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The Honest Answer: It Depends
"How long will my child need PT?" is one of the most common questions parents ask, and it's completely reasonable. You want to know what you're committing to, how long until you see results, and when your child will "graduate" from therapy. The honest answer is that timelines vary significantly based on your child's age, diagnosis, severity, and goals. But we can give you some realistic frameworks.
Typical Timelines by Condition
While every child is different, here are the general ranges pediatric PTs see most often:
Torticollis (infant). Most babies with torticollis respond well to PT within 2 to 4 months of consistent treatment, especially when caught early (before 3 months of age). Mild cases may resolve in 6 to 8 sessions. More established torticollis can take 4 to 6 months.
Gross motor delays (mild to moderate). Babies and toddlers with mild delays (rolling a bit late, not yet crawling) often catch up within 2 to 4 months of weekly PT. Moderate delays may take 4 to 8 months. The younger the child when PT starts, the faster progress tends to be.
Toe walking. Toe walking treatment varies widely depending on the cause. Habitual toe walking may respond to PT within 3 to 6 months. Toe walking related to muscle tightness or neurological factors may require 6 to 12 months or longer, sometimes combined with bracing or serial casting.
Low muscle tone (hypotonia). Because hypotonia is a characteristic rather than a condition that "resolves," PT timelines are longer. Many children with low tone benefit from PT for 6 to 12 months initially, with periodic check-ins as they reach new developmental stages. The goal shifts over time from building foundational skills to supporting higher-level motor activities.
Post-surgical rehabilitation. Children recovering from orthopedic surgeries (club foot correction, hip surgery, etc.) typically follow a defined rehab protocol. These programs usually last 3 to 6 months, with the most intensive phase in the first 6 to 8 weeks.
Conditions with ongoing needs. Children with cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, genetic conditions, or other diagnoses that affect motor development long-term often benefit from PT across multiple stages of development. This doesn't mean continuous weekly sessions forever. It often looks like an intensive phase followed by a maintenance phase, then periodic "tune-ups" as the child faces new motor challenges (learning to ride a bike, starting a sport, navigating a new school environment).
What Affects How Long PT Takes
Several factors influence the timeline:
Age at start of therapy. Earlier is almost always faster. A 4-month-old with torticollis will typically resolve faster than a 9-month-old with the same issue. This is because younger brains are more plastic and younger bodies haven't had time to develop compensatory patterns.
Severity of the delay or condition. A baby who is a few weeks behind on milestones will need less intervention than a baby who is several months behind. More significant delays require more time to build the foundational skills that were missed.
Consistency of attendance. This is one of the biggest factors parents can control. Children who attend PT consistently (weekly sessions without frequent cancellations) make faster progress than those with inconsistent attendance. Missing sessions disrupts momentum.
Home program follow-through. The activities your PT gives you to do between sessions are just as important as the sessions themselves. Families who consistently practice the home program see faster results. Even 5 to 10 minutes a day makes a measurable difference.
Underlying cause. A motor delay caused by limited floor time and too much time in containers will resolve faster than a delay caused by a neurological condition. The PT will identify the underlying factors during the evaluation and set expectations accordingly.
What Progress Actually Looks Like
Progress in pediatric PT is rarely a straight line. Here's what to realistically expect:
Weeks 1 to 4: The PT is getting to know your child, completing the evaluation, establishing goals, and teaching you the initial home program. You may see small changes, but this period is primarily about building the foundation for treatment.
Months 1 to 2: This is when you typically start seeing noticeable changes. Your child may be stronger in certain positions, more willing to try new movements, or showing improved quality in skills they already had. The changes might be subtle to outside observers but clear to you and your PT.
Months 2 to 4: For many children, this is the "breakthrough" period where new skills start clicking. The baby who wasn't rolling starts rolling. The toddler who was cruising takes independent steps. The work done in the early weeks pays off as skills that were building under the surface become visible.
Months 4 and beyond: If your child has a straightforward delay, this may be the transition-to-discharge phase. If there's an underlying condition, this is often where goals shift from foundational skills to higher-level activities and the frequency of sessions may decrease.
When to Reassess the Plan
A good PT will formally reassess your child's progress every 3 to 4 months (or sooner if things are moving quickly). During reassessment, you should expect updated standardized test scores showing measurable progress, a review of which goals have been met and which are still in progress, new goals for the next phase of treatment, and an honest conversation about whether PT is still needed.
If your child isn't making expected progress, the PT should be transparent about why and what adjustments to make. Sometimes a change in approach, frequency, or even a referral to another specialist is the right move.
Signs PT Is Working
Between formal reassessments, these are encouraging signs to watch for: your child is attempting movements they previously avoided, the quality of existing skills is improving (smoother, more controlled, more confident), your child is more willing to try new physical challenges, skills learned in therapy are carrying over to daily life, and other people (daycare providers, grandparents) are commenting on improvements.
When PT Ends
Discharge from PT happens when your child has met their goals, is functioning within age-appropriate expectations, and has the foundation to continue developing without ongoing professional support. Your PT will discuss discharge planning in advance so it's never a surprise.
Some families continue with periodic check-ins (every 3 to 6 months) after discharge to make sure development stays on track as their child faces new challenges. This is especially common for children with diagnosed conditions.
At Coral Care, our PTs set clear, measurable goals from day one and keep you informed about progress every step of the way. Get matched with a pediatric PT who can evaluate your child and give you a realistic picture of what the therapy journey will look like.


