Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder vs Gross Motor Delay
FASD vs Gross Motor Delay in Young Children
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) and gross motor delay are different things. FASD is a lifelong, whole-child condition caused by alcohol exposure before birth, affecting growth, learning, behaviour and sometimes movement together. Gross motor delay is narrower — it simply means big-movement milestones like sitting, standing or walking are arriving later, for any of many reasons. Motor delay can be one part of FASD, but most children with a motor delay do not have FASD. Only a full clinical look at the whole child can tell which picture applies.
Two very different things can look alike in a wobbly toddler — one is about how a baby developed before birth, the other is simply about when movement skills arrive.
In short
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) describes a range of lifelong differences in a child's brain and body caused by exposure to alcohol during pregnancy — it can affect growth, facial features, learning, attention, behaviour and movement all together. Gross motor delay is much narrower: it simply means a child is reaching big-movement milestones — like sitting, crawling, standing or walking — later than expected, whatever the cause. Put simply: FASD is a whole-child condition with a known prenatal cause, while gross motor delay is a single area of development that is behind and may have many different reasons, including FASD itself.How they differ in everyday life
With FASD, the picture is usually broader than movement alone. Alongside any motor wobbliness, you might notice slower growth, distinctive facial features, difficulties with attention and memory, trouble with learning or impulse control, and challenges with everyday routines. It stems from alcohol exposure before birth and stays with a child across their lifetime, though the right support changes outcomes enormously.With gross motor delay, the concern is focused on the large muscles and coordination — a baby who is slow to hold up their head, roll, sit unsupported, pull to stand or take first steps. A child can have a gross motor delay and be developing beautifully in every other area — speech, social connection, problem-solving. The delay may be temporary, may reflect low muscle tone, or may be one early sign of a bigger picture (which is why it is always worth checking).
So motor delay can be a part of FASD, but most children with a gross motor delay do not have FASD at all. The honest answer to which one a child is showing comes only from looking at the whole child, not the movement alone.
When to seek a look
Trust your instinct if your baby consistently misses big-movement milestones, feels unusually floppy or stiff, or is not bearing weight on their legs by the expected age. And if alcohol was part of pregnancy, a gentle, non-judgemental developmental check is wise regardless of milestones — early support makes a real difference. A clinician will gather the full story and guide next steps.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 your child's movement, growth, learning and connection together, then builds a plan — often drawing on occupational therapy and physiotherapy for motor skills. Learn more about Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder and explore our full [services](/).Trusted sources
The CDC and HealthyChildren on fetal alcohol spectrum disorders and on developmental milestones; the American Academy of Pediatrics on monitoring early motor development. These describe FASD as a prenatal-exposure condition and motor delay as a milestone concern with many possible causes.Next step — Worried about your child's movement, or about alcohol during pregnancy? Book a developmental screening and let a clinician look at the whole picture with warmth and care.
What to watch
A baby who consistently misses big-movement milestones (head control, sitting, pulling to stand, walking), feels unusually floppy or stiff, or does not bear weight on the legs by the expected age. If alcohol was part of pregnancy, seek a developmental check regardless of milestones.
Try this at home
Give your baby plenty of supervised floor and tummy time every day — reaching, rolling and pushing up against the floor are how big-muscle skills are built. Cheer every small effort, not just the milestone itself.
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 a gross motor delay without having FASD?
Yes — most children with a gross motor delay do not have FASD. A delay in big-movement skills can come from many causes, including low muscle tone or simply a slower-than-average pace, and many children catch up well with the right support. A clinician looks at the whole picture to understand the cause.
Is gross motor delay part of FASD?
It can be. Because FASD affects how the brain and body developed before birth, some children with FASD do show motor coordination or balance difficulties. But motor delay is only one possible feature among many, and on its own it does not point to FASD.
My child walked late — should I worry about FASD?
Walking late by itself is not a sign of FASD. FASD is linked to alcohol exposure during pregnancy and usually involves a broader pattern across growth, learning and behaviour. If you have concerns about either movement milestones or pregnancy exposure, a gentle developmental check gives clear, reassuring answers.