Developmental Language Disorder vs Dyslexia (Reading Impairment)
DLD vs Dyslexia: The Difference in Young Children
Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) is a difficulty with spoken language — understanding and using words and sentences — not explained by another condition, and it shows up early in talking and listening. Dyslexia is a specific reading and spelling difficulty, especially linking letters to sounds, in a child whose oral language and thinking are otherwise on track, and it usually becomes visible once reading begins. In short, DLD is mainly about talking and listening while dyslexia is mainly about reading and writing — though they can overlap and a child can have both. An accurate, individualised assessment matters far more than the label.
Two children may both struggle in the classroom — one finds it hard to understand and use spoken words, the other finds it hard to crack the code of reading — and knowing which is which changes everything about how we help.
In short
Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) is a difficulty with spoken language itself — understanding what others say and putting words and sentences together to be understood — that isn't explained by another condition. Dyslexia (a reading impairment) is a specific difficulty with reading and spelling, particularly linking letters to sounds (decoding), in a child whose understanding and intelligence are otherwise on track. In short: DLD is mainly about talking and listening, dyslexia is mainly about reading and writing — though they can overlap, and a child can have both.How they differ in everyday life
A young child with DLD may be late to talk, use short or jumbled sentences, struggle to find the right word, mix up the order of words, or find it hard to follow instructions and stories. These signs show up in spoken conversation long before reading is even on the table — often from the toddler and preschool years. Because language underpins so much, DLD can also affect friendships, behaviour and later learning.Dyslexia tends to become visible a little later, once formal reading begins (usually around age 6–7). Here a child often understands and speaks well but struggles to sound out words, reads slowly and effortfully, confuses similar-looking words, spells unpredictably, and finds rhyming or breaking words into sounds tricky. Their thinking and oral language are typically strong — it's the written code that's the sticking point.
The key contrast: DLD lives in the oral language system, dyslexia in the reading and spelling system. They share roots (both can involve how the brain processes the sounds of language), which is why some children show features of both — and why an accurate, individualised assessment matters far more than a label.
When to seek a review
Consider a developmental review if, by the preschool years, your child speaks much less than peers, is hard to understand, struggles to follow simple instructions or tell a simple story. Once school reading begins, seek a review if your child finds letter–sound work, rhyming or early reading and spelling persistently hard despite good teaching — especially if reading feels effortful while talking does not. Early support helps in both cases.The Pinnacle way
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore®, a clinician-administered structured assessment, and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. Our team can tell apart developmental language disorder and reading difficulties, then build an individualised plan — often beginning with speech therapy to strengthen the language and sound foundations that both spoken language and reading rest upon.Trusted sources
ASHA on spoken language disorders and the distinction between language and reading difficulties; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on speech, language and early-literacy milestones; NICE and WHO guidance on identifying and supporting communication and learning differences in children.Next step — If your child finds talking, listening or early reading harder than peers, book a developmental review so we can pinpoint where the difficulty lies and start the right gentle support early.
What to watch
DLD signs: late or limited talking, hard-to-understand speech, jumbled sentences, word-finding trouble, difficulty following instructions or telling stories. Dyslexia signs (from ~age 6–7): good talking but slow effortful reading, trouble sounding out words, weak rhyming, unpredictable spelling. Seek a review if talking, listening or early reading is persistently harder than peers.
Try this at home
Read aloud together daily and play sound games — clap out syllables, find rhyming words, spot words that start with the same sound. This playfully strengthens the spoken-language and letter-sound skills that both speaking and reading depend on.
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 dyslexia?
Yes. The two share some underlying roots — particularly how the brain processes the sounds of language — so a child can have features of both. This is one reason an individualised, clinician-led assessment matters more than a single label, as it helps us support the whole child rather than just one area.
At what age can each be identified?
DLD often becomes noticeable in the toddler and preschool years, because it shows up in spoken language. Dyslexia usually becomes clearer once formal reading begins, around age 6–7. Before that age, we watch and support early language and sound-awareness skills rather than applying a reading label too soon.
Does DLD mean my child is not intelligent?
No. DLD is a specific difficulty with spoken language and is not a reflection of overall intelligence. Many children with DLD or dyslexia have strong thinking and reasoning skills — the difficulty is in one particular area, which the right support can strengthen over time.