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DIY Building Blocks

DIY Building Blocks: a smart, simple tool for your child's development

DIY Building Blocks are open-ended stacking and construction toys that build fine-motor control, hand–eye coordination, spatial thinking, problem-solving and shared play. They suit most toddlers and young children — the key is matching block size and challenge to your child's stage and supervising for choking. They support development but never replace a clinician-led assessment.

DIY Building Blocks: a smart, simple tool for your child's development
DIY Building Blocks: building your child's brain through play — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

That tub of colourful blocks on the play mat is doing far more for your child than it looks — it is quietly building the brain.

In short

DIY Building Blocks are simple, open-ended stacking and construction toys — wooden cubes, interlocking bricks, or even safe household items — that your child arranges, balances and rebuilds in their own way. They are a genuinely useful material for most toddlers and young children because they grow fine-motor control, hand–eye coordination, spatial thinking, problem-solving and shared play all at once. For the vast majority of children they are safe, low-cost and "right" — the real question is matching the size and challenge to your child's stage, not whether to use them at all.

Why blocks work so well

When a child grasps, stacks and topples blocks, they are practising the pincer grip, wrist rotation and bilateral coordination that later power buttons, pencils and cutlery. Balancing a tower teaches cause-and-effect and early physics; copying a pattern builds visual-spatial reasoning; building with you or a sibling grows turn-taking, language and joint attention. Because blocks have no single "right" answer, they invite repetition and creativity — exactly the kind of self-directed play the developing brain thrives on.

Match the material to the child: large, chunky soft blocks for little hands under 2 (and always supervise for mouthing and choking), graduating to smaller interlocking bricks and pattern-copying challenges for preschoolers. If your child consistently shows no interest in stacking, can't bring two hands together to build, or by around 18–24 months isn't attempting simple towers, that is worth gently noting — not as a worry, but as something a developmental check can look at calmly.

The Pinnacle way

A material like building blocks supports development, but it is never a substitute for assessment: a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care. If you'd like ideas tuned to your child's exact stage, our occupational therapy team can show you how everyday play like DIY building blocks builds motor and thinking skills step by step.

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on the developmental value of unstructured, open-ended play; CDC developmental milestone resources on fine-motor and problem-solving skills in early childhood.

Next step — Not sure if the blocks should be bigger, smaller or paired with extra support? Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician for play ideas matched to your child.

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

By around 18–24 months most children attempt simple towers and bring both hands together to build. Note gently if your child shows no interest in stacking, can't coordinate two hands, or persistently mouths small pieces — these are things a calm developmental check can look at.

Try this at home

Build alongside your child rather than for them — copy their tower, then add one block and say what you're doing ("up, up, big!"). This turns simple stacking into shared language and turn-taking practice.

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

At what age can my child start playing with building blocks?

Large, soft, chunky blocks suit babies from around 9–12 months with supervision, mainly for grasping and banging. Most children begin genuine stacking around 12–18 months, building taller towers and copying simple patterns through the preschool years.

Are building blocks safe for toddlers?

Yes, with sensible care. Choose blocks too large to be a choking hazard for children under 3, supervise play, and check for sharp edges or loose small parts. As your child outgrows mouthing, you can introduce smaller interlocking bricks.

Can building blocks help if my child has a developmental delay?

They can be a wonderful supportive material, but they are not a treatment on their own. A Pinnacle clinician can show you how to use blocks to target specific motor or thinking goals as part of a proper, personalised plan.

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