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Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties

Worrying about emotional & behavioural difficulties at 6–9 months

At 6–9 months, Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties is not a meaningful label — it describes older children. What matters now is your baby's connection: shared smiles, comfort-seeking and curiosity. Fussiness and clinginess are normal. Raise any persistent concern with your paediatrician for a general developmental check, not a behavioural diagnosis.

Worrying about emotional & behavioural difficulties at 6–9 months
When to worry about your baby's behaviour at 6–9 months — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

If your baby's cries, clinging or fussiness have you wondering whether something deeper is going on, your attentiveness is exactly what a 6-to-9-month-old needs.

In short

At 6 to 9 months, it is far too early to label a baby with Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties — this is a description used for older children, not infants. What is meaningful at this age is the developing relationship and connection between you and your baby: shared smiles, comfort-seeking, settling when held, and growing curiosity about faces and the world. So the honest answer is: don't worry about a "behavioural difficulty" yet — instead, gently watch how your baby connects and responds, and raise anything that feels persistently off with your paediatrician.

What is actually appropriate to watch at 6–9 months

Babies this age vary enormously, and big feelings, fussiness and clinginess are completely normal — especially as separation awareness emerges around this time. Rather than "signs of a disorder", think of these as the healthy building blocks of emotional development:
  • Social connection — does your baby smile back, enjoy gentle play (peek-a-boo), and turn towards familiar faces and voices?
  • Comfort and settling — can your baby usually be soothed by being held, fed or spoken to softly, even if it takes a little while?
  • Engagement — growing interest in faces, sounds, toys and surroundings; following you with their eyes.
  • Responsiveness — reacting to your voice, calming to your touch, showing pleasure and displeasure.

It's reasonable to mention things to your doctor if, over weeks, your baby seems persistently unable to be comforted, rarely makes eye contact or smiles, doesn't respond to sounds or your voice, or has gone quiet and withdrawn after previously engaging. These are reasons for a general developmental check — not a behavioural diagnosis. Emotional & behavioural difficulties as a recognised pattern become meaningful much later, typically in the toddler and preschool years and beyond, once a child's behaviour and feelings can be observed across settings.

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 worry. For a baby this young, our clinicians focus on warm developmental surveillance: mapping your baby's connection, responsiveness and milestones, supporting the parent–child bond, and reassuring you where things are on track. If you'd value a baseline, our early intervention team can gently observe and guide. The goal is confidence and connection — never a label on an infant.

Trusted sources

American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on infant social-emotional development and developmental surveillance; CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" milestone resources; WHO Nurturing Care framework on responsive caregiving in the early years.

Next step — Trust your instincts. Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle clinician for gentle, reassuring guidance on your baby's emotional growth.

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

Over weeks, gently note if your baby is rarely comforted by being held, seldom smiles or makes eye contact, doesn't respond to your voice, or has gone withdrawn after previously engaging. These warrant a general developmental check — not a behavioural label at this age.

Try this at home

Spend a few unhurried minutes each day face-to-face — talking softly, smiling, playing peek-a-boo. Notice how your baby connects back. This daily 'serve and return' builds emotional security and gives you a natural feel for their growth.

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 a 6-to-9-month-old have emotional and behavioural difficulties?

Not as a diagnosis. Emotional & Behavioural Difficulties is a pattern recognised in older children, observed across settings over time. In babies this age, what matters is healthy connection, comfort-seeking and responsiveness — not a behavioural label.

Is it normal for my baby to be very clingy and fussy at this age?

Yes. Clinginess often grows around 6–9 months as separation awareness develops, and fussiness is common. It usually reflects healthy attachment, not a problem. Raise it with your doctor only if your baby seems persistently inconsolable over weeks.

When does it become meaningful to assess emotional or behavioural difficulties?

Such patterns typically become meaningful in the toddler and preschool years and beyond, once a child's feelings and behaviour can be observed consistently across home and other settings. Before then, the focus is on connection and developmental milestones.

What should I do if my baby rarely smiles or responds?

If, over weeks, your baby rarely makes eye contact, smiles, responds to sounds or your voice, or seems withdrawn after previously engaging, mention it to your paediatrician for a general developmental check — not because of a behavioural diagnosis.

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