Global Developmental Delay
When to worry about Global Developmental Delay at 18–24 months
At 18–24 months, worry is reasonable if your child is behind in two or more areas at once — movement, words, understanding, play — or has lost skills. One slow area often catches up; a pattern across several is the real flag. Worry is a reason to check, not a diagnosis.
If your little one seems to be taking their own time across many areas at once, the worry is real — and checking is the kindest, most hopeful next step.
In short
Global Developmental Delay (GDD) means a child under five is significantly behind in two or more areas of development at once — such as movement, speech, understanding, social skills or daily self-help — rather than just one. At 18–24 months, it's worth a check (not a panic) if your child is not yet walking, has very few or no words, isn't pointing or sharing interest, doesn't follow a simple instruction, or has lost skills they once had. One slow area is common and often catches up. A pattern of delay across several areas is the real flag — and a reason to assess, not a diagnosis in itself.What to watch by 18–24 months
- Movement — not walking by 18 months, very unsteady, or floppy/stiff muscle tone
- Communication — fewer than ~6–10 words, not pointing, not responding to their name
- Understanding — can't follow "give me the ball" or point to a body part
- Play & social — little pretend play, limited eye contact or shared smiles
- Any loss of words, skills or eye contact previously present — check promptly
The science, briefly
WHO ICD-11 reserves the term Global Developmental Delay for under-fives precisely because young brains are still unfolding — many children simply need time, and some need support. Frameworks like the CDC's milestone checklists and India's RBSK 4-Ds screening exist so concerns are caught early, when the developing brain is most responsive. Identified early, outcomes improve markedly; the goal is always support, never a label.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under a qualified clinician — never from an online form. Our clinician measures your child against their own AbilityScore baseline, looks for causes, and builds a plan through early intervention — drawing on 25 million+ therapy sessions across 70+ centres.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11; CDC Learn the Signs, Act Early; Indian Academy of Pediatrics; AAP (HealthyChildren.org); RBSK developmental screening.Next step — The kindest thing to do with worry is check. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.
What to watch
Seek assessment sooner if your child loses words or skills they once had, isn't walking by 18 months, doesn't point or respond to their name, or can't follow a simple instruction by 2 years.
Try this at home
Build short back-and-forth moments into the day: name what you're doing, pause, and warmly celebrate any reply — a sound, a point or a step. Ten minutes daily of play, talk and movement gently supports every area at once.
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 being behind in one area Global Developmental Delay?
No. GDD describes significant delay in two or more developmental areas at once — such as movement and speech together. A single slow area, like late walking, often catches up on its own, though it's still worth mentioning at your next check-up.
Will my child outgrow it?
Many children simply need time and catch up beautifully; others benefit from early support. That's exactly why a gentle, structured check matters — it tells you which path your child is on, so you can act early if needed and relax if not.
Is 18–24 months too early to assess?
Not at all. This is an ideal window to screen, because the developing brain is most responsive to early support. A clinician confirms whether a delay exists — a worry on its own is never a diagnosis.