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Persistent Toe-Walking

Worrying about toe-walking at 3 to 6 months

At 3 to 6 months, persistent toe-walking is not a meaningful concern — toe-walking only appears after a child begins walking (usually 9–18 months). Pointed toes at this age reflect normal infant reflexes and tone. What matters now is head control, tummy time and even movement; raise persistent stiffness or floppiness with your doctor, and review toe-walking only once walking is well established.

Worrying about toe-walking at 3 to 6 months
Toe-walking at 3-6 months: what to know — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

If you've spotted your baby pointing their toes and wondered whether it's the start of toe-walking, take a gentle breath — at this age, that question doesn't quite apply yet.

In short

At 3 to 6 months, persistent toe-walking is not something to worry about — and not something that can be identified yet. Toe-walking is a pattern seen after a child begins walking, which usually starts somewhere between 9 and 18 months. Your 3-to-6-month-old isn't bearing weight to walk yet, so pointed toes, curled feet or pushing against your hands are simply normal newborn-and-infant reflexes and tone, not a foot or gait problem.

What's actually appropriate to watch at 3–6 months

Rather than feet-and-walking signs, this age is about the building blocks that come long before standing:
  • Head control — holding the head steady when upright and during tummy time by around 4 months.
  • Tummy time — pushing up on forearms, then on hands, lifting the chest.
  • Even movement — kicking and reaching with both sides of the body fairly equally.
  • Loosening of the legs — the tight, curled-up newborn posture gradually softening.

Things that are worth mentioning to your doctor at this age are general tone concerns: legs that feel persistently stiff and scissoring, a baby who feels very floppy, a strong preference for one side, or stiffness that doesn't ease as the weeks pass. These are tone observations — not a toe-walking diagnosis.

When toe-walking becomes a meaningful question

The time to look at toe-walking is once your child is genuinely walking. If, well after walking is established (commonly reviewed around 2 years and beyond), your child still walks mostly on tiptoe and rarely puts heels down, that's the point to raise it. For now, the most useful step is a routine developmental check rather than any toe-focused worry.

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 description. At this age our clinicians focus on your baby's overall movement, tone and milestones, building their own developmental baseline. If anything about how your baby moves feels off to you, our occupational therapy and physiotherapy teams can offer gentle, reassuring guidance — most often the news is simply that all is on track.

Trusted sources

CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early" guidance on infant motor development; American Academy of Pediatrics surveillance recommendations; WHO motor-milestone framework.

Next step — Keep enjoying tummy time, and bring any movement or tone questions to a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician for clear, calm reassurance.

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

Toe-walking can't be judged before your child walks. At 3-6 months, instead watch head control, tummy-time progress and even, two-sided movement. Mention to your doctor any legs that stay very stiff and scissored, a very floppy baby, or a strong one-sided preference — these are tone observations, not toe-walking.

Try this at home

Give short, frequent tummy-time sessions through the day so your baby strengthens neck, back and shoulders — the real groundwork for sitting, crawling and eventually walking.

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

Can a 3-month-old have persistent toe-walking?

No. Toe-walking is a pattern seen only after a child starts walking, usually between 9 and 18 months. A 3-to-6-month-old isn't bearing weight to walk, so pointed toes are normal reflexes and tone, not toe-walking.

My baby points their toes a lot — is that a sign?

Pointed toes and curled feet are typical infant reflexes at this age and not a sign of toe-walking. If you notice legs that stay persistently stiff, scissoring or a very floppy body, mention it to your doctor as a tone observation.

When is the right age to assess toe-walking?

Once walking is well established. If, well after walking begins — commonly reviewed around 2 years and beyond — a child still walks mostly on tiptoe and rarely puts heels down, that is the point to raise toe-walking with a clinician.

What should I watch instead at 3 to 6 months?

Look for steady head control, good progress in tummy time, and even kicking and reaching on both sides. A routine developmental check is far more useful at this age than any toe-focused worry.

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