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Pretend-Play

What a Delay in Pretend-Play Means for Your Child

Pretend-play usually begins around 18 months and grows through the toddler years. A delay is not a diagnosis — it's a reason for a gentle developmental check, especially if it travels with delays in talking, gestures or social connection. Because pretend-play is closely linked to language and social understanding, noticing it early gives a fuller picture, and playful support works best at this age.

What a Delay in Pretend-Play Means for Your Child
What a Delay in Pretend-Play Means for Your Child — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When your toddler feeds a teddy or 'talks' on a toy phone, that little act of imagination is a window into how their mind and social world are blossoming.

In short

Pretend-play — pretending a block is a car, feeding a doll, or 'cooking' in a toy kitchen — usually begins around 18 months and grows richer through the toddler years. A delay in pretend-play is not a diagnosis and not something to fear; on its own it simply means it's worth a gentle look, especially if it travels with delays in talking, gestures or social connection. Early, playful support works beautifully at this age, so a calm developmental check now turns a small question into a clear next step.

What to watch at 12–36 months

Pretend-play develops on a gentle curve, and every child arrives in their own time. These are reasons for a clinician's eye — not alarm:
  • By ~18 months — little pretend acts like pressing a toy phone to the ear, or pretending to drink from an empty cup.
  • By ~24 months — feeding or putting a doll to sleep, using one object to stand for another (a banana as a phone).
  • By ~3 years — short pretend stories, role-play, and including you or other children in the game.
  • Gentle flags — little or no make-believe by age 2–3, play that stays only lining-up or spinning objects, or pretend-play that hasn't grown alongside few words, limited pointing or sharing, or little response to name.

Pretend-play is closely woven with language and social understanding, so noticing it alongside those areas gives the fullest picture.

The science

Symbolic, make-believe play reflects a child's growing ability to hold an idea in mind and share it — a foundation for language, problem-solving and relationships. Because of this link, paediatric guidance treats pretend-play as a useful marker within wider developmental monitoring, not as a single pass-or-fail test.

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 clinicians watch how your child plays, communicates and connects, then build playful support around strengths. You can read more about pretend-play and how our behaviour therapy team nurtures social and imaginative skills.

Trusted sources

CDC 'Learn the Signs, Act Early' developmental milestones for play and social skills; American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on toddler play and developmental monitoring; WHO Nurturing Care framework on early learning through play.

Next step — Trust what you notice in everyday play. Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician for a warm, clear review of your child's play and milestones.

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

Seek a developmental check if there's little or no make-believe by age 2–3, play that stays only lining-up or spinning objects, or pretend-play that hasn't grown alongside few words, limited pointing or sharing, or little response to name. On its own a delay is simply a reason to look gently, not to worry.

Try this at home

Join your toddler's play and model one small pretend act — 'feed' the teddy, or pretend to sip from an empty cup — then pause and see if they copy or build on it. Short, joyful turns like this nurture imagination beautifully.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 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

At what age should my toddler start pretend-play?

Little pretend acts — like pressing a toy phone to the ear or pretending to drink from an empty cup — usually begin around 18 months, and grow into feeding dolls and role-play by age 2–3. Every child arrives in their own time.

Is a delay in pretend-play a sign of autism?

Not on its own. Pretend-play is one of many areas clinicians look at. It becomes more meaningful when it travels with delays in talking, pointing, sharing or responding to name — which is why a gentle developmental check, not an online list, gives the clearest picture.

Can pretend-play be encouraged at home?

Yes. Join your child's play, model simple pretend acts, and offer open-ended toys like dolls, blocks and toy kitchens. Following their lead and pausing for them to respond builds imagination and language together.

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