Auditory Processing Difficulties
Early Signs of Auditory Processing Difficulties at 6–9 Months
At 6–9 months, auditory processing difficulty cannot yet be identified — that label only applies in later childhood. At this age, watch whether your baby turns to sounds and your voice, babbles, and reacts to noise, and ensure her hearing has been checked. These are reassuring signals to observe, not a diagnosis. Only a clinician can assess.
When you wonder whether your baby is truly hearing the world around her, that loving attention is exactly what helps her thrive.
In short
At 6 to 9 months, the brain is still building the very foundations of hearing and listening, so a formal "auditory processing difficulty" cannot yet be identified — that label only becomes meaningful in later childhood when a child is talking and following instructions. At this age, the kindest and most useful thing is simply to watch how your baby responds to sound and voices, and to make sure her basic hearing has been checked. If you notice she rarely turns to sounds or your voice, a gentle hearing and developmental check is the right, reassuring next step.What is actually appropriate to watch at 6–9 months
Rather than looking for "processing" signs, notice these everyday listening milestones:Responding to sound and voice
- Turns her head or eyes towards your voice or a new sound
- Calms or brightens when she hears a familiar, soothing voice
- Startles or reacts to a sudden loud noise
Early communication
- Babbles with strings of sounds ("ba-ba", "da-da") by around 7–9 months
- Looks at you when you call her name (emerging around 9 months)
- Enjoys back-and-forth sound games like peekaboo
Gentle signals worth a check
- Consistently does not turn towards sounds or your voice
- Little or no babbling by 9 months
- Seems not to startle to loud sounds at all
These are signals to look closer, not a diagnosis. The single most important step at this age is confirming that hearing itself is working well, because clear hearing is the doorway to all later listening and language.
When auditory processing assessment becomes meaningful
Auditory processing difficulty describes trouble making sense of sound even when hearing is normal. Because it depends on language and listening in noise, it is usually only assessable from around 6–7 years. For a baby, the path is different: first a hearing screen, then a general developmental check of how she listens, babbles and connects. If her newborn hearing screen was ever missed or unclear, ask for it now.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 checklist. Our team gently observes how your baby responds to sound, voice and play, and guides you on hearing testing and early support. Learn more about auditory processing difficulties and how early speech therapy nurtures listening and language from the very start.Trusted sources
Guided by WHO on early childhood hearing and development, the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren.org on hearing and communication milestones, and ASHA on auditory development — all paraphrased here for parents.Next step — if you'd like reassurance about your baby's hearing and listening, book a gentle developmental check with our team on WhatsApp: +91 91001 81181.
What to watch
Seek a hearing and developmental check sooner if your baby consistently does not turn towards sounds or your voice, shows little or no babbling by 9 months, or does not startle to loud noises — and confirm her newborn hearing screen was clear.
Try this at home
Play simple sound games — call her name softly from different sides, sing, and pause to let her babble back. These back-and-forth moments build listening and language naturally.
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 auditory processing difficulty be diagnosed in a baby?
No. Auditory processing difficulty depends on language and listening in noise, so it is usually only assessable from around 6–7 years. In a baby, the right step is a hearing screen and a general check of how she responds to sound and voice.
What listening milestones should I expect at 6–9 months?
She should begin turning towards sounds and your voice, babbling sound strings like 'ba-ba', enjoying peekaboo, and starting to look when you call her name by around 9 months.
Should I be worried if my baby ignores sounds?
It is worth a check rather than a worry. If she consistently does not turn towards sounds or your voice, or shows little babbling by 9 months, ask for a hearing test and a developmental check for reassurance and early support.