Selective Mutism
When to worry about Selective Mutism in a newborn
Selective Mutism cannot be identified in a newborn — it is an anxiety-based condition that only emerges once a child speaks, typically recognised between ages 3 and 5 when a child speaks freely at home but consistently not in other settings. In the newborn period there is nothing to worry about; instead enjoy bonding, cooing, eye contact and the social smile. Only a Pinnacle clinician can assess, never an online form.
If you've heard the term Selective Mutism and wondered whether your newborn's quietness could be an early sign, take a breath — this is a question rooted in love, and the reassuring answer is no.
In short
Selective Mutism is not something that can be present or identified in a newborn. It is an anxiety-based condition where a child who can speak comfortably in some settings (usually home) consistently does not speak in others (such as nursery or with unfamiliar people) — and that pattern can only emerge once a child has developed spoken language, typically from around age 3 to 5. A newborn does not yet talk, so there is simply nothing here to worry about. What matters at this age is something quite different and lovely to watch: early bonding, sounds and connection.What is actually meaningful to observe in a newborn
Rather than language, your baby's early communication shows up in warm, body-level ways. In the first three months you can gently enjoy and notice:- Startling or settling to your voice — turning towards familiar sounds
- Eye contact and gazing at your face during feeds and cuddles
- Cooing and contented sounds beginning around 6–8 weeks
- A social smile emerging around 6 weeks to 2 months
- Calming to being held and to your voice
These are the seeds of communication. Crying is your newborn's first language, and responding warmly is exactly how connection grows.
When Selective Mutism becomes a meaningful question
Selective Mutism (ICD-11 6B06) is usually recognised once a child is regularly in social or group settings — often around nursery or school entry, between 3 and 5 years. The hallmark is a consistent failure to speak in specific situations despite speaking freely elsewhere, lasting at least a month (and not just the first settling-in weeks of a new place). If by toddlerhood your child speaks happily at home but falls silent elsewhere for weeks on end, that is the right moment for a gentle developmental check — never in the newborn period.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. For your newborn, the kindest path is simply to enjoy bonding and to attend routine developmental checks as your baby grows. Should questions about speaking or shyness arise in the toddler years, our warm speech therapy and child psychology teams are here, and you can always read more about Selective Mutism when it becomes age-relevant.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 describes Selective Mutism (6B06) as a consistent selectivity in speaking tied to social situations. The American Academy of Pediatrics (healthychildren.org) outlines typical early communication milestones across the first months. WHO's Nurturing Care Framework highlights responsive caregiving as the foundation of early development.Next step — Enjoy these early weeks with confidence, and keep your routine well-baby visits. If you'd like reassurance about your baby's overall development, book a developmental check with 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
In a newborn, there is nothing related to Selective Mutism to watch for. Instead, enjoy warm signs of early connection: settling to your voice, eye contact during feeds, cooing from 6–8 weeks, and a social smile by around 2 months. Questions about not speaking become meaningful only from age 3–5, if your child speaks freely at home but consistently not elsewhere for over a month.
Try this at home
Talk, hum and sing to your baby throughout the day, pausing as if waiting for a reply. These warm back-and-forth moments — even before words — build the foundation for confident communication later.
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
Can a newborn be diagnosed with Selective Mutism?
No. Selective Mutism is an anxiety-based condition where a child who can speak does not speak in certain settings. A newborn does not yet talk, so the condition cannot be present or identified at this age.
At what age does Selective Mutism usually appear?
It is typically recognised between ages 3 and 5, once a child is regularly in social or group settings such as nursery or school and shows a consistent pattern of speaking at home but not elsewhere for at least a month.
What communication should I see in my newborn?
In the first three months, look for settling to your voice, eye contact during feeds, cooing sounds from around 6–8 weeks and a social smile by about 2 months. These are the early seeds of communication.
When should I actually seek help about speaking?
If, in the toddler or preschool years, your child speaks happily at home but falls silent in other settings for several weeks beyond a normal settling-in period, that is the right time for a gentle developmental check.