Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder vs Selective Mutism
FASD vs Selective Mutism in Young Children
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) and Selective Mutism can both leave a young child quiet, but they are very different. FASD is a lifelong neurodevelopmental condition caused by alcohol exposure before birth, affecting learning, growth, attention, behaviour and sometimes facial features — and its difficulties appear across every setting. Selective Mutism is an anxiety-based condition where a child speaks freely in safe places like home but cannot speak in others like school; their language is intact. The key clue is consistency: FASD challenges are everywhere, while Selective Mutism silence is selective.
Both can leave a young child quiet and hard to reach — but one begins before birth, and the other lives in anxiety.
In short
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) and Selective Mutism can look alike at a glance — a child who is quiet, struggles to keep up, or seems different from peers — but they come from completely different places. FASD is a lifelong neurodevelopmental condition caused by alcohol exposure in the womb, affecting learning, growth, behaviour and sometimes facial features. Selective Mutism is an anxiety-based condition where a child can speak comfortably in safe settings (usually home) but consistently cannot speak in others (often school) — their language is intact; their voice is locked by fear. In short: FASD is about how the brain developed before birth; Selective Mutism is about anxiety in the present.How they differ in everyday life
A child with FASD may show challenges across many areas at once — slower learning, difficulty with memory and attention, trouble managing emotions or understanding consequences, smaller growth, and sometimes distinctive facial features. The difficulties are broad and present in every setting, not just one, because they reflect how the developing brain was affected. Language may be delayed across the board, at home and outside.A child with Selective Mutism typically talks, laughs and chatters freely at home with close family — but goes silent at preschool, with relatives, or in shops. This is not stubbornness or rudeness, and it is not a language delay; the words are there. It is intense social anxiety that physically freezes speech in specific situations. Outside those triggers, their development is usually on track.
The key clue: consistency. FASD difficulties appear everywhere; Selective Mutism silence is selective — present in some places, absent in others. That single pattern often points a clinician in the right direction.
When to seek a look
If your child is quiet in some settings but speaks freely at home, gently note where and with whom — that map is gold for a clinician assessing anxiety. If there are broader delays across learning, growth, attention and behaviour in every setting — especially with known prenatal alcohol exposure — a wider developmental assessment is the right path. Either way, early support helps enormously, and neither condition is a verdict on what your child can achieve.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 communicates and copes across different settings, then shapes support — drawing on speech therapy and behavioural therapy as needed. Learn more about Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder.Trusted sources
The CDC on fetal alcohol spectrum disorders and their lifelong effects; the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association on selective mutism as an anxiety-based communication condition; the American Academy of Pediatrics on supporting children's development and emotional wellbeing.Next step — Worried about your child's silence or development? Book a developmental screening and let a clinician map the pattern and match the right support.
What to watch
A child who speaks freely at home but goes silent at school or with relatives — while otherwise developing well — points toward Selective Mutism (anxiety). Broad delays in learning, growth, attention and behaviour across every setting, especially with known prenatal alcohol exposure, point toward FASD. Note where and with whom your child does and does not speak.
Try this at home
If your child goes quiet in some places, never pressure them to speak — it deepens the freeze. Instead, lower the spotlight: let them point, nod or whisper, keep settings warm and low-pressure, and celebrate small attempts. For broader delays, build short, playful learning moments into daily routine.
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 Selective Mutism?
Yes, though they are distinct. A child with FASD may also develop anxiety, including selective mutism. A clinician can tease apart what is a neurodevelopmental difference and what is anxiety-driven, then tailor support for both.
Is Selective Mutism just extreme shyness?
No. Shyness usually eases with time and warmth. Selective Mutism is a consistent, anxiety-based inability to speak in specific settings despite speaking comfortably elsewhere — it often needs gentle, structured support to overcome.
How can I tell the difference at home?
Watch for consistency. If your child speaks freely at home but not at school, that selective pattern suggests anxiety (Selective Mutism). If difficulties with learning, growth, attention and behaviour appear in every setting, a wider developmental assessment is wise.