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The Question Every Parent Asks
Maybe your pediatrician mentioned physical therapy at your last visit. Maybe you've been watching your baby's friends hit milestones earlier. Maybe a grandparent made a comment that's been nagging at you. Whatever brought you here, you're asking a question that thousands of parents ask every day: does my child actually need PT?
The honest answer is that it depends, but the good news is that the signs are usually pretty clear once you know what to look for. Let's walk through the framework that pediatric physical therapists use to help parents make this decision.
Start Here: The Two Questions That Matter Most
Before we get into specific milestones and red flags, there are two questions that can help you quickly gauge whether a PT evaluation makes sense:
1. Is your child making steady progress? Development doesn't have to happen on a strict schedule. Some kids roll at 3 months, others at 6 months, and both can be perfectly normal. What matters more than timing is trajectory. Is your child consistently gaining new skills, even if they're on the slower end? Or have they hit a plateau where nothing new is emerging?
2. Does something look or feel different about how your child moves? Parents are remarkably good at sensing when something is off, even when they can't articulate exactly what it is. Maybe your baby feels unusually floppy when you pick them up. Maybe your toddler's walking looks different from other kids their age. Maybe one side of your child's body seems to work differently than the other. That gut feeling is worth trusting.
If you answered "no" to the first question or "yes" to the second, a PT evaluation is probably a good idea. But let's get more specific.
Signs by Age Group
0 to 6 months. At this age, the main things PTs look for are head control, symmetry, and early movement foundations. Consider an evaluation if your baby has difficulty lifting their head during tummy time by 3 to 4 months, always turns their head to one side, seems unusually stiff or unusually floppy when you handle them, isn't bringing hands to midline by 4 months, or has a visible flat spot developing on their head.
6 to 12 months. This is when the big motor milestones start rolling in. An evaluation may help if your baby isn't sitting independently by 9 months, isn't rolling in both directions by 7 months, isn't showing interest in crawling or scooting by 10 months, can't bear weight on their legs when held in standing by 9 months, or uses one side of their body significantly more than the other.
12 to 24 months. Walking is the headline milestone here, but there's more to it. Consider PT if your toddler isn't walking independently by 18 months, falls significantly more than other kids their age, walks exclusively on their toes, has difficulty with stairs (going up with help) by 18 months, or seems clumsy or uncoordinated compared to peers.
2 to 5 years. By this age, motor skills are becoming more refined. A PT evaluation can help if your child has difficulty running, jumping, or climbing compared to peers, avoids physical activities that other kids enjoy, has persistent balance problems, tires very quickly during physical play, or has difficulty with pedaling a tricycle by age 3.
Conditions That Often Benefit from PT
Some children come to PT not because of milestone delays, but because they have a diagnosed or suspected condition. Pediatric PT commonly helps kids with torticollis (tight neck muscles causing head tilt), low muscle tone (hypotonia), toe walking, flat feet or foot alignment issues, developmental coordination disorder, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, autism spectrum disorder (for motor components), prematurity, genetic conditions affecting muscle or bone development, scoliosis, joint hypermobility, and recovery from orthopedic injuries or surgeries.
If your child has any of these conditions, PT is often part of the recommended care plan. But you don't need a diagnosis to benefit from PT. Many children come in simply because their parents noticed something and wanted answers.
What If My Pediatrician Says to Wait?
This is one of the most common frustrations parents share with us. You bring up a concern at a well-child visit, and your pediatrician says "let's wait and see" or "they'll probably catch up." Sometimes this is the right call. Sometimes it isn't.
Here's what pediatric PTs want you to know: you don't need your pediatrician's permission to get a PT evaluation. In most states, you can see a physical therapist through direct access, which means no referral is needed. Your pediatrician may need to write a prescription for insurance coverage, but you can schedule an evaluation on your own.
A PT evaluation doesn't commit you to anything. It's an assessment that gives you information. If everything looks fine, you'll leave with peace of mind and maybe a few activities to support your child's development at home. If there's an area that needs work, you'll catch it early, when intervention is most effective.
The research on early intervention is clear: starting sooner leads to better outcomes. The "wait and see" approach sometimes works, but when it doesn't, the lost time can make a real difference. An evaluation removes the uncertainty.
What a PT Evaluation Involves
If the idea of a PT evaluation feels intimidating, it shouldn't. For babies and young children, the evaluation is essentially structured play. The PT will watch your child move, play with toys, and transition between positions. They'll assess muscle tone, strength, range of motion, balance, and coordination. They'll ask you detailed questions about your child's history and daily routines.
The whole thing usually takes about an hour. Your child will be playing for most of it. At the end, the PT will share their findings, explain what they mean in plain language, and discuss whether therapy would help. If so, they'll outline a plan that typically includes weekly sessions and a home program of activities you can do between visits.
The Cost of Waiting vs. the Cost of Acting
Parents sometimes delay getting an evaluation because they're worried about overreacting, the cost, or the time commitment. Let's address each of these:
Overreacting. Getting an evaluation when everything turns out fine isn't overreacting. It's responsible parenting. PTs evaluate children who are developing typically all the time, and those families leave with reassurance and often helpful tips for supporting development at home.
Cost. Most insurance plans cover pediatric PT with a prescription from your doctor. Coral Care works with most major insurance providers. The cost of a few PT sessions now is almost always less than the cost of more intensive intervention later.
Time. Early intervention at the youngest ages often resolves quickly. Many babies and toddlers need only 8 to 12 sessions before they're discharged. The longer you wait, the more sessions are typically needed.
Take the Next Step
If you've read this far, you probably have a reason to be here. Whether it's a specific concern or a general feeling that something might be off, trust that instinct. A PT evaluation gives you clarity, and clarity is always better than uncertainty.
At Coral Care, we make it easy to get started. We match families with experienced pediatric PTs, handle insurance verification, and can often schedule evaluations within days. Get matched with a pediatric PT who can answer your questions and assess your child's motor development.


