Fine Motor Delay
When to worry about Fine Motor Delay at 18-24 months
Between 18 and 24 months, fine motor skills are still emerging and vary widely. It's worth a gentle clinician check — not panic — if your toddler isn't using a thumb-finger pinch, can't stack two blocks, shows no interest in scribbling or self-feeding, or a skill has faded. A cluster of lags, or delay alongside slow walking or few words, deserves prompt review.
If you've watched your toddler struggle to pick up a raisin or stack a couple of blocks, and wondered whether their little hands are keeping pace — your noticing is exactly the right instinct.
In short
Fine motor delay means a child's small-muscle skills — using fingers and hands to grasp, pinch, stack and scribble — are lagging clearly behind what most children manage at their age. Between 18 and 24 months, it's normal for skills to be uneven and emerging. It's worth a gentle check, rather than worry, if by around 18 months your child isn't using a neat finger-and-thumb pinch, can't stack two small blocks, shows no interest in scribbling, or strongly favours one hand. None of these alone is a diagnosis — they're simply signals that a developmental review is sensible.What's typical, and what's worth a check
Fine motor skills build gradually, and toddlers vary a great deal. Around this age, many children are beginning to feed themselves with a spoon, turn chunky board-book pages, point with one finger, and make marks with a crayon. Gentle flags worth raising with a clinician include:- Grasp — not yet using a thumb-and-finger pinch to pick up small objects (like a piece of cereal) by around 18 months.
- Building — unable to stack two or three blocks by 18–24 months.
- Tool use — no attempt to hold a crayon or scribble, or no try at self-feeding with a spoon.
- Hand preference — strongly using only one hand and ignoring the other very early (true hand dominance usually settles later, around 2–3 years).
- Quality — hands that seem unusually stiff, floppy or trembly when reaching.
A single late skill in an otherwise thriving toddler is rarely cause for alarm. What matters more is a cluster of skills lagging, a skill that was there and then faded, or fine motor delay alongside slow walking, few words or limited eye contact. Those patterns deserve prompt review rather than waiting.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online checklist or a single observation. Our therapists first build your child's own developmental baseline across fine motor, gross motor, play and communication, then shape playful, strengths-led support. If hand skills are the worry, our occupational therapy team uses everyday play — stacking, scribbling, pincer games — to build steadily on what your child can already do. The aim is clarity and a confident path forward, not a label.Trusted sources
CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early" guidance; American Academy of Pediatrics developmental surveillance recommendations; WHO ICD-11 framework for developmental difficulties.Next step — Trust what you've noticed. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician so your toddler's hand skills can be reviewed gently and early.
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
Raise it with a clinician if by 18-24 months your toddler isn't using a thumb-and-finger pinch, can't stack two blocks, shows no interest in scribbling or self-feeding, or strongly uses just one hand. A cluster of lags, a lost skill, or fine motor delay alongside slow walking or few words warrants a prompt check.
Try this at home
Offer small, safe pincer-practice play each day - dropping pasta into a cup, posting coins through a slot, or chunky-crayon scribbling. Watch how your toddler's fingers and thumb work together, and jot down what they manage well so you have a useful record to share.
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 it normal for my 18-month-old not to scribble yet?
Many toddlers begin marking with a crayon between 15 and 24 months, so a little later is often within the normal range. If there's no interest in holding a crayon or making marks by around 18-24 months, alongside other lagging hand skills, it's worth mentioning at a developmental check - not a reason for alarm on its own.
My toddler strongly favours one hand - should I worry?
True hand dominance usually settles between 2 and 3 years. A very strong, early preference for one hand while ignoring the other before that can sometimes be worth a clinician's look, as it may reflect how both sides are working. Most often it's part of normal variation, but a gentle review brings reassurance.
Can fine motor delay improve with support?
Yes - many toddlers respond well to playful, structured support. Occupational therapists build hand skills through everyday play like stacking, posting and scribbling, working from what your child can already do. Early, gentle support often helps skills catch up steadily.