Child Growth Milestones: Complete Age-by-Age Guide for Parents (0–5 Years)

Child Development Guide

Child Growth
Milestones
0 – 5 Years

A complete age-by-age guide to your child’s physical, cognitive, language, and social development — what to expect, what to watch for, and how to nurture every stage of growth.

4domains of development
0–5most critical years
1M+neural connections/sec at birth
90%brain develops by age 5
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Important Note for Parents
Milestones are averages and ranges — not deadlines. Every child develops at their own pace. A child who walks at 9 months and one who walks at 15 months are both within the normal range. Use this guide as a general reference, not a report card. Always speak to your paediatrician if you have concerns.
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Section 1The 4 Domains of Child Development

Child development is assessed across four interconnected domains — each influencing the others. A delay in one area can affect progress in others, which is why paediatricians assess all four at every well-child visit rather than focusing only on physical growth.

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Physical / Motor

Gross motor: large muscle control — rolling, sitting, crawling, walking, running, climbing.
Fine motor: small muscle precision — grasping, pinching, drawing, self-feeding. Both develop head-to-toe and centre-outward.

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Cognitive / Intellectual

Thinking, learning, problem-solving, memory, and understanding cause and effect. Develops through exploration and play. The first 3 years represent an extraordinary window of neural plasticity — more connections are formed in this period than at any other time in life.

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Language & Communication

Receptive language: understanding what is said.
Expressive language: communicating through sounds, words, and sentences. Language development is one of the strongest predictors of long-term academic and social outcomes.

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Social & Emotional

Bonding, attachment, recognising emotions, empathy, self-regulation, and social interaction. The quality of early caregiving relationships is the single most powerful influence on social and emotional development — and long-term mental health.

“The first five years of life are not a preparation for life — they are life itself. The experiences of this period shape the architecture of the developing brain for decades to come.” — Based on Harvard Center on the Developing Child research
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Section 2Newborn Milestones (0–3 Months)

The first three months are a period of extraordinary, rapid development — from a completely dependent newborn to a socially engaged, smiling, communicating baby. The foundational neural circuits for everything that follows are being laid down at breathtaking speed.

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0–3 Months
Newborn & Early Infant
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Lifts head briefly when placed on tummy (tummy time)
  • Moves arms and legs symmetrically
  • Grasps a finger placed in palm (palmar grasp reflex)
  • Turns head towards sounds and familiar voices
  • Follows a slowly moving object with eyes to midline
🧠 Cognitive
  • Recognises mother’s/caregiver’s voice from birth
  • Responds to familiar faces vs strangers
  • Prefers looking at high-contrast patterns and human faces
  • Shows surprise or distress at sudden loud sounds
  • Beginning to associate feeding with hunger relief
💬 Language
  • Cries differently for hunger, discomfort, and tiredness
  • Makes soft cooing and gurgling sounds by 6–8 weeks
  • Quiets or smiles in response to caregiver’s voice
  • Startles to loud sounds
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • First social smile — usually 6–8 weeks
  • Makes eye contact during feeding and interaction
  • Calms when picked up and held by caregiver
  • Begins to show brief periods of contentment and alertness
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Baby Does Not:

Respond to loud sounds by 1 month · Follow a moving face with eyes by 2 months · Smile at people by 3 months · Hold head up at all during tummy time by 3 months · Make any sounds other than crying by 3 months

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Section 34–6 Month Milestones
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4–6 Months
Rolling, Babbling & Social Discovery
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Rolls from tummy to back (4 months) then back to tummy (5–6 months)
  • Holds head steady without support
  • Bears weight on legs when held standing
  • Reaches for objects with both hands; transfers object hand to hand
  • Brings objects to mouth to explore
🧠 Cognitive
  • Explores objects by mouthing, shaking, banging
  • Looks for dropped objects (beginning object permanence)
  • Responds to own name reliably by 5–6 months
  • Shows curiosity — reaches towards interesting objects
💬 Language
  • Babbles chains of sounds: “ba-ba”, “da-da”, “ma-ma” (not yet meaningful)
  • Laughs and squeals with delight
  • Responds to tone of voice — upset by angry voices, soothed by calm
  • Vocalises to initiate interaction with caregiver
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • Smiles spontaneously — especially at familiar people
  • Enjoys social play; protests when play stops
  • Distinguishes familiar caregivers from strangers
  • Beginning of stranger anxiety (earlier in some babies)
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Baby Does Not:

Roll over in either direction by 6 months · Try to reach objects by 4 months · Babble by 6 months · Show affection for caregivers · Seem interested in people around them

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Section 47–9 Month Milestones
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7–9 Months
Sitting, Crawling & Growing Intentionality
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Sits without support for increasing periods
  • Gets into sitting position independently by 9 months
  • Begins crawling — though commando crawl, bottom shuffle, and rolling are all normal alternatives
  • Pulls to stand at furniture by 8–9 months
  • Developing pincer grasp — picking up small objects with thumb and index finger
🧠 Cognitive
  • Object permanence established — looks for hidden objects
  • Understands cause and effect — drops object to hear sound
  • Explores objects methodically — examines from multiple angles
  • Imitates gestures and actions
💬 Language
  • Longer babble strings; uses consonant-vowel combinations
  • Begins to understand common words: “no”, “bye-bye”, own name
  • Points at objects of interest (by 9–10 months)
  • Uses gestures — waves, claps in imitation
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • Stranger anxiety peaks — clings to caregiver, distressed with unfamiliar people
  • Separation anxiety begins — cries when main caregiver leaves
  • Shows clear preferences for familiar people
  • Enjoys interactive games: peek-a-boo, pat-a-cake
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Baby Does Not:

Sit unsupported by 9 months · Crawl or begin any form of movement · Show any signs of stranger or separation anxiety · Babble at all · Look where you point · Wave or imitate any gestures

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Section 510–12 Month Milestones
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10–12 Months
Cruising, First Words & Big Personality
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Pulls to stand and cruises along furniture
  • May take first independent steps — average 12 months (normal range 9–15 months)
  • Pincer grasp well established — picks up peas, raisins
  • Claps hands, bangs objects together purposefully
  • Beginning to self-feed with fingers
🧠 Cognitive
  • Understands 20–50 words even before speaking them
  • Uses objects correctly — puts cup to mouth, brush to hair
  • Problem solves — pulls cloth to get toy underneath
  • Follows simple one-step instructions with gesture
💬 Language
  • First meaningful words (typically “mama”, “dada” with intent) — 10–14 months
  • Uses jargon — strings of babble with sentence-like intonation
  • Points to request objects and share interest (joint attention)
  • Responds to own name consistently
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • Strong attachment to primary caregiver well established
  • Shows empathy — upset when another child cries
  • Tests boundaries — drops food to watch reaction
  • Begins to show independence and frustration
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Baby Does Not:

Crawl or bear weight on legs by 12 months · Say even one word by 16 months · Point to show interest by 12 months · Search for hidden objects · Wave goodbye or imitate actions · Make eye contact

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Section 612–18 Month Milestones
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12–18 Months
Walking, Single Words & Toddler Exploration
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Walks independently — wide stance, arms held up for balance
  • Climbs onto low furniture
  • Stacks 2–4 blocks by 18 months
  • Scribbles with crayon (uses whole fist initially)
  • Uses spoon with assistance; drinks from cup
🧠 Cognitive
  • Symbolic play begins — pretends to feed a doll or stuffed animal
  • Identifies body parts when named
  • Follows two-step instructions (“Get your shoes and bring them here”)
  • Groups objects by category — puts all balls together
💬 Language
  • Uses 5–20 words by 18 months (some children have more)
  • Says “no” with conviction
  • Points to pictures in books when named
  • Vocabulary explosion begins in many children around 18 months
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • Tantrums begin — emotional regulation not yet developed
  • Parallel play — plays alongside (not with) other children
  • Shows affection openly — hugs, kisses
  • Looks to caregiver for emotional guidance (social referencing)
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Toddler Does Not:

Walk by 18 months · Say at least 6 words by 18 months · Point at things they want · Use any pretend play · Show affection or interest in interactions with caregivers

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Section 718–24 Month Milestones
🗣️
18–24 Months
Language Explosion, Running & Growing Independence
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Runs (though still unsteady and falls often)
  • Kicks a ball; throws overarm
  • Walks up stairs with support (two feet per step)
  • Stacks 6+ blocks; turns pages of a book one at a time
  • Uses spoon independently with some spilling
🧠 Cognitive
  • Engages in simple pretend play with objects
  • Sorts objects by shape and colour
  • Beginning to understand “mine” vs others
  • Points to body parts on self and others
💬 Language
  • 50+ words by 24 months is the standard guideline
  • Two-word combinations: “more milk”, “daddy go”, “big dog”
  • Strangers understand ~50% of what the child says
  • Follows two-step instructions without gesture cues
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • Increasing independence — “Me do it!” — with parallel frustration
  • Defiant behaviour (testing limits) is developmentally normal
  • Begins to notice and show interest in other children
  • Becomes possessive of toys — “Mine!”
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Toddler Does Not:

Use 2-word phrases by 24 months · Have at least 50 words by 24 months · Follow simple instructions · Show interest in other children · Imitate actions or words

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The 18-Month and 24-Month Check — Two Key Developmental Screens

The 18-month and 24-month well-child visits include standardised developmental screening (commonly the M-CHAT for autism screening and ASQ for general development). These visits are among the most important of early childhood — even if your child appears to be developing normally. Many developmental conditions including autism spectrum disorder, language delay, and hearing impairment are most effectively addressed with early intervention that begins with identification at these visits.

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Section 82–3 Year Milestones
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2–3 Years
Sentences, Questions & the “Why” Phase
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Runs confidently, rarely falls; begins to jump on the spot
  • Climbs well; navigates playground equipment
  • Walks up and down stairs alternating feet (by 3 years)
  • Draws circles and crosses; begins to draw a person as a circle with lines
  • Manages buttons and zips with some help
🧠 Cognitive
  • Rich pretend play — assigns roles, creates elaborate scenarios
  • Completes simple puzzles (4–6 pieces)
  • Understands concepts: big/small, in/on/under, first/last
  • Counts to 3 or more; begins to understand “how many?”
  • Memory for past events noticeably improves
💬 Language
  • 3-word sentences by 2 years; 4–5 word sentences by 3 years
  • Vocabulary of 200–1,000 words by age 3
  • Asks “what”, “who”, “where” questions constantly
  • Strangers understand ~75% of speech by age 3
  • Tells simple stories about events
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • Engages in interactive play — takes turns, shares (sometimes!)
  • Shows affection for peers, not just family
  • Beginning to understand rules and fairness
  • Strong emotional reactions — big feelings, small body
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Child Does Not:

Use sentences of 3+ words by 3 years · Follow multi-step instructions · Show interest in other children · Engage in pretend play · Be understood by family members most of the time

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Section 93–4 Year Milestones
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3–4 Years
Friends, Stories & Building Independence
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Hops on one foot; begins to skip
  • Catches a large ball with arms extended
  • Draws a recognisable person with head and body
  • Uses scissors to cut along a line
  • Dresses and undresses independently (simple fasteners)
🧠 Cognitive
  • Names colours and shapes correctly
  • Counts to 10+; beginning to understand number concepts
  • Understands “same” and “different”
  • Retells a simple story in sequence
  • Longer attention span — can focus on a task for 10–15 minutes
💬 Language
  • Speaks in 4–6 word sentences; tells stories
  • Uses past and future tense (with errors — “I runned”)
  • Asks “why” incessantly — this is healthy curiosity
  • Strangers understand 75–100% of speech
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • Has preferred friends; may have a “best friend”
  • Cooperative play well established — plays house, shop, hospital
  • Understands and follows game rules
  • Beginning to understand others have different feelings and perspectives
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Child Does Not:

Use sentences by age 4 · Show interest in interactive play with other children · Draw basic shapes · Be understood by strangers most of the time · Follow 3-step instructions

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Section 104–5 Year Milestones
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4–5 Years
School Ready — Curiosity, Coordination & Complex Thinking
🏃 Physical / Motor
  • Skips, hops on one foot for 5+ seconds
  • Catches a small ball; developing ball-throwing accuracy
  • Writes first name; copies letters and numbers
  • Draws detailed people with face, body, limbs, and fingers
  • Fully independent with dressing, toileting, and hand washing
🧠 Cognitive
  • Counts to 20+; recognises written numbers
  • Beginning to read simple words — letter-sound connections
  • Understands basic time concepts: yesterday, today, tomorrow
  • Sorts by multiple attributes simultaneously
  • Attention span sufficient for structured classroom learning
💬 Language
  • Vocabulary of 1,000–2,000+ words
  • Speaks clearly in complex sentences; adults can understand all speech
  • Uses most grammatical structures correctly
  • Tells elaborate stories; describes events in order
  • Understands most jokes and simple humour
🤝 Social / Emotional
  • Plays cooperatively; negotiates roles and rules
  • Theory of mind established — understands others can have different thoughts/beliefs
  • Shows empathy and caring behaviour towards peers
  • Can regulate emotions for short periods with support
⚠ Talk to Your Doctor If Your Child Does Not:

Speak clearly enough for strangers to understand by age 5 · Show interest in other children or imaginative play · Manage simple self-care tasks · Recognise some letters or numbers by age 5

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Section 11Physical Growth — Weight, Height & Head Circumference

Physical growth follows predictable patterns in early childhood, though there is significant normal variation between children. Paediatricians plot growth on standardised WHO or CDC charts to track percentile trends over time — a consistent trend is more informative than any single measurement.

Average Physical Growth Milestones (Weight — Approximate Reference)
Birth
~3.4 kg
~3.4 kg
3 months
~5.8 kg
~5.8 kg
6 months
~7.3 kg
~7.3 kg
12 months
~9.5 kg
~9.5 kg
2 years
~12.2 kg
~12.2 kg
3 years
~14.4 kg
~14.4 kg
5 years
~18.3 kg
~18.3 kg

These are WHO median (50th percentile) values for boys. Girls differ slightly. Normal range is wide — 3rd to 97th percentile is considered within normal limits. What matters most is a consistent growth trajectory on YOUR child’s curve.

AgeAverage HeightKey Physical MilestoneHead Circumference Growth
Birth~50 cm (20 in)Newborn reflexes present~34 cm — grows 2 cm/month
3 months~61 cm (24 in)Lifts head during tummy time~41 cm
6 months~67 cm (26 in)Sits with support; rolls~43 cm
12 months~74 cm (29 in)Standing; first steps~46 cm
2 years~86 cm (34 in)Running; kick a ball~48 cm
3 years~95 cm (37 in)Hopping; tricycle riding~50 cm
4 years~102 cm (40 in)Skip; catch a ball~51 cm
5 years~110 cm (43 in)School-ready motor skills~51.5 cm
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Growth Faltering — When to Be Concerned

A single below-average measurement is rarely concerning — growth must be tracked over time. Growth faltering (previously “failure to thrive”) is defined as a sustained decline of two or more percentile lines on a growth chart. This warrants investigation for nutritional, medical, or social causes. Crossing upward through percentile lines is normal in the first 2 years as babies find their genetic growth trajectory.

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Section 12How to Actively Support Your Child’s Development

Brain development in early childhood is profoundly experience-dependent. The quality of interactions, environments, and opportunities you provide directly shapes the neural circuits your child is building. You do not need expensive toys or programmes — responsive, engaged parenting is the most powerful developmental tool.

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Talk, Read & Sing Daily

Children who are talked to more develop stronger language, literacy, and cognitive skills. Narrate your day, describe objects, read together, sing songs. The “serve and return” interaction — responding to a child’s cue — builds neural pathways faster than any toy.

Birth onwards
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Daily Tummy Time

Supervised awake tummy time from day one strengthens neck, back, and shoulder muscles essential for rolling, sitting, and crawling. Aim for 30 minutes total spread through the day by 3 months. It also prevents flat head (plagiocephaly).

From birth
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Open-Ended Play

Blocks, stacking rings, shape sorters, puzzles, and simple art supplies develop fine motor skills, spatial reasoning, and problem solving far better than electronic toys. The messier the play, the more sensory learning occurs.

6 months+
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Read Aloud Every Day

Daily shared book reading is the single most consistently evidence-backed activity for language, literacy, and cognitive development. Start with board books from birth. By age 5, children who were read to daily have significantly larger vocabularies than those who were not.

Birth to 5+ years
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Outdoor Unstructured Play

Time in nature and outdoor unstructured play builds physical coordination, risk assessment, creativity, and emotional regulation. Even 30 minutes of outdoor play daily significantly benefits development across all domains.

Walking onwards
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Music & Movement

Singing, dancing, nursery rhymes, and music directly strengthen phonological awareness (crucial for reading), rhythm, coordination, memory, and emotional expression. Children’s brains are uniquely tuned to musical patterns.

Birth onwards
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Screen Time Recommendations by Age (WHO & AAP)

Under 18 months: No screen time except video calls with family. 18–24 months: High-quality programming only, watched together with a caregiver who helps the child understand what they’re seeing. 2–5 years: Maximum 1 hour per day of co-viewed, high-quality content. The issue is not merely duration — it is the displacement of face-to-face interaction, physical play, and sleep that causes harm.

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Section 13Developmental Red Flags — When to See a Doctor

The following are absolute developmental red flags — signs that warrant prompt referral to a paediatrician regardless of age. These are not about normal variation; they indicate the need for proper evaluation and, if needed, early intervention.

🚨 Seek Developmental Assessment If Your Child:
Does not respond to their name by 12 months
Has no babbling or pointing by 12 months
Has no single words by 16 months
Has no 2-word combinations by 24 months
Loses language or social skills at any age — regression is always a red flag
Does not make eye contact consistently
Shows no interest in other children by 3 years
Cannot be understood by strangers by age 3
Does not walk by 18 months
Shows very strong hand preference before 18 months — may indicate weakness on the other side
Has repetitive, restricted behaviours or intense fixations
Cannot draw a circle or cross by age 3
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Early Intervention Makes a Measurable Difference

For all developmental conditions — autism, language delay, motor delay, intellectual disability — early intervention consistently produces better outcomes than waiting. The developing brain is at its most plastic in the first 3–5 years. Speech therapy, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, and specialist educational support are far more effective when started early. If you have any concern about your child’s development, raise it immediately — there is no benefit to waiting.

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Always Rule Out Hearing Loss First

Hearing impairment is one of the most common and most commonly missed causes of language delay. A child with moderate hearing loss may appear to hear normally in quiet, one-on-one settings while missing critical speech sounds. Any child with language delay or suspected speech/communication concerns should have a formal audiology assessment before or alongside other developmental referrals. Conductive hearing loss from recurrent ear infections (glue ear) is extremely common and treatable.

Section 14Frequently Asked Questions
My child isn’t walking at 14 months — should I be worried?
The normal age range for first independent steps is 9–18 months, with the average around 12 months. A child who is not walking at 14 months is still within normal limits and does not necessarily have a developmental problem. However, it is worth mentioning to your paediatrician at the next visit so they can confirm the child is progressing in other gross motor areas (standing, cruising, pulling to stand) and has no signs of muscle weakness or neurological concern. A child not walking by 18 months should be formally assessed.
My 2-year-old isn’t talking much — could it be autism?
Language delay at 2 years has many causes — hearing loss, late talker (no underlying concern), developmental language disorder, or autism spectrum disorder being among the most common. The presence or absence of autism cannot be determined by language delay alone — what matters is the broader social-communication picture: does your child make good eye contact, respond to their name, point to share interest, engage in back-and-forth play, and show interest in other children? See your paediatrician promptly if your 2-year-old has fewer than 50 words or no two-word combinations — early assessment and speech therapy is beneficial regardless of the underlying cause.
What do percentiles on growth charts actually mean?
A percentile tells you where your child’s measurement falls relative to other children of the same age and sex. A child at the 25th percentile for weight is heavier than 25% of children and lighter than 75% — this is completely normal. Any percentile from the 3rd to 97th is within normal limits. What concerns paediatricians is not the absolute percentile but a significant crossing of percentile lines over time — either dropping significantly (possible growth faltering or illness) or rising rapidly (possible overfeeding or hormonal concern). A consistently small child who follows their own growth curve is usually healthy.
How do I know if my child has a developmental delay or is just a “late bloomer”?
This is one of the most agonising questions for parents — and honestly, clinical assessment is often needed to distinguish them. Some indicators that suggest a genuine delay rather than natural variation: the child is significantly behind in multiple developmental areas simultaneously; they have lost skills they previously had; they are not making progress even with additional stimulation and support; there are red-flag signs present (no pointing, no eye contact, no response to name). When in doubt, a developmental assessment does no harm — it either provides reassurance or identifies a concern early enough for intervention to make a real difference.
My child was premature — should I use their actual age or corrected age for milestones?
For premature babies, use their corrected age (also called adjusted age) for developmental milestone comparison until at least 24 months, and for physical growth until age 3. Corrected age = chronological age minus weeks of prematurity. For example, a 6-month-old baby born 8 weeks early should be assessed against 4-month milestones. Most preterm infants “catch up” to their chronological peers by 2–3 years of age, though those born very preterm (<28 weeks) or with associated complications may take longer. Your neonatologist or paediatrician will guide your specific child’s trajectory.
Does screen time really affect development?
The evidence consistently shows that excessive passive screen time in children under 3 years is associated with language delays, attention difficulties, sleep disruption, and reduced physical activity — primarily because screen time displaces the face-to-face interaction, play, and movement that drive development. Interactive video calls (e.g. grandparents) are different from passive viewing and are not subject to the same concerns. The WHO and American Academy of Pediatrics both recommend no screen time under 18 months (except video calls) and a maximum of 1 hour per day of high-quality co-viewed content for ages 2–5. Quality and context matter as much as duration.

Watch Them Grow.
Trust the Journey.

No two children are alike. The ranges in this guide reflect the beautiful variety of human development — not a checklist every child must complete on the same schedule.

Your role is to provide love, stimulation, safety, and responsive caregiving. The rest unfolds in its own time. Trust the process — and trust your instincts if something feels off.

⚕️ Medical Disclaimer: This guide is for informational and educational purposes only and does not replace a professional assessment by a qualified paediatrician or child development specialist. Developmental milestones are provided as general reference ranges. Always consult your child’s doctor with any specific concerns about development or growth.

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