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Anti-Slip Grip Tape

Anti-Slip Grip Tape: Is It Right for Your Child?

Anti-slip grip tape is a textured adhesive strip applied to smooth surfaces — stairs, bathroom floors, ramps, footplates — to add friction and reduce slips. It is a low-cost safety and independence aid, not a medical device. It can suit children who are unsteady, learning stairs, or using mobility equipment, but the right support depends on your child's actual balance, coordination and sensory needs, best judged with a clinician.

Anti-Slip Grip Tape: Is It Right for Your Child?
Anti-Slip Grip Tape: Is It Right for Your Child? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

You spotted your little one slipping on the bathroom tiles — and wondered if a strip of textured tape could be the small fix that gives them confidence.

In short

Anti-slip grip tape is a strong, textured adhesive strip you stick onto smooth surfaces — stair edges, bathroom floors, ramps, the footplate of a chair — to give little feet and hands more friction and a surer hold. It is a simple, low-cost safety and independence aid, not a therapy or a medical device. It can be a sensible help for many children, especially those who are unsteady on their feet, who use a walker or wheelchair, or who are just learning to climb stairs — but the right support always depends on your child's actual balance, coordination and sensory needs.

How it helps — and how to judge if it fits

Think of grip tape as removing one source of slips so your child can practise moving with confidence. It is most useful when:
  • Your child slips on wet or polished surfaces (bathrooms, kitchens, stair nosings).
  • They are building stair-climbing or standing balance and need a clear, felt edge to step onto.
  • They use mobility equipment — marking a footplate, transfer board or ramp edge.
  • Your child responds well to clear textured cues under hands or feet.

A few gentle checks before you buy: choose tape rated for indoor or outdoor/wet use as needed; pick a bright, contrasting colour so the edge is easy to see; and watch your child's sensory response — some children find coarse textures overwhelming, so a finer grit may suit better. Grip tape reduces slips, but it does not replace supervision, and it won't address an underlying balance or coordination difficulty — that is where a proper look at your child's motor development matters.

The Pinnacle way

A material like grip tape is one small piece of a bigger picture. Whether it's the right aid — and what else might help your child move more freely — is best decided once we understand how your child's balance, strength and coordination are developing. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a tip sheet or an app. Our occupational therapy team can suggest the simplest aids that fit your home and your child, and you can start by understanding your child's developmental starting point or reading more about anti-slip grip tape.

Trusted sources

US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance on preventing childhood falls and home safety; HealthyChildren.org (American Academy of Pediatrics) advice on home safety for young children.

Next step — Want to know which simple aids truly fit your child? Book a developmental assessment 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 how your child responds to the texture — some children find coarse grit overwhelming and may need a finer grade. Check that the tape stays firmly stuck (lifting edges become a trip hazard), and notice whether slips keep happening despite the tape, which may signal an underlying balance or coordination difficulty worth assessing.

Try this at home

Pick a bright, contrasting colour for stair edges so your child can clearly see where to step — the visual cue helps as much as the grip itself.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · 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 anti-slip grip tape a medical device?

No. It is a simple, low-cost safety aid that adds friction to smooth surfaces. It is not a therapy or a medical device, and it does not treat any underlying difficulty — it just reduces slips so your child can move more confidently.

Where can I use grip tape in my home?

Common spots are stair edges (nosings), bathroom and kitchen floors, ramp edges, and the footplate of a chair, walker or wheelchair. Choose tape rated for wet use in damp areas, and a bright colour so the edge is easy to see.

My child dislikes the rough texture — what should I do?

Some children are sensitive to coarse textures. Try a finer-grit tape, or use it only where it's most needed. If textures often distress your child, mention this to an occupational therapist, who can suggest gentler options.

Will grip tape fix my child's balance problems?

No. Grip tape removes one source of slipping, but it won't address an underlying balance or coordination difficulty. If your child slips often despite the tape, a developmental assessment can help understand why and what support will help most.

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