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Dyscalculia (Mathematics Impairment)

What is Dyscalculia (Mathematics Impairment)?

Dyscalculia (ICD-11 6A03.2) is a specific, persistent difficulty learning and using number concepts — counting, quantities, number facts, place value — despite typical ability and teaching. It is not low intelligence or poor effort. Because formal arithmetic is only emerging early on, a specific learning disorder label is generally meaningful from around age 6–8, after real maths exposure. Targeted, structured support works well.

What is Dyscalculia (Mathematics Impairment)?
Dyscalculia (Mathematics Impairment): What It Is — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

A child who reads well but freezes at numbers may be telling you something specific — that is the pattern dyscalculia describes.

In short

Dyscalculia (ICD-11 6A03.2, developmental learning disorder with impairment in mathematics) is a specific, persistent difficulty in learning and using number concepts despite typical learning opportunities and overall ability. A child may struggle with counting, recognising quantities, recalling number facts, or grasping place value far more than expected for their age. It is not a sign of low intelligence or poor effort — it reflects how the brain processes numerical information, and it responds well to targeted, structured support.

The science, briefly

Dyscalculia centres on the number sense — the intuitive feel for how big or small quantities are, and how they relate. Early signs that may emerge as formal maths begins include difficulty linking a number word to a quantity, counting on fingers long after peers, trouble remembering simple sums or times tables, confusion with place value (tens, units), and anxiety or avoidance around number tasks. It often sits alongside difficulties with sequencing, time-telling and money. Importantly, because formal arithmetic is only just developing in the early years, a specific learning disorder label is generally meaningful from around age 6–8, once a child has had real exposure to structured maths teaching. Before that age, the right stance is to nurture number play, watch progress, and seek a developmental review if the gap is wide or the child is distressed — not to rush to label.

When to seek a review

Consider a structured developmental review if a school-age child consistently lags well behind peers in number work despite good teaching, shows strong avoidance or anxiety around maths, or if difficulties persist across a year of support. Early, accurate understanding turns frustration into a clear plan.

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, never from an app or checklist. Our pathway pairs special education with individualised number-sense building, shaped to each child's dyscalculia profile, drawing on 2.5 billion+ learning data points across 70+ centres.

Trusted sources

WHO ICD-11 (developmental learning disorder with impairment in mathematics); CDC developmental and learning milestones; NICE guidance on learning difficulties and support.

Next step — Book a developmental learning review at your nearest Pinnacle Blooms Network centre to understand your child's number profile and build a clear support plan.

What to watch

Difficulty linking number words to quantities, counting on fingers long after peers, trouble recalling simple sums or times tables, confusion with place value, problems with time and money, and anxiety or avoidance around number tasks despite good teaching.

Try this at home

Make numbers playful and concrete — count stairs, share snacks into equal groups, use coins to shop — so quantity is something your child sees and touches, not just memorises.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10

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 dyscalculia a sign that my child is not intelligent?

No. Dyscalculia is a specific difficulty with processing number information and is unrelated to overall intelligence. Many children with dyscalculia are bright and capable in other areas — they simply need number concepts taught in a structured, concrete way.

At what age can dyscalculia be identified?

Because formal arithmetic only develops once structured maths teaching begins, a specific learning disorder in mathematics is generally meaningful from around age 6–8. Before that, the focus is on nurturing number play and monitoring progress rather than labelling.

Can dyscalculia be helped?

Yes. With targeted, structured support that rebuilds number sense step by step, children make real progress. Early understanding also reduces maths anxiety and protects confidence.

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