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Emotional

What is emotional development in children?

Emotional development is how children gradually learn to recognise, express, understand and manage their own feelings, and to read and respond to others' feelings. It begins in infancy with comfort and connection, and grows across early childhood into self-soothing, empathy and resilience. It follows a broadly predictable sequence but at each child's own pace, and warm, responsive relationships are essential to it.

What is emotional development in children?
Emotional Development in Children — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Long before a child can name a feeling, they are already learning to feel it, soothe it, and share it with you.

In short

Emotional development is the gradual way children learn to recognise, express, understand and manage their feelings — and to read and respond to the feelings of others. It begins in infancy with the simple back-and-forth of comfort and connection, and grows over years into self-soothing, empathy, patience and resilience. Like walking or talking, it unfolds in a broadly predictable sequence, but every child moves through it at their own pace — and warm, responsive relationships are the soil it grows in.

What emotional development looks like as it grows

Think of emotional development as a story that builds across early childhood. In the first year, babies show feelings through cries, coos and smiles, and learn that a trusted adult will respond — this is the foundation of emotional security. Between 1 and 3 years, toddlers feel big emotions intensely (delight, frustration, fear) and begin, slowly, to manage them with your help; tantrums are a normal part of this stage, not a failure. From around 3 to 6 years, children start naming feelings, showing empathy, taking turns, waiting, and recovering from upsets a little more independently.

Emotional development weaves closely with social skills, language and play — a child often needs words and relationships to make sense of what they feel. Common healthy signs include seeking comfort when upset, showing affection, beginning to label emotions ("I'm cross"), and gradually coping with small disappointments. It is worth a gentle developmental review if, beyond the toddler years, a child shows very little emotional connection, cannot be comforted, rarely shares feelings or interest with others, or if intense distress is not easing with age and support.

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 form. Our team looks at emotional, social, language and play skills together as one whole child, and where helpful draws on behavioural therapy to build emotional regulation, alongside everyday family strategies. You can explore more on our [home pathways](/).

Trusted sources

The WHO International Classification of Functioning describes emotional functions (b152) as how we generate, regulate and express feelings; HealthyChildren and the AAP outline the typical stages of social-emotional growth across early childhood.

Next step — If you are curious about where your child sits or want reassurance, book a friendly developmental screen — it is the simplest way to celebrate strengths and catch any support needs early.

What to watch

Beyond the toddler years: very little emotional connection or affection, being hard to comfort, rarely sharing feelings or interest with others, or intense distress that is not easing with age and support — alongside any delays in language, play or social skills.

Try this at home

Name feelings out loud as they happen — yours and your child's: "You're frustrated the tower fell, that's hard." Putting words to emotions, calmly and often, helps children learn to recognise and manage them.

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 does emotional development begin?

It begins in infancy. From the first months, babies express feelings through cries and smiles and learn that a trusted adult will respond — this early comfort and connection is the foundation of all later emotional growth.

Are tantrums a normal part of emotional development?

Yes. Between roughly 1 and 3 years, toddlers feel emotions very intensely and are only beginning to manage them. Tantrums are a normal stage of learning, not a failure — and they ease as a child grows and you help them name and cope with feelings.

When should I seek a review about my child's emotions?

Consider a gentle developmental review if, beyond the toddler years, your child shows very little emotional connection, cannot be comforted, rarely shares feelings or interest with others, or if intense distress is not easing with age and support. A review most often brings reassurance and the right early help.

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