Motor Development
What is Motor Development in child development?
Motor development is how a child gradually gains control over body movements — gross motor skills like sitting, walking, climbing and jumping, and fine motor skills like grasping, scribbling and using a spoon. It unfolds in a broadly predictable order as the brain, muscles and senses grow together, though every child follows their own timeline. It is a core thread of early childhood development, not a test to pass, and steady forward progress matters more than exact ages.
Every roll, reach, wobble and run is your child writing their own story of movement — and that story has a name: motor development.
In short
Motor development is the way a child gradually gains control over their body's movements — from lifting the head and rolling, to crawling, walking and running (gross motor), and to grasping, pointing, scribbling and using a spoon (fine motor). It unfolds in a broadly predictable order as the brain, muscles and senses grow together, yet every child moves along their own timeline. It is one of the core threads of early childhood development, not a test to pass.How motor development unfolds
Movement skills build in two streams. Gross motor skills use the large muscles — sitting, standing, walking, climbing stairs, jumping and balancing. Fine motor skills use the small muscles of the hands and fingers — picking up small objects, turning pages, threading beads, holding a crayon and managing buttons. Between three and seven years, children typically refine these: running with control, hopping, catching a ball, drawing simple shapes and beginning to write. Each new skill rests on earlier ones, and practice through everyday play is how the brain wires these movements into smooth, confident action. A child who reaches a skill a little later than a friend is usually following their own healthy pattern — what matters is steady forward progress.When to seek a review
Consider a developmental review if you notice a persistent gap compared with peers — such as not walking by around 18 months, frequent falling, very floppy or very stiff movements, difficulty holding objects, or skills that seem to slip backward. Early, playful support helps a capable child build coordination and confidence.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 the whole picture of motor development across gross and fine motor skills, then builds an individualised plan that may draw on occupational therapy where helpful.Trusted sources
WHO ICF framework (b760, control of voluntary movement functions); CDC developmental milestone guidance; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on movement and motor milestones.Next step — If you want to understand where your child is on their movement journey, book a developmental review to map their strengths and start any helpful support early.
What to watch
Not walking by around 18 months, frequent falling, very floppy or very stiff movements, difficulty holding or picking up objects, or movement skills that seem to slip backward compared with peers.
Try this at home
Build motor skills through play — let your child climb, jump, balance on a line and run in open space for gross motor practice, and offer beads to thread, crayons to scribble and buttons to fasten for fine motor strength.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 730 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
What is the difference between gross and fine motor skills?
Gross motor skills use the large muscles for actions like sitting, walking, climbing and jumping. Fine motor skills use the small muscles of the hands and fingers for tasks like grasping, scribbling, threading beads and holding a spoon. Both develop together through everyday play.
At what age should my child be walking?
Most children take their first independent steps between 12 and 18 months, but the range is wide and healthy. If your child is not walking by around 18 months, a gentle developmental review can reassure you and identify any helpful support early.
Is delayed motor development always a problem?
No. Children develop along their own timelines, and reaching a skill a little later than a peer is often a normal variation. What matters most is steady forward progress. A persistent gap or skills slipping backward is worth a review, but it is an invitation to support, not a verdict.