Motor Planning Difficulties
When to worry about Motor Planning Difficulties at 9–12 months
At 9–12 months, specific Motor Planning Difficulties are too early to label — babies are still building the basic motor skills that planning later depends on. What matters now is the broad picture: reaching, sitting steadily, beginning to move across the floor, and comfortable muscle tone. Clear delay, strong early hand preference, or floppiness/stiffness warrants a prompt general developmental check, not alarm.
If you've watched your baby reach, grasp or roll and wondered why some movements seem to take extra effort, your gentle attention is exactly the right instinct.
In short
At 9–12 months, the idea of Motor Planning Difficulties — trouble organising and sequencing the steps of a movement — is too early to label, because babies this age are still building the very motor skills that planning later relies on. What is meaningful now is watching the broad sweep of motor development: reaching, transferring objects, sitting steadily, beginning to crawl or pull to stand. If those building blocks are clearly delayed or your baby seems unusually floppy or stiff, that's a reason for a prompt general developmental check — not alarm.What is appropriate to watch at 9–12 months
Motor planning (sometimes called praxis) is a higher-order skill that becomes visible later, when a toddler strings movements together for a purpose — climbing, stacking, using a spoon. At this age, simply notice the foundations:- Reach and grasp — bringing both hands to objects, passing a toy hand to hand, and starting a finger-thumb pincer near a year.
- Postural control — sitting steadily without support, and beginning to shift weight to crawl, scoot or pull up.
- Two-sided use — using both sides of the body, not strongly favouring one hand this early.
- Muscle tone — comfortable, springy movement rather than persistently floppy or very stiff.
Gentle worry is warranted — and a check is sensible — if by around 12 months your baby is not sitting steadily, shows no attempt to move across the floor, isn't reaching for or holding objects, strongly favours one hand, or feels markedly floppy or stiff. These point to general motor development, which a clinician can review well before any specific planning label would ever apply.
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 home observation. For a baby this age, our focus is reassurance and a clear developmental baseline; if movement foundations need support, our occupational therapy team works through play to strengthen reaching, balance and coordination. The aim is steady progress and peace of mind — not a label.Trusted sources
CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early" guidance for the first year; American Academy of Pediatrics developmental surveillance; WHO motor development windows for infants.Next step — Trust what you've noticed. Book a developmental assessment so your baby's motor foundations can be reviewed gently by a Pinnacle clinician.
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 isn't sitting steadily, makes no attempt to move across the floor, isn't reaching for or holding objects, strongly favours one hand this early, or feels markedly floppy or stiff. These reflect general motor development — reviewable well before any specific planning label would apply.
Try this at home
Offer easy floor play each day — a favourite toy just out of reach encourages reaching, weight-shifting and the early movement sequencing that motor planning later builds on. Keep it light and playful.
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 Motor Planning Difficulties be diagnosed in a 9–12-month-old?
Not meaningfully. Motor planning is a higher-order skill that becomes visible later, when a toddler sequences movements for a purpose. At this age, clinicians look at the broad foundations of movement rather than planning itself, so no specific label is applied this early.
What movement milestones should I expect near 12 months?
Around this age many babies sit steadily, pass toys hand to hand, begin a finger-thumb pincer, and start crawling, scooting or pulling to stand. There's a wide normal range — it's the overall pattern, not a single milestone, that matters.
When should I book a check?
Sooner rather than later if, by about 12 months, your baby isn't sitting steadily, shows no attempt to move across the floor, isn't reaching for objects, strongly favours one hand, or feels persistently floppy or stiff. A general developmental check brings clarity.