Tourette Syndrome
When to Worry About Tourette Syndrome in a 6-Year-Old
Brief, single tics around ages 5–7 are common and usually pass. Tourette Syndrome is considered only when a child has multiple motor tics plus at least one vocal tic, lasting over a year and beginning before 18. At six, seek a check when tics are persistent, varied, distressing or affecting school and friendships — and remember tics are involuntary, never to be disciplined. Only a Pinnacle clinician can assess, never an online form.
If you've spotted your six-year-old blinking hard, sniffing or twitching in ways they can't seem to help, it's natural to wonder about Tourette Syndrome — and asking gently is the right instinct.
In short
Many children develop tics around ages 5–7, and most are simple, brief and pass on their own — a single tic for a few weeks is rarely a cause for worry. Tourette Syndrome (ICD-11 8A05.00) is only considered when a child has both multiple motor tics and at least one vocal tic, recurring for more than a year, beginning before age 18. So at six, the moment to seek a check is when tics are persistent, varied, and affecting your child's comfort, school or friendships — not the first time you notice one.What's typical, and what's worth watching
Tics are sudden, repetitive movements or sounds. A transient bout is common in early school years and often fades. Worth a calm clinical conversation if you notice:- Several different motor tics — eye-blinking, head-jerking, shoulder-shrugging, facial grimacing — that come and go and change over time
- A vocal tic too — throat-clearing, sniffing, grunting or repeating sounds
- Tics lasting beyond a year, waxing and waning rather than disappearing
- Impact on daily life — discomfort, embarrassment, teasing, trouble concentrating or sleeping
- Other patterns alongside — strong worries, repetitive routines, or restlessness and inattention, which sometimes travel with tics
Tics often increase with excitement, tiredness or stress, and ease during absorbing activity. Drawing attention to them or asking a child to "stop" usually makes things harder — warmth and calm help most.
When to seek a check
Arrange a developmental check if tics have continued for several months and include both movements and sounds, are distressing your child, or are affecting school and friendships. A clinician will also look at sleep, mood and attention, and gently tell apart a passing tic phase from a persistent tic disorder. Tics are involuntary — never a behaviour to discipline.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 checklist. Our team looks at your child's whole picture — movement, attention, emotions and the world around them — and supports families with practical, reassuring strategies through child psychology and behaviour support, drawing on 25 million+ therapy sessions across 70+ centres.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (8A05.00, Tourette syndrome); American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on tics in childhood (healthychildren.org); NICE guidance on tic disorders.Next step — If the tics have lasted a while or are troubling your child, a calm conversation with a clinician brings clarity. Book a developmental check with a Pinnacle child specialist.
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 several different motor tics (blinking, head-jerks, shrugging) alongside a vocal tic (throat-clearing, sniffing, grunting) that last beyond a year and wax and wane. Seek a check sooner if tics distress your child, affect school or friendships, or come with strong worries, routines, or restlessness and inattention.
Try this at home
Stay calm and avoid drawing attention to a tic or asking your child to stop — that usually makes it harder. Keep routines steady, protect sleep, and ease stress; tics often quieten during absorbing, enjoyable activity.
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
Is it normal for a 6-year-old to have tics?
Yes — many children develop tics around ages 5–7. Most are simple, brief and pass on their own within weeks or months. A single, short-lived tic is rarely a cause for concern.
When do tics suggest Tourette Syndrome rather than a passing phase?
Tourette Syndrome is considered only when a child has multiple motor tics and at least one vocal tic, recurring for more than a year and beginning before age 18. A clinician can tell apart a passing tic phase from a persistent tic disorder.
Should I tell my child to stop the tic?
No. Tics are involuntary, and asking a child to stop usually makes them harder, not easier. Staying calm, keeping routines steady and protecting sleep helps most.
Do tics come with other difficulties?
Sometimes. Tics can travel alongside strong worries, repetitive routines, or restlessness and inattention. A developmental check looks at the whole picture, including mood, sleep and attention.