Autism Spectrum vs Developmental Coordination Disorder
Autism Spectrum vs Developmental Coordination Disorder in young children
Autism Spectrum and Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) can look similar in young children but differ at the root. Autism is mainly a social-communication difference — eye contact, shared attention, language, play, repetitive interests and sensory sensitivity. DCD is mainly a motor difference — clumsiness, falls, and trouble with dressing, cutlery, scissors and drawing, in a child who otherwise connects well. They can overlap, and a child can have both, so a clinician's whole-child assessment is what tells them apart.
Two children may both seem 'a bit behind' — but one is mostly puzzled by people, and the other is mostly fighting their own body.
In short
Autism Spectrum is mainly about how a child connects and communicates — social back-and-forth, shared attention, language and play — often alongside repetitive interests and strong sensory likes and dislikes. Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD) is mainly about movement — a child whose coordination, balance and fine-motor skills lag well behind their age, so dressing, holding a spoon, running or drawing feel clumsy and effortful. The simplest way to hold it: autism is primarily a social-communication difference; DCD is primarily a motor-skill difference. They can look alike at a glance, and a child can have both.How they differ day to day
In autism, you may notice less eye contact, limited pointing or showing, fewer to-and-fro 'conversations' (in words or gestures), delayed or unusual language, a strong need for sameness, deep focused interests, and big reactions to sounds, textures or lights. The thread running through it is social connection and communication.In DCD, the child usually wants to connect and communicates well, but their hands and body don't cooperate. You might see late sitting or walking, frequent trips and falls, trouble with buttons, cutlery, scissors or pencils, messy or laboured drawing, and avoiding play that needs coordination — not because they aren't interested, but because it is genuinely hard.
Where they overlap: a child with autism may also be clumsy, and a frustrated child with DCD may withdraw from group play and look socially reluctant. That is exactly why a careful, whole-child look matters — the same outward behaviour can have very different roots, and only a clinician can tell them apart.
When to seek a check
If your child is missing social-communication milestones, or their movement and self-care skills are clearly behind same-age friends and it's affecting everyday life or play, a developmental screening is wise. Early support helps in both — the sooner the right path is matched, the more you build on your child's strengths.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 observes how your child connects, communicates, plays and moves, then matches the right support — from social-communication and speech therapy to motor-focused occupational therapy. Learn more about autism and how we walk alongside your family.Trusted sources
The American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on developmental milestones; the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on social communication; the World Health Organization (ICD-11) on how these conditions are described.Next step — Unsure whether it's connection, coordination, or both? Book a developmental screening and let a Pinnacle clinician map your child's strengths and the right way forward.
What to watch
Think about the main thread: a child who misses social cues, makes little eye contact, has delayed or unusual language and strong sensory reactions points toward autism; a child who wants to connect and talks fine but is clumsy, falls often, and struggles with buttons, cutlery, scissors or drawing points toward DCD. Either pattern — or both together — is worth a developmental screening.
Try this at home
During everyday play, watch two things separately: does your child share moments with you (looking, pointing, showing, back-and-forth) and does their body cooperate (steady walking, holding a spoon, stacking blocks). Noticing which one is harder helps the clinician find the right path.
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
Can a child have both autism and DCD?
Yes. Movement difficulties are common in autism, and some children meet the picture for both. That is exactly why a careful, whole-child assessment by a clinician matters — to see which areas need support and how to blend it.
My child is clumsy but very social — is that autism?
A child who connects warmly, shares attention and communicates well but is markedly clumsy and struggles with dressing, cutlery or drawing fits more with Developmental Coordination Disorder than autism. A clinician can confirm after observing your child.
At what age can these be told apart?
Early signs of both can appear in the toddler and preschool years, and screening is appropriate whenever you have concerns. A formal distinction is made by a qualified clinician through structured assessment, not from a single behaviour at home.
Do they need different therapy?
Often, yes. Autism support frequently centres on social-communication and speech therapy, while DCD support is largely occupational therapy focused on motor skills. A clinician matches and blends these to your individual child.