Developmental Language Disorder vs Childhood Apraxia of Speech
DLD vs Childhood Apraxia of Speech in Young Children
Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) and Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) both make a young child hard to understand, but they are different. DLD is a difficulty with language itself — understanding, word-finding and building sentences. CAS is a motor-planning difficulty — the child knows what to say but struggles to coordinate the mouth to say it, so words come out inconsistently. A child may have one, the other, or both, which is why a careful speech-language assessment matters.
Both can make a young child's talking harder to follow — but one is about the words and sentences, the other is about getting the mouth to move.
In short
Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) is a difficulty with language itself — understanding words, finding the right words, putting sentences together, and following what others say. Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) is a difficulty with the motor planning of speech — the child knows exactly what they want to say, but the brain struggles to send the right signals to coordinate the lips, tongue and jaw to say it clearly. In short: DLD is about the message; CAS is about making the sounds. A child can have one, the other, or sometimes both.How they differ in everyday life
With DLD, you might notice a child who speaks clearly but uses short or muddled sentences, mixes up word order, struggles to learn new words, has trouble following instructions, or finds it hard to tell a story or answer questions. The speech sounds often come out fine — it's the language wrapped around them that's tricky.With CAS, the child usually understands well and has plenty they want to say, but the words come out inconsistently — the same word may sound different each time they try it, longer words fall apart, and they may grope or struggle visibly to position their mouth. Vowels can be distorted, and speech can be very hard for unfamiliar listeners to understand, even though the child's ideas are rich.
The overlap can confuse families: both can make a young child hard to understand, and both can make a child reluctant to talk. That is exactly why a careful listen by a speech-language professional matters — the pattern of the difficulty, not just its presence, points the way.
When to seek a look
If by around 2 years your child has very few words, is consistently hard to understand, seems to struggle to get words out, or isn't combining words by 2½–3 years, a speech-language assessment is worthwhile. Earlier support is gentler and more effective — and you never need a confirmed label to begin.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 listen closely to how your child talks and understands, then tailor speech therapy to the real picture — language-building for DLD, and motor-planning approaches for apraxia. Explore more across our [services](/).Trusted sources
The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association distinguishes language disorders from motor-speech disorders such as apraxia; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren describe expected early communication milestones and when to seek a speech-language assessment.Next step — If your young child is hard to understand or slow to talk, book a speech and language screening so a clinician can tell which pattern fits — and start the right support early.
What to watch
Watch for a child who speaks clearly but uses muddled or very short sentences and struggles to follow instructions (more like DLD), versus a child who has lots to say but whose words come out inconsistently — the same word sounding different each time, mouth visibly groping, hard for strangers to understand (more like apraxia).
Try this at home
Talk through everyday moments slowly and face-to-face — name what you're doing, pause to let your child try, and celebrate the attempt, not the perfection. For tricky words, say them clearly and let your child watch your mouth.
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 DLD and apraxia of speech?
Yes. Some children have difficulty both with language (understanding and building sentences) and with the motor planning of speech sounds. A speech-language assessment helps untangle the pattern so therapy can target both layers.
Will my child grow out of it?
Some young children catch up, but persistent difficulty — especially being very hard to understand or struggling to get words out — deserves a proper look. Early speech therapy is gentle and effective, and you don't need to wait for a confirmed label to begin support.
How do therapists tell them apart?
A speech-language professional listens to the pattern: DLD shows up in muddled sentences and word-finding with clear sounds, while apraxia shows inconsistent sound production and visible struggle to coordinate the mouth even when language understanding is strong.