Gross Motor Function Measure
Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM): What It Assesses
The Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM) is a clinician-administered, observational assessment of large-muscle movement — lying and rolling, sitting, crawling and kneeling, standing, and walking, running and jumping. Used most often with children who have cerebral palsy and other motor conditions, it maps what a child can do today and is especially valued for measuring progress over time. It is play-based and child-friendly, never a test a child can pass or fail.
A careful, structured way to see and celebrate how a child moves — rolling, sitting, crawling, standing and walking — and to track every step of progress.
In short
The Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM) is a clinician-administered assessment that observes how a child performs everyday large-muscle movements — lying and rolling, sitting, crawling and kneeling, standing, and walking, running and jumping. It is used most often with children who have cerebral palsy and other motor conditions, not to label a child, but to map their current movement abilities and to measure change over time as therapy progresses. Think of it as a thoughtful, repeatable snapshot of what a child can do with their body today.What the GMFM assesses
The GMFM looks at gross (large-muscle) motor skills across five everyday areas, often described as dimensions: lying and rolling; sitting; crawling and kneeling; standing; and walking, running and jumping. A trained therapist watches the child attempt a series of natural movement tasks and records how much of each task the child completes — from not yet beginning, to partly managing, to doing it independently. Because the same tasks are observed each time, the GMFM is especially valued for showing progress — the small, meaningful gains a child makes over weeks and months of therapy. There are two well-known versions (the original 88-item form and a shorter 66-item form), and it is designed to be sensitive to change, so even gradual improvements are visible. It is an observational, play-based measure — gentle, hands-on and child-friendly — not a test a child can pass or fail.Why it matters for your child's journey
For families of children with motor differences, the GMFM turns a worry — is my child making progress? — into something a therapist can see and share clearly. It helps a team set realistic, motivating goals, choose the right therapy focus, and show parents tangible movement gains over time. It pairs naturally with tools like the Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS), which describes a child's usual level of movement, so the whole picture guides the plan.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 therapists use validated measures like the GMFM alongside individualised goals, then build a movement plan that may draw on physiotherapy and other supports to help your child move with more confidence.Trusted sources
Guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on motor development and follow-up of children with movement differences; WHO resources on early childhood development and disability; CanChild-related concepts on gross motor classification (as referenced through reputable paediatric and rehabilitation guidance).Next step — If your child has a motor difference or you want to understand and track their movement progress, book a developmental review to discuss whether the GMFM is right for them.
What to watch
Whether a child is reaching large-muscle milestones — steady sitting, crawling, pulling to stand, independent walking — and whether they are making gradual, steady gains in these areas over time rather than staying stuck.
Try this at home
Make movement playful — encourage reaching, rolling, crawling races, and supported standing during everyday play, and gently notice the small new things your child manages from week to week.
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
Is the GMFM a test my child can fail?
No. The GMFM is an observational measure that simply records what a child can do with everyday movements. It has no pass or fail — its purpose is to map current abilities and to show progress over time.
Which children is the GMFM used for?
It is used most often with children who have cerebral palsy and other movement or motor conditions, to map their gross motor abilities and track change as therapy progresses.
How is the GMFM different from the GMFCS?
The GMFM measures and tracks a child's gross motor performance across set tasks, while the GMFCS describes a child's usual overall level of movement. They are often used together to guide a therapy plan.