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Picky Eating

What causes picky eating in a 1-year-old?

Picky eating at one year is usually normal: growth slows so appetite drops, toddlers assert independence, and they are naturally cautious of new foods. It rarely signals a problem. Speak to a clinician if there is choking, faltering growth, or a shrinking, narrow range of accepted foods.

What causes picky eating in a 1-year-old?
Why Is My 1-Year-Old Suddenly a Picky Eater? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Your one-year-old turned away the very food they loved last week — and you're wondering what changed. The reassuring truth: at this age, fussy eating is usually a sign of healthy development, not a problem.

In short

Picky eating in a one-year-old is overwhelmingly normal and expected. Around the first birthday, growth naturally slows, so appetite dips; toddlers also begin asserting independence and develop a healthy wariness of new foods (called neophobia). Add still-developing chewing skills and sensitivity to taste, texture, smell and temperature, and refusing foods becomes a typical part of learning to eat. It is rarely a cause for alarm.

Why it happens at this age

  • Slower growth, smaller appetite. A baby roughly triples their birth weight in year one; that rapid growth then settles, so they simply need less food and eat less.
  • Emerging independence. "No" is a powerful new skill. Refusing food is one of the few choices a toddler can fully control — it's a developmental milestone in disguise.
  • Neophobia (caution with new foods). Toddlers are biologically primed to be suspicious of unfamiliar tastes and textures. A food may need 10–15 calm exposures before it's accepted.
  • Sensory exploration. Texture, smell, colour and temperature all matter intensely at this age; a child may accept a food one day and reject it the next.
  • Developing oral-motor skills. Chewing and managing lumps is still being mastered, so some refusals are about ability, not preference.

When to look a little closer

Most fussiness fades with patience. But do speak to your paediatrician if you notice: choking, gagging or coughing with most meals; a very narrow range of accepted foods that keeps shrinking; refusing whole food groups or textures completely; faltering weight or growth; or significant distress around every meal. These can signal an oral-motor, sensory or feeding difficulty worth a gentle check.

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 form or this page. If mealtimes feel hard, our feeding and occupational therapy teams support oral-motor and sensory development, and a structured AbilityScore® check can map where your child stands today. [Start here](/) whenever you'd like guidance.

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on toddler feeding and self-feeding (healthychildren.org); WHO infant and young child feeding recommendations (who.int).

Next step — If feeding feels stressful or you'd simply like reassurance, [book a developmental check 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 choking or gagging at most meals, refusal of whole textures or food groups, a shrinking range of accepted foods, faltering weight, or distress around every meal — these warrant a clinician's check.

Try this at home

Offer one tiny portion of a new food alongside a familiar favourite, with no pressure. It can take 10–15 relaxed exposures before a toddler accepts it — keep mealtimes calm and let your child decide how much to eat.

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 picky eating normal at one year old?

Yes. Around the first birthday, growth slows, appetite naturally dips, and toddlers become independent and cautious of new foods. Fussy eating at this age is usually a normal part of learning to eat.

How many times should I offer a new food?

Toddlers often need 10–15 calm, pressure-free exposures before accepting a new food. Keep offering small amounts alongside familiar favourites without forcing it.

When should I worry about my toddler's eating?

Speak to your paediatrician if there is choking or gagging at most meals, refusal of whole textures or food groups, a shrinking range of accepted foods, faltering growth, or distress at every meal.

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