Motor
What is motor readiness, and why does it matter for my child?
Motor readiness is a child's developing ability to control and coordinate their body — both the big movements like sitting, crawling and walking (gross motor) and the small, precise movements like grasping and holding a crayon (fine motor) — at a level that matches their growth. It matters because these movement skills are the foundation for feeding, dressing, play, social confidence and early learning. When motor foundations are steady, a child can focus their energy on exploring and learning rather than struggling with their body.
Long before a child writes their first letter or runs across a playground, their body is quietly building the foundations that make those moments possible — that quiet groundwork is motor readiness.
In short
Motor readiness is your child's developing ability to control and coordinate their body — both the big movements (sitting, crawling, walking, jumping) and the small, precise movements (grasping, pinching, holding a crayon) — in a way that matches their stage of growth. It matters because these movement skills are the launch-pad for almost everything else: feeding, dressing, play, social confidence, and even early writing and learning. When motor foundations are steady, a child can put their energy into exploring and learning rather than struggling to stay upright or hold a spoon.What motor readiness looks like
Motor readiness has two broad strands that grow together:- Gross motor — the larger muscles and whole-body control: head steadiness, rolling, sitting, crawling, pulling to stand, walking, climbing, balance and coordination.
- Fine motor — the small, precise hand and finger movements: reaching, grasping, transferring a toy between hands, the pincer grip, stacking, scribbling and eventually using utensils and crayons.
Underpinning both are core strength, balance, posture and the brain's movement-planning — the way the body senses where it is in space and organises a smooth, purposeful action. A child building motor readiness shows steady progress at their own pace: more control, more independence, and growing confidence to try new physical challenges. There is a wide and perfectly normal range in timing, so it is the overall direction and steadiness of progress that matters most, not hitting a date on the calendar.
Why it matters — and when to check in
Motor readiness quietly supports speech (breath and oral control), play (the doorway to social skills), self-care (feeding, dressing) and later school skills (sitting to attend, holding a pencil). Strong foundations free a child to focus on learning rather than on the effort of movement. It is worth a friendly developmental review if your child seems consistently behind peers in reaching their movement milestones, loses skills they once had, shows marked stiffness or floppiness, strongly favours one side of the body, or if you simply have a quiet worry — early support is gentle, playful and most effective when it begins early.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 therapists look at how your child moves, balances and uses their hands together, then build a playful, individualised plan — often drawing on physiotherapy and occupational therapy to strengthen and refine these foundations. You can explore more about how we support every child at our [home](/) hub.Trusted sources
The American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on motor milestones and physical development; CDC's developmental milestone guidance on movement and coordination; NICE guidance on reviewing developmental concerns.Next step — If you would like reassurance or a clear picture of your child's movement foundations, book a developmental assessment with our team for warm, expert guidance and the right early support.
What to watch
Consistently lagging behind peers in movement milestones, losing skills once gained, marked stiffness or floppiness, strongly favouring one side of the body, or any quiet ongoing worry about how your child sits, moves, balances or uses their hands.
Try this at home
Build motor readiness through play: tummy time and floor play for core strength, climbing and balance games for big muscles, and threading beads, stacking blocks or squishing dough for little hands — no drilling needed, just everyday joyful movement.
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 should my child reach their motor milestones?
There is a wide and perfectly normal range. What matters most is steady progress in the right direction rather than hitting an exact date. Head steadiness, rolling and sitting come in the first months; crawling, pulling to stand and walking through the first year and into the second; refined hand skills like the pincer grip and scribbling develop alongside. If progress seems stalled or skills are lost, a friendly review brings clarity.
What is the difference between gross motor and fine motor skills?
Gross motor skills use the larger muscles for whole-body movements — sitting, crawling, walking, jumping and balance. Fine motor skills use the small muscles of the hands and fingers for precise actions — grasping, pinching, stacking and holding a crayon. Both grow together and both are part of motor readiness.
Can I help my child's motor readiness at home?
Absolutely, and play is the best way. Tummy time, floor play, climbing, balance games, threading beads, stacking and dough play all build strength and coordination naturally. If you ever feel something is not quite progressing, a developmental review offers reassurance and a clear plan.