Dysgraphia (Written Expression Impairment) vs Gross Motor Delay
Dysgraphia vs Gross Motor Delay: What's the Difference?
Dysgraphia is a difficulty with written expression — forming letters, spacing, spelling and getting ideas on paper — usually noticed once schoolwork begins around age 6–7, even though the child speaks and thinks well. Gross motor delay is when large whole-body milestones such as sitting, crawling, walking and jumping arrive later than expected, and is spotted much earlier, often in infancy or toddlerhood. Dysgraphia affects the precise act of writing; gross motor delay affects big body movement. They can occasionally overlap, since core and shoulder stability support a steady writing hand, so a clinician should clarify which is involved.
One is about the hand that struggles to write words; the other is about the whole body learning to move — and telling them apart changes everything.
In short
Dysgraphia is a difficulty with written expression — forming letters, spacing, spelling and getting ideas onto paper — even when a child understands and can speak well. Gross motor delay is when the large-muscle milestones — sitting, crawling, walking, running, jumping, climbing — arrive later than expected. In short: dysgraphia affects the fine, precise act of writing and is usually noticed once schoolwork begins (around age 6–7); gross motor delay affects big whole-body movement and is spotted much earlier, often in infancy or the toddler years.How they differ in everyday life
Dysgraphia shows up at the desk, not the playground. A child may have great ideas and chat fluently, yet their writing is laboured, messy, inconsistently sized or spaced, painfully slow, or full of spelling slips that don't match their spoken vocabulary. They may grip the pencil oddly, tire quickly, or avoid writing tasks. Because it's tied to written language, it becomes meaningful to assess only once formal writing is being taught — typically from around 6–8 years.Gross motor delay shows up far earlier and across the whole body. You might notice a baby who is late to hold their head steady, sit unsupported, crawl or pull to stand; or a toddler who walks late, seems wobbly, tires easily, avoids stairs or struggles to run and jump like peers. Because early movement underpins so much else, delays here are worth checking promptly rather than waiting.
Why the distinction matters
They can look unrelated, yet sometimes overlap — strong core and shoulder stability (a gross-motor foundation) supports the steady hand needed for writing, so a child with motor difficulties may also find handwriting hard. The key is what's being affected: whole-body movement points towards a motor pathway and physiotherapy/occupational support; written output with intact speech and movement points towards a learning-profile review. A clinician untangles which is which — and whether both are in play.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 moves, holds, writes and expresses ideas, then recommends the right support — from occupational therapy for handwriting and fine-motor skills to physiotherapy-led movement work. Learn more about dysgraphia and how we assess it.Trusted sources
The CDC's developmental-milestone guidance on early gross motor skills; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on movement milestones and learning differences in writing.Next step — Unsure whether it's writing, movement, or both? Book a developmental screening and let a clinician map your child's strengths and needs.
What to watch
Watch for a child who speaks and thinks well but writes slowly, messily or with odd spacing and grip once school begins (possible dysgraphia), versus a baby or toddler who is late to sit, crawl, walk, run or climb and seems wobbly or tires easily (possible gross motor delay).
Try this at home
Build the foundation through play: for writing, try drawing in sand or shaving foam and chunky crayons on a vertical surface to strengthen the hand; for movement, make daily games of climbing, jumping and balancing. Notice what your child enjoys and what they quietly avoid — that tells you where to look.
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 can dysgraphia be identified?
Because dysgraphia is about written expression, it becomes meaningful to assess only once formal writing is being taught — typically from around 6 to 8 years. Before then, watch and support fine-motor play; if you have concerns, a developmental check can guide you.
Is gross motor delay noticed earlier than dysgraphia?
Yes. Gross motor delay involves big whole-body milestones like sitting, crawling and walking, so it is often spotted in infancy or the toddler years — much earlier than dysgraphia, which appears once writing begins.
Can a child have both dysgraphia and gross motor delay?
Sometimes, yes. Strong core and shoulder stability support the steady hand needed for writing, so motor difficulties can affect handwriting too. A clinician untangles which is involved and whether both need support.
Which therapy helps with each?
Handwriting and fine-motor difficulties are often supported through occupational therapy, while whole-body movement delays involve physiotherapy-led work. A clinician matches the right blend after a proper assessment.