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The Cruising Phase: What It Looks Like and How Long It Lasts
Cruising is that stage where your toddler moves sideways along furniture, holding on with one or both hands, looking like they're about to walk any minute. It's exciting to watch because it feels like independent walking is right around the corner.
For most kids, it is. The typical timeline goes something like this: babies start pulling to stand around 8 to 10 months, begin cruising around 9 to 12 months, and take their first independent steps between 12 and 15 months. The cruising phase usually lasts anywhere from a few weeks to a couple of months.
But some toddlers cruise for a long time. They get really good at it. They can cruise around the entire living room, transfer between pieces of furniture, and even cruise while carrying a toy. Yet they won't let go and take independent steps. If your toddler has been cruising for months without progressing to walking, you're probably starting to wonder if something is holding them back.
Why Some Toddlers Get Stuck at Cruising
There are several reasons a toddler might cruise confidently but resist walking independently:
Balance and confidence. Walking requires a completely different balance system than cruising. When cruising, your toddler always has at least one hand on a stable surface. Walking means letting go of that security and trusting their body to stay upright. For some kids, the confidence piece takes longer than the physical ability.
Core and hip strength. Cruising uses a lot of arm and leg strength, but walking independently demands more from the core and hips. Your toddler needs strong hip abductors (the muscles on the outside of the hips) to maintain single-leg balance with each step. Some toddlers who cruise well are actually compensating for core or hip weakness by relying on their arms.
Foot and ankle stability. Walking requires the foot and ankle to work as a stable base while the rest of the body moves forward. Toddlers with low tone in their feet and ankles, or those who pronate (roll inward) excessively, may find the transition to unsupported walking more challenging.
Sensory caution. Some toddlers are more sensory-cautious by nature. They don't like the feeling of instability that comes with those first wobbly independent steps. These kids often need to feel very secure in their balance before they'll let go.
Efficiency. If your toddler has gotten really fast at cruising, they may not see a reason to try something harder and slower. Walking is less efficient than cruising when you're first learning, and some toddlers are practical little people who stick with what works.
When the Cruising Phase Has Gone On Too Long
There's no single cutoff date, but here are the general guidelines pediatric PTs use:
15 months with no independent steps. If your toddler hasn't taken any independent steps by 15 months, it's a good idea to schedule a PT evaluation. This is within the outer range of typical but worth checking.
18 months and still not walking. The CDC and AAP consider 18 months the upper limit of the typical walking timeline. If your child isn't walking independently by 18 months, an evaluation is recommended. (If you've already read our article on toddler not walking at 18 months, you'll know this is a clear action point.)
Cruising for more than 3 months without progress. If your toddler started cruising at 10 months and is still exclusively cruising at 13 to 14 months with no signs of letting go, the pattern may indicate a need for targeted support.
Regression. If your toddler was starting to take independent steps and then stopped and went back to cruising only, this regression should be discussed with your pediatrician.
How PT Helps Bridge the Cruising-to-Walking Gap
A pediatric physical therapist can identify exactly what's preventing your toddler from making the leap to walking. Common interventions include:
Core and hip strengthening. Targeted activities that build the specific muscle groups needed for independent balance. This might include activities on unstable surfaces, single-leg stance games, or climbing activities that challenge the core and hips.
Balance training. Gradual progression from standing with two-hand support to one-hand support to momentary unsupported standing. A PT knows how to set up the environment so your toddler practices balance without feeling scared or frustrated.
Foot and ankle work. If foot or ankle instability is contributing, a PT may recommend specific footwear, orthotics, or exercises to build stability in the lower leg and foot.
Confidence building. For sensory-cautious kids, a PT can create situations that gradually increase your toddler's comfort with the feeling of unsupported standing and walking. This might involve walking between two people, pushing a weighted cart, or walking on different surfaces.
Parent coaching. Much of pediatric PT for this age group involves teaching parents what to do between sessions. Your PT will give you specific strategies for encouraging walking throughout your daily routine.
What You Can Do at Home
While you're waiting for an evaluation or working alongside PT sessions, try these strategies:
Create furniture gaps. Arrange your furniture with small gaps between pieces so your toddler has to take one or two unsupported steps to get from the couch to the coffee table. Keep the gap small enough that it feels achievable.
Offer push toys. A sturdy push walker (not a seated walker, which doesn't build the right muscles) gives your toddler the stability they're looking for while building the walking pattern. Make sure the push toy is weighted enough that it doesn't scoot away too fast.
Walk together with one hand. If your toddler wants to hold your hand, offer just one finger instead of your whole hand. This gives them less support and encourages them to use their own balance more. Gradually reduce even this support over time.
Avoid the two-hand walk. Walking while holding both of a toddler's hands above their head actually teaches a different balance pattern than independent walking. If you can, encourage one-hand support or use a push toy instead.
Celebrate attempts. When your toddler lets go of the furniture, even for a second, make it a positive experience. Your enthusiasm helps them associate the sensation of unsupported standing with something exciting rather than scary.
The Bottom Line
Cruising is a normal and important phase. But when it drags on well past the expected timeline, or when your toddler seems stuck despite being physically capable of more, professional support can make a real difference. Pediatric PTs help toddlers build the specific strength, balance, and confidence they need to transition to independent walking.
At Coral Care, we match families with pediatric PTs who specialize in helping toddlers take those first big steps. Get matched with a pediatric PT who can assess your toddler and create a personalized plan to get them walking.


