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Tourette Syndrome

What to Expect as Your Child with Tourette Syndrome Grows Up

For most children with Tourette Syndrome, tics begin around ages 5–7, peak in the early teens, and ease significantly into late adolescence and adulthood. What most shapes daily life is often co-occurring attention, anxiety or sleep needs, all of which are highly supportable. With understanding and the right support, children with Tourette Syndrome grow, learn and thrive. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to Expect as Your Child with Tourette Syndrome Grows Up
Tourette Syndrome: What the Journey Ahead Looks Like — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Tourette Syndrome is a journey, not a destination — and for most children, the path ahead is far brighter than that first diagnosis day may feel.

In short

For most children, Tourette Syndrome improves over time. Tics typically begin around ages 5–7, reach their most noticeable point in the early teens (around 10–12), and then ease significantly through late adolescence and into adulthood for the majority. Many young adults find their tics become mild, well-managed, or barely noticeable. With understanding, the right support, and attention to any co-occurring needs like attention or anxiety, your child can grow, learn, work and thrive fully.

What the journey often looks like

  • The waxing and waning pattern — tics naturally come and go in waves, change form (one tic fades, another appears), and flare with excitement, tiredness or stress. This is expected and not a sign things are worsening.
  • The teenage peak, then improvement — tics are often most prominent in the early teens, which can coincide with self-consciousness. The reassuring news: for most, this is the peak, and the years that follow bring steady easing.
  • Adulthood — by the late teens and twenties, many people experience markedly reduced tics; a smaller number have persistent tics, but these are usually milder than in childhood.
  • The bigger picture is rarely tics alone — what most affects daily life is often the associated areas: attention (ADHD), anxiety, obsessive features, or sleep. Supporting these well makes the biggest difference to confidence, friendships and school success.
  • Self-understanding empowers — as children grow, helping them understand their tics, explain them calmly to peers, and feel unashamed builds resilience that lasts a lifetime.

How support helps along the way

Behavioural approaches such as habit-reversal and comprehensive behavioural intervention for tics (CBIT) can help older children and teens gain a sense of control. Just as important is a supportive school environment, addressing any learning or attention needs, and nurturing self-esteem. Therapy is tailored to your child's profile — not the label.

When to seek a check

Seek a developmental and clinical review if tics cause pain or injury, significantly disrupt school or sleep, or are accompanied by big worries about attention, mood, anxiety or compulsive behaviours — these companion areas are very supportable. Any sudden, severe change always deserves prompt medical attention.

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 app or online form. Our clinicians build a precise picture of your child's strengths and needs through a clinician-administered structured assessment, then shape support around attention, confidence and any co-occurring needs, including behavioural and developmental therapy. Explore more about how we [support families on every developmental journey](/).

Trusted sources

WHO ICD-11 (Tourette syndrome, 8A05.00); American Academy of Pediatrics guidance via HealthyChildren.org on tic disorders and their typical course; CDC information on Tourette Syndrome describing the usual peak in early adolescence and improvement into adulthood.

Next step — Want a clear plan and reassurance for the years ahead? Book an assessment 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

Watch for tics that cause pain or injury, that significantly disrupt sleep or school, or that appear alongside difficulties with attention, anxiety, mood or compulsive behaviours — these companion areas are very supportable. Any sudden or severe change deserves prompt medical attention.

Try this at home

Stay calm and unhurried about tics — never ask your child to 'stop'. Tics often ease when a child feels relaxed and accepted, so a low-pressure, understanding home does more good than any reminder ever could.

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

Will my child's tics go away as they grow older?

For most children, tics ease significantly through late adolescence and into adulthood. Tics usually peak in the early teens (around 10–12) and then steadily reduce. A smaller number of people have tics that persist, but these are usually milder than in childhood.

Why do my child's tics keep changing?

Tics naturally wax and wane — they come and go in waves, change form over time, and flare with excitement, tiredness or stress. This pattern is completely expected and is not a sign that things are getting worse.

What matters most for my child's future with Tourette Syndrome?

Often it is not the tics themselves but the associated areas — attention, anxiety, mood, obsessive features or sleep — that most affect daily life. Supporting these well, alongside a child's confidence and self-understanding, makes the biggest difference to friendships, school and adult life.

Can therapy help my child manage their tics?

Yes. Behavioural approaches such as habit-reversal and comprehensive behavioural intervention for tics (CBIT) can help older children and teens gain a sense of control, while support for confidence, school and any co-occurring needs strengthens overall wellbeing.

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