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What a delay in walking means for your child

First independent steps typically come between 12 and 15 months, but the healthy range is wide — many typical toddlers walk at 16–18 months. A walking delay alone is usually a difference in pace, not a diagnosis. A gentle clinical check is wise mainly if a child is not walking at all by 18 months, is not pulling to stand or cruising by around 12 months, loses a skill, or shows stiffness, floppiness or one-sided weakness. Only a Pinnacle clinician can assess — never an online checklist.

What a delay in walking means for your child
What a delay in walking means for your child — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

If your little one is taking their own sweet time to find their feet, while other toddlers seem to be dashing about, it's only natural to wonder what it means.

In short

Most children take their first independent steps somewhere between 12 and 15 months — but the healthy range is genuinely wide, and many confident, perfectly typical children only walk at 16, 17 or even 18 months. A delay in walking on its own is usually just a difference in pace, not a diagnosis. It becomes worth a gentle clinical look mainly when a child is not walking at all by 18 months, or when walking loss, stiffness, floppiness or one-sided weakness appears.

What is normal — and what to watch

Walking is built on months of groundwork: rolling, sitting, crawling, cruising along furniture. Children who bottom-shuffle or skip crawling often walk a little later and still turn out completely fine.

Consider a developmental conversation if you notice patterns that persist, rather than a child who is simply unhurried:

  • Not walking at all by 18 months, despite plenty of floor time and encouragement
  • Not pulling to stand or cruising furniture by around 12 months
  • Losing a skill your child once had (standing, cruising, steps)
  • Stiff, floppy, or markedly one-sided movement, or always favouring one side
  • Walking only on tiptoes persistently, or legs that seem very rigid or very loose
  • Walking delay alongside delays in other areas — speech, play, understanding

These point to a check, never a label — and most have gentle, supportable explanations.

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 a checklist. Our therapists look at your child's whole movement story — muscle tone, balance, strength and how the pieces fit together — and offer warm, play-based occupational therapy and movement support when it is genuinely needed. Most late walkers simply need time, floor play and bare-foot practice.

Trusted sources

CDC developmental milestone guidance on gross-motor skills (cdc.gov); AAP family guidance on motor development (healthychildren.org); WHO motor milestone study windows (who.int).

Next step — If your child is past 18 months without steps, or you notice any loss of skill or one-sided weakness, the kindest move is a calm clinical check. Book a developmental screen with a Pinnacle therapist.

What to watch

Watch for patterns that persist rather than an unhurried child: not walking at all by 18 months, not pulling to stand or cruising by around 12 months, losing a skill once gained, stiff or floppy or one-sided movement, persistent tiptoe walking, or walking delay alongside delays in speech, play or understanding. Occasional wobbly steps, bottom-shuffling and late-but-steady progress are usually normal.

Try this at home

Give your toddler plenty of bare-foot floor time and safe furniture to cruise along — pulling to stand and side-stepping build the strength and balance that walking needs. Cheer their efforts without rushing; confidence matters as much as muscle.

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 child be walking?

Most children take independent steps between 12 and 15 months, but the healthy range is wide — many typical toddlers only walk confidently at 16 to 18 months. Walking later than the average, on its own, is usually just a difference in pace.

My baby skipped crawling — is that a problem?

Not usually. Many children bottom-shuffle, roll, or move straight from sitting to cruising and pulling up. These children often walk a little later and still develop completely typically. What matters more is steady overall progress.

When should I have my child's walking checked?

Consider a gentle clinical check if your child is not walking at all by 18 months, is not pulling to stand or cruising by around 12 months, loses a skill once gained, or shows stiffness, floppiness, persistent tiptoe walking or one-sided weakness.

Does late walking mean my child has a developmental problem?

Rarely. A walking delay alone is most often just timing. It points to a check, never a diagnosis. Only a qualified clinician at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre can assess your child's movement properly — never an online form or checklist.

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