Stool Withholding
When to worry about stool withholding in your child
Stool withholding — clenching, leg-crossing, hiding or refusing to poo — is common between 2 and 6 years and usually starts after one painful motion. It is about fear, not defiance, and responds well to early gentle support. Worry and see your doctor when it lasts beyond a week or two, or comes with hard or painful stools, soiling, tummy pain, blood, poor appetite or weight loss.
When a toddler holds back a poo, it can feel worrying — but noticing the pattern and asking gentle questions is exactly the right, loving first step.
In short
Stool withholding — when a child clenches, crosses their legs, hides, or refuses to pass a poo — is very common between 2 and 6 years, often after one painful or hard motion. It is usually about fear of pain, not naughtiness, and most children respond beautifully to early, gentle support. Worry — and see your doctor soon — when withholding lasts more than a week or two, comes with hard or painful stools, soiling of underwear, tummy pain, blood, poor appetite, or any loss of weight.What to watch at 2–6 years
Many children hold back after a single uncomfortable poo, learning to fear the toilet. Gentle signs the pattern needs a doctor's eye:- Holding posture — clenching buttocks, going up on tiptoes, crossing legs, stiffening, hiding behind furniture, or looking flushed and tense when the urge comes.
- Hard or painful stools — large, dry, pebble-like or very wide stools, or crying and straining on the toilet.
- Soiling (encopresis) — runny or smeary marks in the underwear; this is often liquid leaking past a hard stool, not deliberate, and is a sign to seek help.
- Tummy signs — recurring belly pain, a swollen tummy, reduced appetite, or feeling generally unwell.
- Red flags needing prompt review — blood in the stool, weight loss or poor growth, vomiting, or withholding that began in early infancy.
The aim is not alarm — a withholding cycle left to continue can stretch the bowel and become harder to settle, so early, calm support works best.
When to act
See your GP or paediatrician soon if withholding lasts beyond a week or two, if there is soiling, ongoing pain, blood, or any growth concern. Most children do very well with reassurance, a softer-stool plan guided by a doctor, a calm unhurried toilet routine, and praise for sitting rather than for performing. Trust what you observe every day — it is valuable information.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. Because withholding often links to routine, sensory comfort and self-help skills, our occupational therapy team can help build a relaxed, confident toileting routine, and a developmental assessment gives a calm, whole-child picture.Trusted sources
American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) guidance on constipation, toilet learning and stool withholding in young children; NICE guidance on childhood constipation including withholding behaviour; CDC developmental and toileting milestones.Next step — Trust what you've noticed. Speak with your doctor about the stool pattern, and book a developmental review with a Pinnacle clinician for gentle support around toileting confidence.
What to watch
See a doctor if withholding lasts more than a week or two, or comes with hard/painful or very wide stools, soiling or smearing in underwear, recurring tummy pain or swelling, poor appetite, blood in the stool, or weight loss. Withholding posture — clenching, tiptoes, crossing legs, hiding — is a sign to support early before the cycle sets in.
Try this at home
Make toilet time calm and unhurried — a footstool under the feet, a few quiet minutes after meals, and warm praise simply for sitting (not for producing). Keep a short note of how often poos happen and how hard they are; it gives your doctor a clear picture.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10
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 stool withholding the same as constipation?
They are linked but not identical. Withholding is the behaviour of holding back a poo, often from fear of pain. It frequently leads to constipation because the stool stays longer, becomes harder and is then more painful — which makes a child hold back even more. Breaking that cycle early, with a doctor's help, is the key.
Why does my child clench and run away instead of going to the toilet?
This is classic withholding posture — clenching the buttocks, going on tiptoes, crossing legs or hiding. It looks like refusing to go, but the child is actually trying hard NOT to go, usually because a previous poo hurt. It is fear, not defiance, and responds to gentle reassurance rather than pressure.
My child's underwear has runny marks — is that diarrhoea?
Often it is the opposite. Soft or runny leaking (soiling) can be liquid stool escaping past a hard, stuck poo lower down. It is not deliberate and your child usually cannot feel it. It is a sign to see your doctor for a proper plan rather than to scold.
When should I see a doctor straight away?
Seek prompt review if there is blood in the stool, weight loss or poor growth, vomiting, a very swollen tummy, or if the withholding began in early infancy. Otherwise, see your GP or paediatrician soon if it lasts beyond a week or two or comes with soiling or ongoing pain.