Selective Mutism
When to worry about Selective Mutism at 6
Take a closer look when your 6-year-old talks freely at home but is consistently silent in specific settings like school, and this has lasted more than about a month beyond the settling-in period — and is affecting learning, friendships or activities. Selective mutism is an anxiety-based, very treatable difficulty, not defiance or a phase to ignore. Only a Pinnacle clinician can assess; never an online form.
If your bright, chatty-at-home 6-year-old falls completely silent at school, you may be wondering whether this is shyness — or something that needs a gentle look.
In short
At six, the moment to take a closer look is when your child consistently cannot speak in certain settings (most often school) despite talking freely and comfortably at home — and this has lasted more than about a month (beyond the first settling-in weeks of a new term or school). Selective Mutism (ICD-11 6B06) is understood as an anxiety-based difficulty, not stubbornness, defiance or a choice to stay quiet. It is very treatable, and noticing it at six is good, timely awareness — not a reason to panic.When it's worth a closer look
Gentle shyness usually eases as a child warms up. Consider a developmental check when these patterns are persistent and consistent:- Speaks easily at home with close family, but is reliably silent at school, with relatives, or in shops
- The silence has lasted more than a month and is not just the first nervous weeks of a new setting
- It is interfering with learning, making friends, or joining classroom activities
- Your child may freeze, avoid eye contact, use gestures or nods, or look visibly anxious when expected to speak
- It is not explained by an unfamiliar language (a child still learning English may simply need time)
Many children with selective mutism are warm and talkative in their safe spaces — so the difficulty can be misread as "just shy" or "rude". It isn't either. The anxiety is real, and early, kind support works beautifully.
When to seek help sooner
If the silence is widening to all settings, if your child is distressed, or if speech, understanding or social play also concern you, don't wait the full month — a calm clinical conversation can tell apart shyness, a settling phase, and a genuine concern.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 form or a checklist. Our team looks at your child's whole story — anxiety, communication and the settings where speech flows or freezes — and builds a warm, step-by-step plan. Gentle, child-led speech therapy paired with child psychology and anxiety support helps a child find their voice at their own pace, never by pressure.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (6B06, selective mutism); American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (asha.org) guidance on selective mutism; American Academy of Pediatrics family guidance (healthychildren.org).Next step — If this feels familiar, the kindest move is a calm chat with a clinician. Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle speech and child-psychology team.
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
Watch for consistent silence in specific settings (often school) for more than a month, despite easy speech at home, that interferes with learning or friendships — with freezing, avoided eye contact or visible anxiety when expected to speak. Seek help sooner if the silence is spreading to all settings or your child is distressed.
Try this at home
Never pressure or bribe your child to speak in tough settings — it raises the anxiety that fuels the silence. Instead, lower the stakes: let them point or nod, praise small steps like a whisper or a wave, and arrange relaxed one-to-one playdates where talking can grow naturally.
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 selective mutism just extreme shyness?
No. While it can look like shyness, selective mutism is an anxiety-based difficulty where a child genuinely cannot speak in certain settings despite wanting to. Shyness usually eases as a child warms up; selective mutism stays consistent in the same situations and can interfere with school and friendships. It is very treatable with the right support.
Should I push my child to talk at school?
Pushing, bribing or putting a child on the spot tends to increase the anxiety and the silence. The kinder, more effective path is to remove pressure, accept non-verbal answers at first, and build confidence in small, low-stakes steps — which a speech therapist and child psychologist can guide.
My child is still learning English — could that explain the silence?
Yes, possibly. A child in the early stages of learning a new language may stay quiet simply because they are still gaining confidence, and this alone is not selective mutism. If the silence persists well beyond a settling period and also appears with the home language, a gentle clinical check can help clarify.