Fine Motor Delay
When to worry about Fine Motor Delay at 9–12 months
By 9–12 months, most babies reach, grasp, pass toys between hands, bang objects together and begin a pincer grasp. Book a friendly developmental check if your baby keeps hands fisted, never reaches or grasps, shows a strong early one-hand preference, or loses a skill they once had. One late skill alone is rarely a worry — a pattern or regression is the signal to act early.
If you're watching how your baby's little hands work — picking up, passing, pointing — and wondering whether they're on track, that gentle attention is exactly what helps.
In short
At 9–12 months, most babies are beginning to use their hands with growing precision — bringing toys to the mouth, banging two objects together, and starting to pick up tiny things between finger and thumb. It's worth a friendly developmental check if, by around 12 months, your baby is not using both hands fairly equally, never reaches for or picks up objects, can't pass a toy from one hand to the other, or strongly favours one hand (true hand preference this early can be a flag). One slightly later skill on its own is rarely a worry — a pattern of several, or a hand they never use, is the signal to check.What's usually emerging by 9–12 months
Fine motor means the small, skilled movements of hands and fingers. Around this age you'd typically see your baby:- Reach and grasp purposefully for toys and bring them to the mouth.
- Pass objects from one hand to the other.
- Bang two objects together and explore with both hands.
- Develop the pincer grasp — picking up a small morsel (like a piece of soft food) between thumb and index finger, often emerging towards 9–12 months.
Gentle reasons to book a developmental check:
- Hands stay mostly fisted and aren't opening to explore by around 9–10 months.
- No reaching or grasping for objects within sight.
- A strong, consistent preference for one hand — at this age babies should use both; an early one-sided preference deserves review.
- Loss of a hand skill your baby clearly had before (any regression always warrants prompt review).
Many babies vary in pace, and prematurity shifts expected timings (we adjust for corrected age). The point isn't a single deadline — it's noticing a cluster, or a skill that fades, and acting early when support is simplest.
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 list or a single moment of watching. Our clinicians build your baby's own developmental picture, look at the whole pattern of how hands, eyes and play work together, and shape playful support around their strengths. If hand skills are the worry, our occupational therapy team can begin gentle, structured play-based support, and you can read more about fine motor delay to understand what's typical and what's not. The aim is reassurance and a clear way forward — not a label.Trusted sources
CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early" guidance for around 9 and 12 months; American Academy of Pediatrics developmental surveillance; WHO healthy-development frameworks.Next step — Trust what you've noticed. Book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician so your baby's hand skills can be reviewed with warmth and care.
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
By around 12 months, check sooner if your baby keeps hands fisted, never reaches or grasps, can't pass a toy hand to hand, strongly favours one hand, or loses a hand skill they clearly had before. A pattern of several signs — not a single late skill — is the cue to book a check.
Try this at home
Offer safe, finger-sized soft foods or small toys at meal and play times and watch how your baby picks them up — a thumb-and-finger pinch is the skill to look for. Roll a toy within reach and notice whether both hands join in equally.
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 it normal for my 10-month-old to not have a pincer grasp yet?
Often, yes — the pincer grasp (picking up small things between thumb and finger) usually emerges between about 9 and 12 months, so it can still be developing at 10 months. If your baby reaches, grasps and uses both hands well otherwise, give it time; if there's no reaching or grasping at all, book a gentle check.
My baby favours one hand already — should I worry?
At 9–12 months babies should use both hands fairly equally, and a strong, consistent preference for one hand this early is worth reviewing with a clinician. It doesn't mean something is wrong, but checking early is the wise step.
Does prematurity affect when these hand skills appear?
Yes. For babies born early, we look at corrected (adjusted) age rather than birth age, so expected timings shift accordingly. A clinician will factor this in when reviewing your baby's development.