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Jumping

Evidence-Based Therapy Approaches That Build Jumping in Early Childhood

Jumping is built through task-specific, repetition-rich physiotherapy and play-based motor programmes that grade the skill from two-foot lift-off to height and distance, alongside strength, postural-control and bilateral-coordination training delivered with motor-learning principles. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

Evidence-Based Therapy Approaches That Build Jumping in Early Childhood
How Therapy Builds Jumping in Early Childhood — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Jumping is a milestone of power, balance and bilateral coordination — and it is built through play, repetition and graded challenge.

In short

Jumping in early childhood is built through physiotherapy and play-based motor programmes that grade the skill from two-foot lift-off to height, distance and landing control. The evidence base favours task-specific, repetition-rich practice (the child actually jumping in varied contexts), strength and postural-control training for the trunk, hips and calves, and motor-learning principles — external focus, errorless graded challenge and high-frequency reps. Most typically developing children jump with two feet off the ground around 24 months; therapy supports those building toward it.

The science

  • Task-specific practice — motor-learning evidence shows skills improve fastest when practised directly: jumping off low steps, over lines, onto targets. Variability of practice (different heights, surfaces, directions) builds transferable control.
  • Strength and power training — jumping demands eccentric calf, quadriceps and gluteal force plus anticipatory postural control. Graded squat-to-stand, hopping and bouncing activities build the force-generation and landing absorption needed.
  • Bilateral coordination and balance — symmetrical two-foot take-off and landing rely on dynamic balance and core stability, trained through single-leg stance, trampoline and obstacle work.
  • Motor-learning delivery — high repetition, external attentional cues ("jump to the star"), and challenge-point matching keep the task achievable yet effortful.
  • Functional, play-led context — embedding practice in games sustains engagement and the volume of reps that drives change.

When to refer

Refer for a developmental motor review if a child shows no attempt to jump by ~30 months, persistent asymmetry, toe-walking, frequent falls, or global gross-motor delay — to screen for coordination, tone or neuromuscular contributors.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care. We profile gross-motor readiness through a clinician-administered structured assessment and build a graded plan via our physiotherapy team. See more on jumping and how the AbilityScore works.

Trusted sources

AAP / HealthyChildren.org gross-motor milestone guidance; CDC developmental milestone checklists; EACD early childhood motor-development consensus.

Next step — Refer a child for a gross-motor assessment with a Pinnacle physiotherapist to build a graded jumping programme. Book a physiotherapy assessment.

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 no attempt to jump by around 30 months, asymmetrical take-off or landing, persistent toe-walking, frequent falls, or broader gross-motor delay — each warrants a developmental motor review.

Try this at home

Give a child plenty of low-risk jumping practice in play — hopping over a rope on the floor, bouncing on a soft surface, or jumping off a low step onto a cushion — with high repetition and a fun target to aim for.

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 do children typically jump with both feet off the ground?

Most typically developing children achieve a two-foot jump clear of the ground around 24 months, with hopping on one foot emerging later, around 3–4 years. Wide variation is normal; persistent absence by ~30 months warrants a motor review.

Which therapy discipline leads work on jumping?

Paediatric physiotherapy leads gross-motor skill-building such as jumping, often alongside occupational therapy where postural control, sensory regulation or play participation also need support.

What makes jumping practice effective?

High-volume, task-specific repetition across varied heights and surfaces, combined with strength and postural-control work and motor-learning delivery — external cues and graded challenge that keep the task achievable yet effortful.

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