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ADHD

When to worry about ADHD in an 18-to-24-month-old

At 18–24 months, ADHD cannot yet be meaningfully identified — high energy and short attention are normal toddler behaviour. ADHD is reliably assessed only from around age 4–5. Channel any worry into a general developmental check, never a premature label. Only a clinician can assess.

When to worry about ADHD in an 18-to-24-month-old
ADHD at 18–24 months: when should I worry? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

If your toddler is a whirlwind — never still, into everything — it's natural to wonder about ADHD. Here's the honest, reassuring truth about what that age can and can't tell us.

In short

At 18–24 months, ADHD cannot yet be meaningfully identified — and that is good news, not a gap. High energy, short attention, impulsiveness and constant movement are normal, healthy toddler behaviour. A two-year-old is biologically built to explore, not to sit still. ADHD (ICD-11 6A05) is a recognised condition, but it is only reliably assessed from around age 4–5, when we can tell a true pattern apart from ordinary toddler exuberance. So the right response to worry now is not a signs checklist — it's a gentle, general developmental check.

What is appropriate to watch at this age

Rather than ADHD signs, observe these broad developmental anchors for 18–24 months:
  • Connection — does your child look to you, share smiles, point to show you things?
  • Communication — a growing handful of words and lots of gesture and babble
  • Play — curiosity, simple pretend, responding to their name
  • Settling — can be soothed and re-directed by a familiar adult, most of the time

If any of these foundations seem delayed — not the busyness itself — that's the reason to check, and the check is general, not ADHD-specific.

The science, briefly

Major guidelines (NICE NG87, the AAP, and the WHO's ICD-11) describe ADHD as a persistent pattern of inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity that is excessive for the child's developmental age and shows across settings — something simply not measurable in a toddler. Concern is best channelled early through routine developmental monitoring (the CDC's Learn the Signs. Act Early. milestones are a lovely home guide), not premature labelling.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under the care of a qualified clinician — never from an online form or a worried evening of reading. If your instinct says "let's just check", we welcome it: a warm developmental assessment looks at your child's whole picture against their own baseline, and where support helps, gentle behaviour therapy and family coaching come long before any label. Learn more about ADHD and when it becomes meaningful.

Trusted sources

WHO ICD-11 (6A05, ADHD); NICE NG87 on ADHD diagnosis and management; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org); CDC Learn the Signs. Act Early.; Indian Academy of Pediatrics.

Next step — Trust the instinct to check, not the fear of a label. Book a general developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician for reassurance and a plan.

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.

What to watch

Don't watch the busyness itself — watch the foundations: shared smiles and eye contact, pointing to show you things, a growing handful of words, responding to their name, and being soothable. A delay in these (not high energy) is the reason to seek a general developmental check.

Try this at home

Give your toddler's energy a job: short, active 'do-with-me' games — stacking, posting toys, simple chase — with warm pauses for connection. This builds attention naturally and tells you far more than worrying about stillness ever could.

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 ADHD be diagnosed in a 2-year-old?

No. ADHD is only reliably assessed from around age 4–5, when a true, persistent pattern can be told apart from normal toddler activity. At 18–24 months, high energy and short attention are healthy, expected behaviour, not signs of a disorder.

My toddler never sits still — is that a warning sign?

Constant movement is typical at this age; toddlers are built to explore. It is not, on its own, a sign of ADHD. What is worth checking is the developmental foundations — connection, communication and play — rather than the busyness itself.

What should I do if I'm still worried?

Channel the worry into a general developmental check rather than ADHD-specific screening. A clinician can review your child's whole picture, reassure you, and suggest gentle support if anything needs attention — long before any label would ever be considered.

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