with little interest in other children, no shared smiling, showing or pointing, very few words, no pretend play, loss of skills once had, or very frequent meltdowns that are extremely hard to settle compared with peers.

Try this at home

Practise short, fun turns with a visual timer — "your turn, then my turn" — and warmly praise even tiny acts of sharing. Name feelings out loud ("you really wanted that toy") so your child learns turn-taking through play, not pressure.

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 3-year-old to refuse to share?

Yes, completely. At three, children are only beginning to understand that others have their own feelings and wants, and the skills for turn-taking and patience are still developing. Refusing to share or saying "mine!" shows a healthy sense of self and improves with gentle practice over the next two to three years.

How can I help my 3-year-old learn to share?

Practise short turns with a visual timer, model sharing yourself, name feelings ("you really wanted that toy"), and warmly praise small acts of sharing. Keep it playful — pressure and forced sharing tend to backfire, while gentle, repeated coaching builds the skill naturally.

When should difficulty sharing prompt a developmental check?

The sharing itself is rarely the concern — it's the company it keeps. Consider a check if it sits alongside little interest in other children, no shared smiling or pointing, very few words, no pretend play, loss of skills once had, or very frequent meltdowns that are extremely hard to settle compared with peers.

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