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doesn't smile back

What does it mean if my child doesn't smile back?

A social smile usually appears around 6–8 weeks and is established by about 3 months; a baby not yet smiling back most often just needs more time, especially if born early (count from the due date). Seek a gentle check if there is no social smile by around 3 months or if smiling fades. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What does it mean if my child doesn't smile back?
When Your Baby Doesn't Smile Back — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

A baby who hasn't yet smiled back can stir real worry — but a single milestone is one small note, not the whole song of your child's development.

In short

A social smile — your baby smiling back when you smile or coo — usually appears around 6 to 8 weeks, and is well established by about 3 months. If your baby is not yet smiling back, it most often simply means a little more time is needed, especially if they were born early (count from the due date, not the birth date). It becomes worth a gentle developmental check if there is no social smile by around 3 months, or if smiling fades after it appeared. A missing smile on its own is not a diagnosis of anything — it is just one observation to watch alongside the bigger picture.

What a smile tells us — and what else to notice

The social smile is one of the first signs that your baby is connecting with you. But smiling rarely travels alone, so look at the whole pattern of how your baby relates:
  • Eye contact — does your baby look towards your face and hold your gaze, even briefly?
  • Responsiveness — do they settle to your voice, turn towards sounds, or brighten when you come close?
  • Cooing and expressions — gurgles, changing facial expressions, and lively movement when you interact.
  • Born early? — a premature baby reaches milestones on their corrected age; a baby born six weeks early may smile back six weeks later than expected, which is entirely normal.
  • Mood and alertness — a tired, hungry or unwell baby may simply not be in a smiling mood; try again when calm and rested.

Many babies who are slow to social-smile catch up beautifully with no concern at all. The point is not to alarm you, but to help you watch warmly and confidently.

When to seek a gentle check

Consider a developmental check if there is no social smile by around 3 months of age (corrected for prematurity), if your baby rarely makes eye contact, does not seem to respond to your voice or face, or if smiling once present then disappears. Bring it up at your routine well-baby visit — your paediatrician can reassure you or guide a simple next step.

The Pinnacle way

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. If you would like reassurance, a structured clinician assessment builds a clear picture of your child's social and communication development, and early-intervention therapy gently supports connection where it helps. Explore more about [Pinnacle Blooms Network](/) and how we walk beside families.

Trusted sources

AAP / HealthyChildren.org guidance on early social milestones and the social smile; CDC developmental milestone checklists for infants; WHO guidance on early childhood development and responsive caregiving.

Next step — Want gentle reassurance about your baby's smiling and connection? Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician.

What to watch

Watch for no social smile by around 3 months (corrected for prematurity), little or no eye contact, no response to your voice or face, or smiling that appeared and then faded — and mention any of these at your well-baby visit.

Try this at home

Try smiling games when your baby is calm, fed and alert — get close, about 30cm from their face, smile, coo and pause to give them time to respond. Bright, unhurried face-to-face moments invite that first smile.

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

At what age should my baby smile back at me?

A social smile — smiling back in response to your face or voice — usually appears around 6 to 8 weeks and is well established by about 3 months. If your baby was born early, count from the due date rather than the birth date.

My baby isn't smiling back yet — is something wrong?

Most often it simply means a little more time is needed, especially if your baby was premature, tired, hungry or unwell. A single missing milestone is not a diagnosis. Consider a gentle check if there is no social smile by around 3 months or if smiling fades after appearing.

Does prematurity affect when my baby smiles?

Yes. A premature baby reaches milestones on their corrected age. A baby born six weeks early may smile back about six weeks later than expected, which is entirely normal.

When should I speak to a clinician about my baby not smiling?

Mention it at your routine well-baby visit if there is no social smile by around 3 months (corrected for prematurity), if your baby rarely makes eye contact or respond to your voice, or if smiling appeared and then disappeared.

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