Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder vs Intellectual Disability
FASD vs Intellectual Disability in Young Children
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) describes the lifelong developmental effects caused by alcohol exposure before birth — it names the cause and often brings facial, growth and brain-based learning, attention and behaviour differences. Intellectual Disability is not a cause but a description of significant difficulty in both thinking-and-learning and everyday practical skills, whatever the reason. A child can have both, but many children with FASD have a typical IQ and struggle instead with attention, memory and self-regulation. The label matters less than the individual profile of strengths and needs.
Both can affect how a child learns and grows — but one tells you the cause, and the other describes the level of support a child needs today.
In short
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) describes the lifelong effects on a child's development caused by alcohol exposure before birth — it tells you the cause and often comes with a recognisable pattern of facial features, growth differences and brain-based learning, attention and behaviour challenges. Intellectual Disability (ID) is not a cause — it is a description of significant difficulty in both thinking-and-learning skills and everyday practical skills, whatever the reason. A child can have FASD and meet the criteria for intellectual disability — but many children with FASD have a normal IQ and instead struggle with attention, memory, judgement or emotional regulation.How they actually differ
Think of it this way: *FASD answers why, and intellectual disability answers how much support*.FASD* is a diagnosis given when there is prenatal alcohol exposure and a characteristic mix of features. These can include subtle facial differences (a smooth upper lip, thin upper lip, small eye openings), slower physical growth, and — most importantly — brain-based difficulties: trouble with attention, planning, memory, learning from consequences, emotional control, and connecting cause and effect. A child with FASD may be bright and verbal yet find daily routines, judgement and self-regulation genuinely hard. The wider word spectrum* reminds us these effects range from mild to significant.Intellectual Disability is diagnosed when a child shows meaningful difficulty in both intellectual functioning (reasoning, problem-solving, learning) and adaptive functioning (self-care, communication, social and practical skills for everyday life), beginning in the developmental period. It says nothing about why — the cause could be genetic, prenatal (including FASD), birth-related, or unknown.
So the two are not opposites and not the same: FASD is one possible cause of intellectual disability, but it also brings challenges that exist even when IQ is in the typical range.
Why this matters for your child
The label matters less than the profile of strengths and needs. Two children can carry the same word and need very different help. What guides support is a careful look at how your child learns, communicates, regulates emotions and manages daily tasks — and then building scaffolding around those real needs. Early, structured support changes outcomes profoundly for both groups.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 clinicians map your child's full developmental picture — learning, attention, emotional regulation and everyday skills — and build a plan drawing on occupational therapy and behavioural therapy, with speech and language support where needed. Learn more about Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder.Trusted sources
The CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics describe FASD as caused by prenatal alcohol exposure with brain-based and physical features; the World Health Organization (ICD) frames intellectual developmental disorder as significant limitation in intellectual and adaptive functioning arising in the developmental period.Next step — Worried about how your child is learning or coping day to day? Book a developmental screening and let a Pinnacle clinician build a clear picture of your child's strengths and needs.
What to watch
Watch for a child who struggles with attention, memory, planning, emotional control or learning from consequences — and how they manage everyday tasks like self-care and following routines. Difficulties in both learning and daily practical skills, or alongside known prenatal alcohol exposure, are worth a developmental check.
Try this at home
Keep instructions short, concrete and one step at a time, and pair words with a picture or gesture. Children with brain-based learning differences cope far better with predictable routines and gentle repetition than with long verbal explanations.
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 FASD and intellectual disability?
Yes. FASD can be one cause of intellectual disability, so some children meet criteria for both. However, many children with FASD have a typical IQ and instead struggle with attention, memory, planning and emotional regulation.
Is FASD the same as intellectual disability?
No. FASD names a cause — alcohol exposure before birth — and a pattern of physical and brain-based features. Intellectual disability describes significant difficulty in both learning and everyday practical skills, whatever the cause.
Does a normal IQ rule out FASD?
No. A child with FASD can be bright and verbal yet still find attention, judgement, daily routines and emotional control genuinely hard. The brain-based challenges of FASD exist even when IQ is in the typical range.
What should I do if I'm worried?
Book a developmental screening. A clinician will look at how your child learns, communicates, regulates emotions and manages daily tasks, then build support around those real needs.