Auditory Processing Difficulties
Worried about hearing in your 6-to-9-month-old?
At 6–9 months it's too early to identify Auditory Processing Difficulties — that label needs an older, testable child, usually after age 4–5. What matters now is basic hearing: does your baby startle to sound, turn towards voices and make early sounds? If not, a prompt hearing check, not a processing assessment, is the right step.
If your baby sometimes seems not to notice sounds, your instinct to check is a caring, sensible one — let's look at what truly matters at this age.
In short
At 6 to 9 months it is far too early to identify Auditory Processing Difficulties — this is a label that becomes meaningful only in older children whose brains and language are mature enough to be tested. What does matter right now is your baby's basic hearing and their early response to sound. If your little one consistently doesn't startle, turn or quieten to familiar voices and sounds, that's worth a prompt check — not because of a processing disorder, but to be sure hearing itself is working well.What's appropriate to watch at 6–9 months
Auditory processing is about how the brain interprets sound that the ears hear correctly — and that can't be tested in a pre-verbal baby. So at this age, focus on whether sound is reaching your baby and getting a reaction:- Startle or stilling to a sudden loud noise.
- Turning the head or eyes towards your voice or a rattle.
- Quietening or brightening when a familiar person speaks.
- Early sounds — cooing, babbling, beginning sounds like "ba" or "da".
- Enjoying songs, peek-a-boo and back-and-forth sound games.
These aren't tests for a disorder — they're simple signs that hearing and early listening are on track.
When to act
Speak to your paediatrician promptly if your baby does not startle to loud sounds, doesn't turn towards voices by around 6–7 months, makes very few sounds, or seems to respond to some sounds but not others. If a newborn hearing screen was ever missed, ask for one now. A hearing test (audiology) is the right first step — concerns about processing are revisited much later, usually after age 4–5, when listening can be formally assessed. Frequent ear infections also temporarily dull hearing, so mention any of those too.The Pinnacle way
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. For a baby this young, our clinicians prioritise confirming hearing and supporting your everyday listening play, with our speech therapy team ready to guide early communication if needed. The goal is simple reassurance and a clear next step — never an early label.Trusted sources
WHO guidance on infant hearing and early childhood development; American Academy of Pediatrics developmental surveillance; CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" milestones for hearing and communication; ASHA resources on auditory processing in children.Next step — If your baby isn't reliably responding to sounds, book a developmental check and ask about a hearing test — early hearing support makes all the difference.
What to watch
Act sooner if your baby doesn't startle to loud sounds, doesn't turn towards your voice by around 6-7 months, makes very few sounds, or seems to respond to some sounds but not others. The right first step is a hearing test, not a processing assessment.
Try this at home
Play simple sound games — call your baby's name softly from the side, shake a rattle, sing the same song daily — and notice if they turn, still or brighten. A short note of what they respond to is useful to share with your paediatrician.
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 Auditory Processing Difficulties be diagnosed in a baby?
No. Auditory processing is about how the brain interprets sounds the ears hear correctly, and this can only be tested in older, language-able children — usually after age 4-5. In a 6-9 month old, the focus is on basic hearing and early responses to sound, not a processing diagnosis.
What hearing signs should I expect at 6-9 months?
Your baby should startle or still to loud sounds, turn towards your voice or a rattle, quieten when a familiar person speaks, and make early sounds like cooing or babbling. Enjoying songs and peek-a-boo is also a good sign.
When should I see a doctor about my baby's hearing?
Speak to your paediatrician promptly if your baby doesn't startle to loud sounds, doesn't turn towards voices by around 6-7 months, makes very few sounds, or responds to some sounds but not others. Ask for a hearing test, especially if the newborn screen was missed.