Child development milestones are the skills and behaviours most children achieve by a certain age — covering motor development, language and communication, social and emotional growth, and cognitive ability. Tracking milestones helps parents and paediatricians identify if a child needs early support.
Key principle: Milestones are ranges, not exact ages. A child doing something at 14 months instead of 12 months is usually not cause for alarm. But a child who is significantly behind on multiple milestones, or has lost skills they previously had, deserves a paediatric assessment.
🍼 Premature Baby? Use Corrected Age
If your baby was born before 37 weeks of pregnancy (premature), developmental milestones are assessed using corrected age — not the actual birth date. Corrected age is calculated from the original due date. For example, a baby born 10 weeks early who is 8 months old has a corrected age of approximately 5.5 months.
Corrected age is used for milestone assessment until approximately age 2. After age 2, most preterm babies have "caught up" and are assessed against standard milestones.
IVF families and NICU graduates: For babies born after IVF, premature birth, or following a NICU stay, Shiv Clinic provides corrected-age developmental monitoring as part of follow-up care. Learn about paediatric care for AANSH families and NICU-graduate babies →
Milestones: Birth to 3 Months
| Area | Expected by 3 months | Red flag (seek assessment) |
|---|---|---|
| Gross motor | Lifts head briefly when on tummy; some head control when held | No head lifting at all; very floppy muscle tone |
| Fine motor | Opens hands briefly; watches moving objects | Hands consistently fisted; does not follow objects with eyes |
| Language | Coos and gurgles; startles to sounds | No vocalisations; does not react to loud sounds |
| Social | Social smile by 6–8 weeks; recognises caregiver's face | No social smile by 3 months |
Milestones: 4 to 6 Months
| Area | Expected by 6 months | Red flag (seek assessment) |
|---|---|---|
| Gross motor | Rolls over front-to-back and back-to-front; sits with support; holds head steadily | Cannot roll over at all; cannot hold head steady; very stiff or floppy |
| Fine motor | Reaches for and grasps objects; transfers objects hand to hand; brings objects to mouth | Does not reach for objects; does not use both hands |
| Language | Babbles (da-da, ba-ba, ma-ma sounds); laughs and squeals; responds to own name | No babbling; does not respond to name or familiar voices |
| Social | Recognises familiar vs unfamiliar faces; responds to expressions; shows joy | No facial expressions; does not respond to caregiver interaction |
Milestones: 9 to 12 Months
| Area | Expected by 12 months | Red flag (seek assessment) |
|---|---|---|
| Gross motor | Sits independently; pulls to stand; cruises along furniture; first steps (many children walk by 12 months, range up to 15–18 months) | Cannot sit independently by 9 months; no attempt to stand or bear weight on legs |
| Fine motor | Pincer grasp (thumb-forefinger); picks up small objects; bangs objects together; puts objects in containers | No pincer grasp; does not pick up small objects |
| Language | Babbles with varied sounds; uses "mama" / "dada" with meaning; imitates sounds; understands "no" and familiar words | No babbling; no "mama" or "dada"; does not respond to name by 9 months; does not point |
| Social | Waves bye-bye; plays peek-a-boo; points to show interest; stranger anxiety begins; imitates actions | No pointing; no interest in others; no imitation; loss of previously acquired social skills |
Milestones: 18 Months to 2 Years
| Area | Expected by 24 months | Red flag (seek assessment) |
|---|---|---|
| Gross motor | Walks steadily; begins to run; climbs stairs with support; kicks a ball | Not walking independently by 18 months; very frequent falling; tip-toe walking only |
| Fine motor | Stacks 4–6 blocks; scribbles with crayons; turns pages of a book; feeds self with spoon | Cannot stack 2 blocks; no self-feeding attempt |
| Language | Uses at least 50 words; combines 2-word phrases ("more juice", "go bye"); follows 2-step instructions | Fewer than 50 words at 24 months; no 2-word combinations; loss of words previously acquired |
| Social | Plays alongside (parallel play); shows affection; pretend play begins; follows rules in simple games | No interest in other children or adults; no pretend play; no eye contact; regression in skills |
Milestones: 3 to 5 Years
| Area | 3 years | 5 years | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross motor | Runs well; jumps on two feet; pedals tricycle | Skips; hops on one foot; climbs playground equipment | Persistent toe walking; falls frequently; cannot jump by 3 yrs |
| Fine motor | Draws circles and crosses; uses scissors; builds tower of 9+ blocks | Writes some letters; draws a person with 6 parts; uses fork and knife | Cannot hold a pencil; no drawing ability; unable to dress self by 5 yrs |
| Language | Sentences of 3–4 words; strangers understand most speech; asks "why?" questions | Full sentences; tells stories; understands past/future tense; can say name/address | Speech not understood by strangers at 3 yrs; stuttering that worsens; cannot follow 3-step instructions |
| Social / cognitive | Engages in cooperative play; follows rules; understands taking turns; knows own name/age | Plays with friends; understands rules of simple games; counts to 10; knows colours | Cannot separate from parent at 3 yrs; no interest in peers; cannot follow simple games |
When to Seek a Paediatric Assessment
See Dr. Haryani promptly if your child:
- Has lost skills they previously had — in any area (motor, language, social)
- Is significantly behind on multiple milestones for their age (or corrected age)
- Is not meeting the "red flag" thresholds in the tables above
- Is not making eye contact or not responding to their name by 9–12 months
- Is not babbling or does not have first words by 12 months
- Is not using 2-word combinations by 24 months
- Has a strong family history of developmental delay or autism spectrum conditions
- Was born premature (use corrected age — and see below for preterm monitoring)
Early identification and early intervention produce significantly better outcomes. Do not wait and see if there is a persistent concern. A single paediatric assessment can provide reassurance — or, where needed, referral to the right specialist early.
For Warora and Chandrapur district families: Book a developmental review at Shiv Clinic. For NICU graduates and IVF babies, see paediatric care for AANSH families. For ongoing growth monitoring, see our Well-Child & Growth Care service.
Local Context: Development in Warora, Vidarbha
Families in Warora and Chandrapur district may have limited local access to developmental paediatric services for complex presentations. Dr. Haryani's first-line assessment at Shiv Clinic can determine whether a referral to a developmental paediatrician, speech therapist, or physiotherapist in Chandrapur or Nagpur is warranted. Early referral, when needed, makes a significant difference to outcomes.
During monsoon and summer, when illness is more common, parents sometimes notice children "regressing" — becoming clingier or quieter during illness. Brief regression during illness is usually temporary. Persistent regression after recovery should be discussed at the next paediatric visit.