Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder vs Speech and Language Delay
FASD vs Speech and Language Delay: the difference
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) is a lifelong condition caused by alcohol reaching a baby in pregnancy, affecting the brain and body broadly — learning, attention, memory, growth, movement and behaviour, often alongside speech difficulties. Speech and language delay describes a child acquiring talking and understanding more slowly than expected, usually in just that one area and often responding well to focused therapy. Both can look similar early on, which is why a whole-child developmental review matters.
Two children may struggle to talk at the same age — but the story behind those words can be very different, and knowing which is which changes everything.
In short
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) is a lifelong condition caused by alcohol reaching a baby during pregnancy — it affects the developing brain and body broadly, so a child may show learning, attention, memory, growth, movement and behaviour differences alongside speech difficulties. Speech and language delay simply means a child is acquiring talking and understanding more slowly than expected for their age, with no single underlying cause assumed. The key difference: FASD is a known cause with wide-ranging effects, while speech-language delay is a description of one developmental area that often responds well to focused therapy.How they differ
Cause and breadth. FASD has a clear origin — prenatal alcohol exposure — and its effects spread across many domains: a child might have difficulties with memory, planning, attention, emotional regulation, fine and gross motor skills, growth, and sometimes distinctive facial features, in addition to speech and language differences. A speech and language delay, by contrast, is isolated to communication: how clearly a child speaks (speech) and how they understand and use words and sentences (language). Many children with a delay are developing typically in every other area.Pattern over time. A child with a standalone speech-language delay often catches up well with the right support, especially when help starts early. With FASD, communication difficulties usually sit within a wider profile that needs ongoing, joined-up support across learning and behaviour, not just talking.
Why it matters. Both can look similar at age two or three — a quiet child who uses few words. That is exactly why a thorough developmental look at the whole child matters, rather than treating the talking alone. Understanding the bigger picture guides the right kind of help.
When to seek a review
Seek a developmental review if your child is not babbling by around 12 months, has very few words by 18–24 months, is not joining words by age two, is hard to understand, or seems not to understand simple instructions. Mention any concern about alcohol during pregnancy honestly and without fear — it helps clinicians build the fullest, kindest picture. A review is also wise if communication delays come alongside difficulties with attention, memory, movement, growth or behaviour.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 speech therapy team supports a child's talking and understanding, and where a wider profile such as FASD is involved, we build a joined-up plan across communication, learning and behaviour. Early, whole-child support gives every family the clearest path forward.Trusted sources
WHO and CDC on prenatal alcohol exposure and FASD; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on early communication milestones; ASHA on speech and language development and when delays warrant assessment.Next step — If your child's talking seems behind, or you have any concern about pregnancy and alcohol, book a developmental review so the whole picture is understood and the right support starts early.
What to watch
No babbling by ~12 months; very few words by 18–24 months; not joining words by age two; hard to understand; not following simple instructions — especially if alongside difficulties with attention, memory, movement, growth or behaviour.
Try this at home
Talk through your day in short, clear sentences and pause to give your child time to respond — narrate what you are doing, name objects, and celebrate every attempt at a sound or word, however small.
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 a speech and language delay?
Yes. Children with FASD very often have speech and language difficulties as part of a wider profile that also affects learning, attention, memory and behaviour. The difference is that with FASD the communication difficulty sits within a broader picture, while a standalone speech-language delay affects communication alone.
Is a speech delay always a sign of something serious?
No. Many children are simply slower to start talking and catch up well, especially with early support. A developmental review helps clarify whether it is an isolated delay or part of a wider pattern, so the right help can begin promptly.
Should I mention alcohol during pregnancy to the clinician?
Yes, honestly and without fear. Sharing this helps clinicians build the fullest and kindest picture of your child. It is information that guides better support — never a judgement.