Non-Verbal / Minimally Verbal Presentation
When to worry about a non-verbal 5-year-old
By five, most children speak in full sentences understood by strangers. A child using very few words or none — or relying mainly on gesture and sounds — should be assessed now, not waited on. Minimally verbal describes spoken output, not intelligence, and early communication support gives the biggest advantage. Only a Pinnacle clinician can assess what's underneath.
If your bright, busy five-year-old still has very few words — or none — and you've found yourself wondering whether to act, your instinct to look closer is exactly right.
In short
By five, most children speak in full sentences and can be understood by people outside the family. If your child is minimally verbal or non-verbal — using very few spoken words, single words only, or no speech to communicate needs — that is a clear reason to seek an assessment now, not later. This is not a verdict on intelligence or on your child's future; many children find their voice with the right support, and early help is the single biggest advantage you can give.What to look for at five
By this age it is reasonable to expect a child to use many words in short sentences, ask and answer questions, and tell a simple story or recount their day. Reasons to seek a check sooner rather than later include:- Very few or no spoken words to ask, refuse, or share — or relying mostly on leading you by the hand, pointing, or sounds.
- Speech that family can follow but strangers cannot, or that has stalled and not grown over recent months.
- Words once used that have faded or stopped — any loss of skill always warrants prompt review.
- Little use of other communication — gesture, eye contact, pointing to show, or joining in pretend play.
- Frustration or meltdowns around being understood, which often eases as communication grows.
Important: a child who understands far more than they can say, or who communicates well through gesture and devices, is still communicating. Minimally verbal is a description of spoken output — not a measure of your child's thinking or what they can achieve. The point of acting now is simply that the years before formal school are a powerful window for building communication.
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 or a single observation. Our clinicians look at how your child communicates across every channel, build their own strengths-based baseline, and — where helpful — introduce gentle alternative and augmentative supports alongside speech. Explore our speech therapy approach, see how the AbilityScore® structured assessment works, and learn more about non-verbal and minimally verbal presentation. The goal is a clear way forward built around your child.Trusted sources
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association guidance on late and limited talkers; CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early"; American Academy of Pediatrics developmental surveillance recommendations.Next step — Trust what you've noticed. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician so your child's communication is reviewed promptly and a plan can begin.
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
At five, act if your child uses very few spoken words or none, can't be understood by people outside the family, relies mainly on gesture or leading you by the hand, or has lost words once used. Any stall or loss of communication warrants a prompt developmental check.
Try this at home
Keep a one-week note of how your child asks for things they want — words, sounds, pointing, or taking your hand. This simple record shows a clinician exactly how your child communicates today and is far more useful than waiting.
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
Does being non-verbal at five mean my child has a low intelligence?
No. Minimally verbal or non-verbal describes spoken output only — not thinking, understanding, or potential. Many children understand far more than they can say. A clinician-administered assessment looks at all the ways your child communicates, not just speech, to build an accurate picture.
Should I wait to see if my five-year-old catches up on their own?
By five, waiting is not the best path. Most children this age speak in sentences understood by strangers, and the pre-school years are a powerful window for building communication. If your child uses very few words or none, an assessment now lets support begin while it has the greatest impact.
My child communicates with gestures and pointing — is that a problem?
Using gesture and pointing is genuine communication and a positive sign your child wants to connect. The concern is when spoken words stay very limited or absent at five. A clinician can introduce supports — including alternative and augmentative communication — that often help spoken language grow too.
What happens at a Pinnacle assessment for limited speech?
A qualified clinician observes how your child communicates across every channel — words, sounds, gesture, eye contact, play — and builds a strengths-based baseline using the structured AbilityScore® process. No diagnosis comes from an online description; clarity and a plan are formed only at a centre under clinician care.