No-Tie Elastic Shoe Laces
No-Tie Elastic Shoe Laces: Are They Right for Your Child?
No-Tie Elastic Shoe Laces are stretchy laces that turn ordinary shoes into slip-ons, letting children dress independently without tying knots. They are a helpful everyday tool for children building fine-motor skills, hand strength and coordination — not a treatment. Many families use them for daily ease while keeping separate playful practice for lace-tying as a skill the child grows into.
Mornings can be a battle when little fingers can't yet manage laces — and that's where a small swap can give your child a big win.
In short
No-Tie Elastic Shoe Laces are stretchy laces that replace ordinary ones, letting your child slip shoes on and off without ever tying a knot. They turn a regular pair of trainers into easy slip-ons, which can be a real help for children still building fine-motor skills, hand strength or the two-handed coordination that bow-tying needs. They are a supportive everyday tool — not a treatment — and they are right for many children working towards independent dressing.How they help and who they suit
Tying laces is genuinely hard: it asks for finger dexterity, bilateral coordination, motor planning and patience all at once. For a child who isn't there yet, elastic laces let them succeed at getting ready by themselves today, building confidence while those skills mature.They can be a good fit if your child:
- Gets frustrated or needs an adult for every shoe
- Has lower hand strength or coordination, or finds laces fiddly
- Wants the independence of putting on "big-kid" shoes alone
- Needs quick, fuss-free transitions (school gate, therapy, play)
A gentle balance to keep in mind: elastic laces remove the practice of tying. So many families use them for daily ease and keep short, playful lace-tying practice as a separate skill your child grows into over time. Always check the fit — the shoe should still hold the heel snugly so it doesn't slip off mid-run.
The Pinnacle way
No single product decides what your child needs — that comes from understanding the whole child. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from a website or an app. Our occupational therapists can show you exactly where tools like these fit alongside hands-on skill-building, and an occupational-therapy plan can pace the move from elastic laces towards true tying. To know your child's starting point, see how the AbilityScore works.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on fostering independence and self-care milestones in young children; healthychildren.org parent resources on dressing and fine-motor development.Next step — Not sure if your child needs the tool or the skill? Book a Pinnacle assessment and let an OT guide you.
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
Check the shoe still grips the heel snugly so it doesn't slip off when your child runs, and watch whether your child wants to learn tying — if so, keep short practice sessions alongside everyday elastic-lace use.
Try this at home
Use elastic laces for busy mornings, but set aside two minutes of fun "bunny-ears" practice a few times a week on a real shoe so your child still grows into tying laces over time.
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
Are No-Tie Elastic Shoe Laces a therapy or a treatment?
No. They are a supportive everyday tool that makes getting ready easier and builds independence. They are not a treatment and do not replace skill-building, which an occupational therapist can guide.
Will using elastic laces stop my child learning to tie shoes?
Not if you keep practising. Elastic laces remove the daily pressure, but lace-tying is a separate skill. Many families use elastic laces for ease and keep short, playful tying practice going so the child still grows into it.
How do I know if elastic laces are right for my child?
They suit children who find laces frustrating, have lower hand strength or coordination, or want to dress independently. If you're unsure whether your child needs the tool or the underlying skill, a Pinnacle occupational therapist can advise.
Are they safe to use?
Generally yes, when fitted correctly. Make sure the shoe still holds the heel snugly so it doesn't slip off during running or play, and supervise younger children with any small fittings.