sensory integration therapy vs paediatric physiotherapy
Sensory Integration Therapy or Paediatric Physiotherapy?
Paediatric physiotherapy and sensory integration therapy address different needs. Physiotherapy focuses on how the body moves — strength, balance, coordination and gross-motor milestones. Sensory integration therapy focuses on how the brain takes in and organises sensation — touch, movement, sound and body-awareness. Many children need one; some need both. The right choice comes from understanding why your child is struggling, which is why a clinician's assessment matters more than picking a label.
When your child needs movement support, the question isn't which therapy is "better" — it's which one fits what your child actually needs right now.
In short
These two therapies answer different questions. Paediatric physiotherapy focuses on how your child's body moves — strength, balance, coordination, posture and gross-motor milestones like sitting, crawling and walking. Sensory integration therapy focuses on how your child's brain takes in and organises sensation — touch, movement, sound, body-awareness — and how that shapes behaviour, attention and comfort. Many children benefit from one; some benefit from both working together. The right choice comes from understanding why your child is struggling, not from picking a label.How to tell which fits your child
Think about what you are actually seeing day to day.Paediatric physiotherapy may fit if your child has delayed motor milestones, low or high muscle tone, walks awkwardly or tires quickly, has poor balance or coordination, toe-walks, or recovers from an injury or condition affecting movement. The concern lives mostly in how the body moves.
Sensory integration therapy may fit if your child is over- or under-sensitive to touch, sound, textures or movement; seeks constant spinning, crashing or deep pressure; melts down with everyday sensations like haircuts, labels or noise; is clumsy in a way that seems tied to not "feeling" where their body is; or struggles to settle and focus. The concern lives mostly in how sensation is processed and organised.
In real life these overlap. A child who is clumsy and falls often might have an underlying motor difficulty, a sensory body-awareness difficulty, or both — which is why a proper assessment matters more than a guess. A clinician watches your child move, play and respond, then matches therapy to the root, not just the surface.
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, never from an app or form. Our team observes your child across movement and sensation together, then builds one individualised plan — which may draw on occupational therapy for sensory integration, physiotherapy for motor skills, or both in step. Start by exploring how we work at [Pinnacle Blooms Network](/).Trusted sources
The American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on motor development and developmental review; the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association and NICE on assessing and supporting children's developmental needs.Next step — Rather than choosing between the two yourself, book a developmental assessment so a clinician can see your child move and respond, and recommend the right path.
What to watch
Delayed motor milestones, poor balance, low or high muscle tone or clumsy walking point toward physiotherapy; over- or under-sensitivity to touch, sound, textures or movement, sensory-seeking, meltdowns with everyday sensations, or poor body-awareness point toward sensory integration support. Overlapping signs deserve a proper assessment.
Try this at home
Watch when the struggle shows up: if it appears mostly during physical play — running, climbing, balancing — note the movement pattern. If it appears with sensations — noise, textures, haircuts, busy rooms — note the sensory triggers. These everyday notes help a clinician match the right therapy quickly.
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
Can my child have both sensory integration therapy and physiotherapy?
Yes. Some children benefit from both working together — for example, a child with motor delays who is also sensitive to movement. A clinician sequences and combines them into one coordinated plan so they support, not compete with, each other.
How do I know which therapy my child needs?
It comes from understanding why your child is struggling. If the concern is mostly about how the body moves — strength, balance, milestones — physiotherapy often fits. If it is about how sensation is processed — sensitivities, sensory-seeking, body-awareness — sensory integration support often fits. A developmental assessment clarifies the root.
Is sensory integration therapy the same as occupational therapy?
Sensory integration is an approach often delivered within occupational therapy. An occupational therapist trained in sensory integration helps a child organise and respond to sensation so daily activities, play and attention become easier.
My child is clumsy and falls a lot — which therapy is that?
It could be either, or both. Clumsiness can stem from an underlying motor difficulty, from difficulty sensing where the body is in space, or a mix. This is exactly why a clinician's observation matters more than choosing a therapy yourself.