Preschool Language Scales, 5th Ed
What is the PLS-5 and what does it assess?
The Preschool Language Scales, 5th Edition (PLS-5) is a clinician-administered, play-based assessment of early language for children from birth to about 7 years 11 months. It measures two sides of communication: Auditory Comprehension (understanding language) and Expressive Communication (using words and sentences), which together give a Total Language picture. It is one tool among several and is most meaningful when read alongside a child's history, play and everyday communication — never as a label on its own.
A gentle, play-based way to understand how well a young child grasps words and uses them — that is what the PLS-5 sets out to capture.
In short
The Preschool Language Scales, 5th Edition (PLS-5) is a widely used, clinician-administered assessment of early language for children from birth up to around 7 years 11 months. It looks at two sides of communication together — Auditory Comprehension (how well a child understands language) and Expressive Communication (how well a child uses words, gestures and sentences). It is delivered through warm, play-based and picture activities, so it feels natural to the child while giving the clinician a clear, structured picture of where language is flowing well and where a little support may help.What the PLS-5 assesses
The PLS-5 is built around two core scales that, combined, give a Total Language picture:- Auditory Comprehension — how a child takes in and understands language: attending to sounds and speech, recognising words, following instructions, and grasping concepts such as size, number, time and grammar as they grow.
- Expressive Communication — how a child gets their meaning across: early sounds and babble, first words and gestures, vocabulary, sentence-building and storytelling as they mature.
Because it spans from infancy through the early school years, the activities shift with age — from observing how a baby responds to voices and play, to picture-based tasks and conversation for older preschoolers. The PLS-5 is one tool among several a speech-language clinician may use; it is most meaningful when read alongside a child's history, play, hearing and everyday communication, not in isolation. A single test never defines a child — it simply helps a clinician understand strengths and next steps.
When it may be used
A speech-language clinician may draw on the PLS-5 when there are questions about a child's understanding or talking — for example late first words, difficulty following instructions, or limited sentences compared with peers. Noticing a difference early is an invitation to support, not a label, and many early-language gaps respond beautifully to the right, playful help.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. Where a tool such as the PLS-5 is helpful, our clinicians use it within a fuller picture of your child's communication, then shape an individualised plan that may include speech therapy and other supports.Trusted sources
The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) on assessing early language and communication; the CDC and HealthyChildren guidance on communication milestones in young children; WHO resources on early child development.Next step — If you have questions about how your child understands or uses words, book a developmental review so a clinician can choose the right assessment and map a supportive plan.
What to watch
Late first words, difficulty following simple instructions, limited vocabulary or short sentences compared with peers, or little response to voices and sounds in a baby — gentle signals that a clinician may explore a child's language more closely.
Try this at home
Build language through everyday play — narrate what you do ('we're washing the red cup'), pause to let your child respond, and read picture books together, naming and pointing as you go.
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
What ages is the PLS-5 used for?
The PLS-5 is designed for children from birth up to around 7 years 11 months, with activities that shift to suit each age — from observing how a baby responds to voices, to picture and conversation tasks for older preschoolers.
Is the PLS-5 a diagnosis?
No. The PLS-5 is one assessment tool that helps a speech-language clinician understand a child's language. A diagnosis is never made from a single test — it comes only from a qualified clinician considering the whole picture, including history, play and everyday communication.
What two areas does the PLS-5 measure?
It measures Auditory Comprehension (how well a child understands language) and Expressive Communication (how well a child uses words, gestures and sentences). Together these give a Total Language picture.