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Honestly, very little. The transition is being managed by therapists and insurance companies in the background. If you want to feel prepared, save this article as a reference, watch for one-page explainers from your therapy provider in late 2026, and ask your provider directly if anything on a January 2027 EOB looks confusing. Anyone delivering speech therapy in 2027 should be able to explain the codes appearing on your bill in plain language.

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No. The therapy itself, the therapist, the goals being worked on, and the session structure all stay exactly the same. The only difference is what code appears on the paperwork after the session. If you are working with Coral Care, the transition happens behind the scenes and your therapist continues to focus entirely on your child.

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Yes. A single session may now show more than one line item on your Explanation of Benefits, especially if your child works on more than one type of skill in a visit. For example, if your child worked on both language and articulation goals, you may see two codes billed for the same session. This is normal under the new structure and does not mean you are being billed twice for the same work.

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The American Medical Association replaced 92507 with ten new codes that are specific to the type of therapy work and based on time. There are codes for fluency (stuttering), speech sound production (articulation), language, and voice. The exact five-digit code numbers are released in the official 2027 code book in fall 2026. The new codes are recognized by every insurance company that covers speech therapy.

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For most families, no. Your insurance plan covers speech therapy based on your benefits, not on which specific code is used. Your copays, deductibles, and visit limits work the same way under the new codes as they did under 92507. A few insurance plans may take a few weeks in early 2027 to process new codes smoothly, so a January claim might take a little longer than usual.

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Starting January 1, 2027, speech therapists across the country will use new billing codes that replace the older code 92507. Your bill may show different code numbers, sometimes more than one line item per session, and time-based units. The therapy itself does not change. Your insurance benefits, copays, deductibles, and visit limits work the same way as before.

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Frequency depends on the child's needs and goals. Children with mild motor delays or toe walking may benefit from biweekly or monthly sessions as maintenance, with a home program to carry over between visits. Children with significant hypotonia, cerebral palsy, or post-surgical recovery needs may require two to three sessions per week during intensive phases. Your Coral Care PT will evaluate your child and make a frequency recommendation based on the clinical picture — and adjust that recommendation as your child progresses.

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Early Intervention PT is federally funded, free to families, and available from birth through age 2 for children with developmental delays. It ends when a child turns 3, regardless of whether needs persist. School-based PT (ages 3+) is available through an IEP but is typically limited in frequency and scope to educational goals. Private PT through TEFA has no such restrictions — goals can address home mobility, outdoor play, sports participation, and general motor development at whatever frequency the child needs. Many families use TEFA to continue seamlessly after Early Intervention ends.

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Yes. PT addressing persistent toe walking — including Achilles stretching, sensory-based interventions, strengthening, and gait training — qualifies as an educational therapy under TEFA when provided by a licensed physical therapist. Early intervention matters: if Achilles tightness is left untreated, it can progress to a point where stretching and PT alone are insufficient and more invasive interventions become necessary.

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Yes. Physical therapy for children with cerebral palsy is covered under TEFA as an educational therapy. Children with cerebral palsy who have a qualifying IEP on file with TEA and household income at or below 500% of the Federal Poverty Level may qualify for up to $30,000 per year — enough to support intensive, sustained PT that maintains function and prevents secondary complications. In-home PT is particularly valuable for these children, as skills are practiced in the actual environments of daily life rather than a gym setting.

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Not with Coral Care. You can reach out directly and we will verify your insurance benefits before the first session. A physician referral may be required by your insurance plan to authorize coverage for PT sessions — our team can help you navigate that process. But a referral is not required to get started with Coral Care, get matched with a PT, or schedule an evaluation.

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Common signs include not walking by 15 months; persistent toe walking past age 2; falling significantly more than peers of the same age; asymmetrical movement — dragging one leg while crawling, favoring one side; feeling floppy or having low muscle tone; avoiding physical play or tiring faster than peers; difficulty with stairs, jumping, or playground equipment; and having a head tilt or neck rotation that doesn't self-correct. Any of these patterns warrants an evaluation. A Coral Care PT can assess what's happening and build a plan — no referral required.

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Yes. OTs with feeding specialties address sensory-based food aversions — reactions to texture, temperature, color, or smell that limit food repertoire — as well as oral motor dysfunction and mealtime anxiety. When sensory processing is driving the challenge, OT is the right starting point. For children with oral motor difficulties affecting chewing, swallowing, or the mechanics of eating, OT may work alongside a speech therapist. TEFA covers feeding therapy as an educational therapy when delivered by a licensed OT.

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School-based OT operates under an educational model, which means goals must directly relate to the child's ability to access their education. Sessions are typically brief (20–30 minutes), infrequent (often once a week or less), and focused narrowly on school function. Private OT through TEFA can address a broader range of goals — home routines, regulation in the community, extracurricular participation — at higher frequency with more individualized attention. Many families use both in combination.

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Yes. OT plays a central role in autism care, addressing sensory processing differences, emotional regulation, fine and gross motor development, self-care routines, and social participation skills. OT and speech therapy are often delivered together for autistic children — the disciplines are highly complementary. Children with autism who have a qualifying IEP on file with TEA may qualify for up to $30,000 annually through TEFA, which can support the intensive, multi-discipline treatment plans that research shows produce the best outcomes.

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Yes, when delivered by a licensed occupational therapist. Sensory integration therapy, sensory diet development, and structured sensory-based intervention programs provided by a licensed OT qualify as educational therapies under TEFA. Standalone sensory gyms or equipment without a licensed therapist present would not qualify as a therapy expense under TEFA rules.

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Yes — and this is one of the most common reasons families seek OT. Many meltdowns are rooted in sensory processing differences or regulation difficulties that have neurological, not behavioral, origins. OTs work on helping children recognize their own arousal states, build a toolkit of regulation strategies, and develop the sensory supports that reduce the frequency of difficult moments. This work is distinct from behavioral therapy: OT targets the underlying sensory and neurological foundations of self-regulation.

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Common signs include strong negative reactions to clothing textures, grooming, or unexpected touch; difficulty with fine motor tasks like buttons, zippers, or pencil grip; handwriting that seems much harder than it should be; frequent meltdowns at transitions or in sensory-rich environments like stores, cafeterias, or gyms; struggles with dressing, feeding, or other self-care routines; and difficulty organizing tasks or staying on topic during activities. A Coral Care OT evaluation can clarify what's happening and where intervention would help — no referral needed.

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Common signs vary by age. Under 12 months: not babbling, not responding to their name, limited eye contact. By 18 months: fewer than 10 words, not pointing to show you things. By 24 months: fewer than 50 words, not combining two words, speech that's hard for family members to understand. School age: difficulty following multi-step directions, problems with reading, being hard to understand for unfamiliar adults, or avoiding conversation. If you have a concern at any age, an evaluation is the right next step — you do not need a referral with Coral Care.

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Yes. Coral Care accepts BCBS Texas, Baylor Scott & White, and Curative alongside TEFA. Insurance typically functions as the primary payer, and TEFA funds can be used to cover the remainder — including co-pays, sessions beyond insurance limits, or services your insurance plan doesn't cover. Many families find that combining both sources allows for higher frequency and longer duration of therapy than either alone would support.

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CAS is a motor speech disorder in which the brain has difficulty planning and coordinating the precise movements needed to produce speech sounds. Unlike an articulation disorder where a child consistently mispronounces sounds, CAS involves inconsistent errors and difficulty with voluntary movement for speech. CAS requires intensive, highly structured, frequent intervention — typically two to three sessions per week — from an SLP with specific CAS training. The $30,000 TEFA tier is particularly meaningful for these families, as the cost of intensive apraxia treatment can be significant.

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Yes. Speech-language pathology for children with autism — including social communication, pragmatic language, AAC implementation, and articulation — is a covered TEFA educational therapy. Children with autism who have a qualifying IEP on file with TEA may qualify for up to $30,000 per year, which can support the intensive, frequent sessions that autistic children often benefit from most. No IEP is required to get started with Coral Care.

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TEFA eligibility begins at age 3. Private speech therapy with Coral Care is available starting at 12 months, and families can begin before TEFA funds open using insurance or self-pay. Early intervention in speech and language development — particularly during the toddler years — has the strongest evidence for long-term outcomes. Starting therapy now and transitioning payment to TEFA on July 1 is the approach we recommend for most families.

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Yes, when provided by a licensed SLP. Feeding therapy addressing oral motor dysfunction, food texture aversions, swallowing difficulty, and mealtime anxiety qualifies as an educational therapy under TEFA. For children with both sensory and oral motor components to their feeding challenges, OT and SLP may work together — both are covered under TEFA when delivered by licensed providers.

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An out-of-state IEP can be submitted as supplemental documentation and may help with Priority 1 placement in the TEFA lottery, but it does not alone qualify a child for the enhanced $30,000 funding tier. That tier requires an IEP issued by a Texas public school district or charter school on file with TEA. If you have recently moved to Texas, contacting your local school district to initiate a Texas IEP process is worth doing as soon as possible.

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The TEFA Disability Certification Form is an alternative documentation path for children who have a disability but do not currently have an IEP on file with TEA. Completed by a licensed professional — such as a pediatrician, psychologist, or therapist — the form can support Priority 1 placement in the TEFA lottery. However, it does not qualify a child for the $30,000 enhanced funding tier. Only a Texas public school or charter IEP on file with TEA unlocks that amount.

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A Coral Care evaluation produces detailed clinical documentation of your child's current functioning in areas like speech and language, motor development, or sensory processing. That documentation can serve as one of the supporting inputs when your school district evaluates your child for special education eligibility — but the IEP itself is created through the school's ARD committee process, not through a private provider. Coral Care's documentation strengthens the case; the school makes the determination.

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Not automatically. Three conditions must all be met: the IEP must have been issued by a Texas public school district or charter school (not a private school or out-of-state school); it must be from the 2023–24, 2024–25, or 2025–26 school year and on file with TEA; and the household income must be at or below 500% of the Federal Poverty Level. Both the IEP and the income requirement are necessary.

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Both tiers allow TEFA funds to be used for approved expenses including therapy, tutoring, and private school. The $10,474 standard tier is available to all eligible private school families. The $30,000 enhanced tier is specifically for children with a qualifying IEP on file with TEA from a Texas public school or charter school, with household income at or below 500% of the Federal Poverty Level. Both tiers require meeting the general TEFA eligibility requirements.

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Yes. A parent's concern is enough to get started. You do not need a diagnosis, a referral, or an IEP to begin therapy with Coral Care. Many families start with an evaluation, which then informs whether additional documentation — including pursuing an IEP through the school district — is appropriate. The evaluation itself becomes clinical evidence supporting that process.

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The 2026–27 application window closed March 31, 2026. If you applied, award notifications are going out in April via Odyssey. If you missed this cycle, the next window opens in early 2027. In the meantime, your child can start therapy with Coral Care today using insurance or self-pay — and you will be an established family with documented progress when the next cycle opens.

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Yes — and this is what we recommend. Families who begin with Coral Care now using insurance or self-pay arrive at July 1 with an established therapist who already knows their child, documented progress, and an active treatment plan. Switching payment to TEFA on July 1 does not disrupt the therapist relationship. Use code TEXASFAMILIES for $100 off your first evaluation.

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Yes. Coral Care is registered in the Odyssey TEFA marketplace and will accept TEFA funds starting July 1, 2026. We offer in-home occupational therapy, speech-language pathology, and physical therapy across Texas with 200 licensed providers statewide. Families can also combine TEFA with BCBS Texas, Baylor Scott & White, or Curative insurance.

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No. Unused TEFA funds roll over year to year as long as your child stays enrolled in the program. You do not lose money you don't spend in a given year — it simply carries forward into your account for the next year.

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TEFA funds are released in three disbursements. At least 25% of your annual award becomes available July 1, 2026. An additional 50% releases October 1, 2026. The remaining funds become available April 1, 2027. Unused funds roll over to the following year as long as your child remains enrolled in the program.

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No. An IEP determines your funding tier, not whether you qualify. Without an IEP, your child qualifies for the standard $10,474 tier (private school) or $2,000 (homeschool). With a qualifying IEP on file with TEA, your child may qualify for up to $30,000. Either way, your child can participate in TEFA and receive therapy through approved providers like Coral Care.

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Yes. TEFA explicitly covers fees for educational therapies provided by licensed professionals under Texas Education Code Section 29.3522. This includes occupational therapy, speech-language pathology, and physical therapy from providers registered in the Odyssey TEFA marketplace. Coral Care is an approved TEFA provider with 200 licensed therapists across Texas, ready to accept TEFA funds starting July 1, 2026.

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Trust your instincts. Pediatricians see children for short visits and may recommend a watchful waiting approach for mild concerns. But speech and language development happens quickly, and waiting can mean losing critical time during the window when intervention is most effective. You do not need a pediatrician referral to request a speech evaluation — you can contact an SLP directly or reach out to Coral Care and we will take it from there.

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A speech delay affects how clearly a child produces sounds and words — a child with a speech delay may be hard to understand even when they are saying the right things. A language delay affects what a child is able to say and understand — their vocabulary, sentence structure, and comprehension. Some children have one or the other; some have both. An SLP evaluation will clarify which is present and what kind of support your child needs.

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No. A speech-language pathologist evaluates your child based on what they observe — not based on whether a formal diagnosis exists. If your child is behind on language milestones, hard to understand, or showing signs of fluency or social communication challenges, an SLP can assess and develop a treatment plan without a prior diagnosis in place.

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Children can start speech therapy as early as infancy — there is no minimum age. Early Intervention programs serve children from birth through age 2, and private speech therapy is available at any age. The earlier a delay is identified and addressed, the better the outcomes. If you have concerns about your child's speech or language at any age, the right move is to get an evaluation rather than wait.

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Yes — and for many children it is more effective. In-home physical therapy happens in the environment where your child actually lives: your floors, stairs, backyard, and daily routines. Skills practiced there transfer immediately to real life rather than needing to generalize from a clinic setting. Coral Care's in-home PTs are licensed pediatric specialists, and sessions are billed to insurance the same way outpatient clinic visits are.

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Late bloomers typically catch up on their own within a few months, and their overall movement quality looks typical even if timing is slightly behind. A gross motor delay involves a wider gap from same-age peers, inconsistency across multiple milestones, or movement quality that looks qualitatively different — such as low muscle tone, asymmetrical movement, or significant clumsiness. If you are unsure, a PT evaluation will tell you definitively which you are dealing with.

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Toe-walking is common in toddlers who are just learning to walk and usually resolves on its own. If your child is still walking on their toes consistently past age 3, or if it's happening alongside muscle stiffness, limited range of motion, or other motor concerns, a PT evaluation is a good next step. A pediatric PT can assess whether there is an underlying cause and address any tightness before it becomes harder to treat.

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No referral is required to get an evaluation or start services at Coral Care. You can reach out directly and we will verify your insurance benefits before your child's first session. If your pediatrician has concerns about your child's motor development, a referral can help with insurance authorization — but it is not a requirement to get started.

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Sensory-related meltdowns tend to follow a pattern: they happen in specific environments (loud places, crowded rooms, transitions between activities) and feel disproportionate to what triggered them. If your child's meltdowns are frequent, hard to de-escalate, and seem tied to specific sensory inputs or unexpected changes, an OT evaluation can clarify whether sensory processing is involved and what to do about it.

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Yes, when food refusal is rooted in sensory processing differences — reactions to texture, temperature, color, or smell — OT is the right starting point. A pediatric OT can assess whether sensory sensitivities are driving the behavior and develop strategies to expand your child's food repertoire. For children with oral motor challenges, an OT may work alongside a speech therapist.

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Occupational therapy focuses on the skills children need to participate in daily life — getting dressed, managing sensory experiences, writing, regulating emotions, and developing fine motor coordination. Speech therapy addresses communication: talking, understanding language, reading foundations, and in some cases feeding and swallowing. Many children benefit from both, and Coral Care offers them together under one care team.

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No. Occupational therapists evaluate what they observe — not what's on a piece of paper. If your child is struggling with fine motor skills, sensory responses, dressing, or emotional regulation, that's enough reason to request an evaluation. A diagnosis is not required to receive services through Coral Care.

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In most cases, yes. Coral Care accepts most major insurance plans across our nine states. Coverage varies by plan and state — contact us and we'll check your benefits before your first session.

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Convenience matters, which is exactly why in-home therapy exists. When a therapist comes to your home, you get everything telehealth promises — no commute, no waiting room, therapy in your child's natural environment, real family involvement — and your child still gets actual therapy. In-home in-person care is not a compromise between convenience and quality. It is both.

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No. The need for physical guidance doesn't diminish as children get older. A seven-year-old working on handwriting, an eight-year-old with feeding challenges, a nine-year-old building fine motor strength — all of them need hands-on intervention. Virtual OT advocates sometimes frame older children as better candidates for telehealth because they can follow instructions. But following instructions and receiving therapy are two different things.

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The honest read is mixed. The clearest post-pandemic data point: when researchers surveyed 132 pediatric OTs after restrictions lifted, the median rate of telehealth use had dropped to just 10% of their services. These are clinicians who did both. When they had a choice, nine out of ten went back in person. That is the research that matters most.

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Mostly, you become the therapist. The OT watches through a camera and directs you — how to move your child's body, what input to provide, how to respond to what you're seeing. That coaching has value. But you were not trained to deliver occupational therapy, you cannot feel what a trained clinician feels, and you are also trying to be the parent at the same time. Research confirms this burden is real — studies found some caregivers reported increased stress and burnout from managing virtual OT sessions. For a child with active therapy goals, this model asks too much of parents and delivers too little to kids.

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Because the work happens through the body, not through a screen. An OT working on handwriting can feel how a child grips a pencil and physically correct their hand position — a camera cannot. An OT working on feeding can assess oral motor function and texture responses up close in ways video cannot replicate. An OT working on sensory integration delivers deep pressure, vestibular input, and tactile stimulation that require physical contact. An OT working on dressing guides a child's hands through the motor sequence of buttoning, zipping, and fastening. Across almost every OT goal area, the most important clinical tool is the therapist's physical presence and hands — neither of which travels over a video call.

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For a narrow set of goals, yes. Telehealth OT works for teaching parents strategies, checking in on home programs, and maintaining skills a child already built through in-person work. For everything else — sensory integration, fine motor development, feeding, handwriting, self-care skills, motor planning, regulation — the research is less encouraging. The clearest finding across multiple studies is that virtual OT's strongest evidence is in coaching parents, not in treating children directly. Those are not the same thing.

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A lot more than most people expect. OT covers the full range of what children need to do every day: getting dressed, holding a pencil, eating without distress, sitting still long enough to learn, navigating a playground, regulating emotions when a plan changes. Specifically, pediatric OTs work on sensory processing, fine motor skills, gross motor development, handwriting, feeding and oral motor function, self-care, attention, emotional regulation, visual-motor integration, motor planning, and daily living skills. Most of these goals have one thing in common — they require a therapist whose hands are in the room.

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For a narrow set of goals, yes. Telehealth OT works for teaching parents strategies, checking in on home programs, and maintaining skills a child already built through in-person work. For everything else — sensory integration, motor development, body awareness, regulation — the research is less encouraging. The clearest finding across multiple studies is that virtual OT's strongest evidence is in coaching parents, not in treating children directly. Those are not the same thing.

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Virtual OT is therapy delivered over video call, where a licensed occupational therapist guides activities remotely. The therapist observes your child through a screen and coaches you or your child through exercises in real time. It expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic when in-person care wasn't an option — and for many families, it was better than nothing. But better than nothing is a low bar when your child has real sensory or motor needs.

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Don't wait. Start with our free developmental screener to get a clearer picture of where your child stands. If you have concerns, reach out to your pediatrician and consider self-referring to Coral Care — the earlier a child gets support, the better the outcomes.

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Speech therapy addresses communication — including talking, understanding language, and in some cases feeding and swallowing. Occupational therapy focuses on the skills children need to participate in daily life: fine motor skills, sensory processing, self-care tasks like dressing and eating, and attention. Many children benefit from both, which is why Coral Care offers them together.

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Yes — they're not mutually exclusive. Some families work with Coral Care while waiting for public services to begin, and others use us alongside their public EI services. Our goal is to make sure your child isn't losing critical development time while paperwork and waitlists sort themselves out.

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Yes. Coral Care works with insurance so that families can access in-home speech and occupational therapy without paying out of pocket. We'll help you understand your coverage when you reach out.

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No. Families can self-refer directly to Coral Care. You don't need a doctor's order or a referral from the public EI system. Just reach out and we'll take it from there.

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Coral Care is a pediatric therapy company providing in-home speech therapy and occupational therapy for children across the Philadelphia region. Unlike the public early intervention system, we don't have a waitlist families have to navigate. We come directly to your child — at home or at school — and we work with insurance so families aren't paying out of pocket.

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Philadelphia's early intervention system — particularly the preschool program for children ages 3–5 run through Elwyn — is significantly under-resourced relative to demand. There's a shortage of qualified therapists, and the administrative process can be slow. Families who are legally entitled to services are waiting months, sometimes longer. It's a real and documented problem, and it's part of why private providers like Coral Care exist.

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A team of specialists will assess your child across multiple developmental areas — communication, motor skills, cognition, and social-emotional development. It's not a test your child can pass or fail. The evaluation is designed to understand where your child is and what support would help them thrive. Results are shared with you, and if your child is eligible, you'll work with the team to build an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) or Individualized Education Program (IEP).

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In Pennsylvania, anyone can make a referral — you don't need a doctor's order. You can contact your pediatrician, call the statewide CONNECT line, or reach out directly to your local early intervention program. In Philadelphia, that's the Infant Toddler EI program (birth to 3) at 215-685-4646, or Elwyn Early Learning Services (ages 3–5) at 215-222-8054. You can also self-refer directly to Coral Care and we'll help guide you from there.

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Any child from birth to age five who has a developmental delay or disability, or is at risk for one, may be eligible. You don't need a diagnosis to request an evaluation — a concern is enough to get the process started.

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Early intervention is a federally mandated system of support for children from birth through age five who have developmental delays or disabilities. Services can include speech therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy, and specialized instruction. The goal is to address delays during the earliest — and most critical — window of brain development, when support is most effective.

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Early Intervention (EI) is a federally funded program providing free or low-cost evaluations and therapy for children under 3 with developmental delays. It's services-based and family-centered, often delivered in the home. Private therapy (including in-home providers like Coral Care) operates outside EI and is billed through insurance. Private therapy typically offers more scheduling flexibility, faster access, and the ability to continue beyond age 3 without the EI eligibility cutoff. Many families use both simultaneously.

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Feeding and swallowing therapy addresses difficulty with eating, drinking, or managing food safely — including chewing challenges, swallowing dysfunction, texture aversions, oral motor weakness, and sensory-based food refusal. It's provided by SLPs (for swallowing mechanics and oral motor function) and OTs (for sensory and behavioral aspects of feeding). For children with significant feeding challenges, co-treatment between OT and SLP often produces the best results.

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Signs include: not walking by 15 months, walking on tiptoes consistently past age 2, frequent falls significantly beyond what peers experience, asymmetrical crawling or movement patterns, avoiding physical play, low muscle tone (feeling floppy), difficulty climbing stairs, and not keeping up with peers physically. Any of these patterns warrants a conversation with your pediatrician and a referral for a PT evaluation.

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The brain is most plastic — most responsive to intervention — in the first three to five years of life. Early intervention leverages this neurological window to build skills before compensatory patterns become entrenched and before delays compound. Children who receive early intervention consistently show better outcomes than those who wait. The cost of waiting is real: delayed speech at 18 months becomes a bigger gap at 36 months without intervention.

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If your child is behind on speech milestones, hard to understand for their age, frustrated by their inability to communicate, avoiding verbal interaction, or showing regression in speech skills, a speech evaluation is warranted. You don't need a pediatrician's referral — you can contact an SLP directly or request Early Intervention for children under 3. An evaluation gives you clarity; it doesn't commit you to a course of treatment.

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Pediatric OT helps young children develop the skills they need to participate in their daily "occupations" — play, learning, self-care, and interaction. For infants and toddlers this means fine motor development, sensory processing, feeding skills, and early self-care. For preschoolers it expands to include pre-handwriting skills, emotional regulation, and school readiness. OT for young children is always play-based, family-centered, and tied to functional goals that matter in daily life.

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PT-recommended home products include: mini trampolines with handle bars for vestibular and strength work, balance boards and wobble cushions for proprioceptive input, therapy balls for core strengthening, resistance bands sized for children, stepping stones for balance, and foam rollers for body awareness. Your child's PT can recommend specific products based on their goals and will show you how to use them effectively as part of a home exercise program.

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OT targets the developmental skills kindergarten demands: fine motor skills for writing and cutting, emotional regulation for managing transitions and group demands, sensory processing for tolerating a busy classroom environment, self-care independence (dressing, bathroom use, feeding), and attention for tabletop tasks. Starting OT before kindergarten — especially if there are known developmental concerns — gives children the most runway to build these foundations before academic expectations begin.

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A Coral Care care coordinator helps families navigate the process of getting pediatric therapy — from verifying insurance benefits and matching families with the right therapist, to answering questions about next steps and supporting families through the intake process. They're the human touchpoint that makes the experience feel manageable rather than like navigating a fragmented healthcare system alone. Coordinators don't provide therapy — they make sure you can access it smoothly.

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Behavioral therapy (most commonly ABA — Applied Behavior Analysis) uses principles of learning and reinforcement to teach new skills and reduce challenging behaviors. It's most commonly used with autistic children. OT addresses sensory, motor, and daily function; speech addresses communication; behavioral therapy addresses behavior and skill acquisition through structured reinforcement. They often complement each other and are used simultaneously for children with complex needs.

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Research following the pandemic documented significant increases in language delays, social communication challenges, and motor delays in children born during or shortly before the pandemic. Reduced social interaction, limited face-to-face communication (due to masks), and loss of childcare and play-based learning all contributed. Many of these children responded well to early intervention once it was accessed. The lesson reinforced the importance of early identification and prompt referral.

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Not necessarily on its own. Academic knowledge is only one piece of kindergarten readiness. The skills that most predict kindergarten success are social-emotional — managing frustration, separating from caregivers, following group instructions, and navigating peer relationships. A child who knows all their letters but melts down daily or can't sit in a group for 10 minutes may struggle more than a child with fewer academic skills and stronger regulation.

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General benchmarks: 1–3 words by 12 months, 10–20 words by 18 months, 50+ words and beginning two-word combinations by 24 months, and 200+ words with simple sentences by 36 months. These are averages — variation exists. The more important signal is consistent forward progress. Any loss of words previously used is a red flag that warrants immediate evaluation regardless of current word count.

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Tummy time builds the neck, shoulder, and core strength that underlies all subsequent motor development — rolling, sitting, crawling, and eventually walking. It also prevents positional plagiocephaly (flat head syndrome) from too much back-lying. Babies who get insufficient tummy time often show delays in motor milestones. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends starting tummy time from the first day home from the hospital, with increasing duration as tolerated.

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Start with short sessions (1–2 minutes) several times a day rather than one long stretch. Try tummy time on your chest rather than the floor — babies often tolerate it better with a caregiver's heartbeat and face nearby. Place a rolled towel under the chest to reduce strain. Use high-contrast toys or a mirror at eye level. As your baby gets stronger, increase duration. Most babies who resist tummy time improve quickly with consistent, short daily practice.

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Play is the primary vehicle through which children develop motor skills, language, social-emotional competence, problem-solving, and self-regulation. The type of play that's most beneficial evolves with age: sensory and physical play in infancy, symbolic and pretend play in toddlerhood, rule-based play in preschool, and collaborative and creative play in school age. At every stage, child-led play in a supportive environment is more developmentally powerful than structured adult-directed activities.

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Predictable routines provide the nervous system with structure that supports regulation — particularly important for children with sensory processing differences, ADHD, or anxiety. Morning routines prime the nervous system for the day ahead; evening routines signal winding down and prepare the brain for sleep. OTs often help families redesign routines when they're consistently dysregulating — sequencing, timing, and sensory content of routines all affect how they work.

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Climbing develops upper body and core strength, bilateral coordination, problem-solving, body awareness, and risk assessment. It's one of the richest developmental activities available to children — and one that's disappearing from many school playgrounds. For sensory-seeking kids, climbing provides powerful proprioceptive and vestibular input. PTs and OTs frequently recommend climbing as a home or playground activity precisely because it addresses so many developmental domains simultaneously.

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The first session is typically an evaluation — the PT observes how your child moves, assesses strength and range of motion, identifies functional challenges, and reviews your concerns. They'll play with your child to see how they naturally navigate their environment. You'll receive initial impressions and a plan for ongoing sessions. Subsequent sessions follow a consistent structure with active parent participation and home exercise coaching.

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Pediatric PTs are skilled at using what's already in your home: stairs for step practice, couch cushions for balance and core work, laundry baskets for pushing and pulling (heavy work), pillows for obstacle courses, a ball for coordination, and a yoga mat for floor exercises. The advantage of in-home PT is that therapy happens with your actual environment, making skills immediately transferable to daily life.

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A pediatric SLP evaluates and treats challenges with communication — speech sounds, language development, social communication, fluency, voice, and feeding and swallowing. They help children who are delayed in language, hard to understand, struggling with reading foundations, having difficulty in social situations, or who have feeding difficulties related to oral motor function. SLPs also work closely with families, coaching caregivers on strategies that support development between sessions.

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A pediatric OT helps children participate more fully in the activities of daily life — play, learning, self-care, and social participation. They address fine motor delays, sensory processing differences, emotional regulation challenges, handwriting difficulties, feeding issues, and daily living skill gaps. OTs also collaborate with families and schools to design environments and routines that support the child's development between therapy sessions.

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A pediatric PT evaluates and treats challenges related to movement, strength, balance, coordination, and physical endurance. They help children who struggle to walk, run, climb, or keep up with peers physically; who have conditions like cerebral palsy, hypotonia, or torticollis; or who need rehabilitation after injury or surgery. PTs also identify and address musculoskeletal asymmetries and postural issues before they become bigger problems.

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An OT comes to your home and conducts therapy within your child's actual daily context — their bedroom, kitchen, bathroom, and play spaces. This allows direct observation of where challenges occur and enables therapy that transfers immediately to real routines. Sessions include hands-on treatment, parent education, and environmental modifications. Skills learned at home generalize better than skills learned in a clinic because they're practiced where life actually happens.

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A pediatric PT visits your home on a regular schedule and conducts therapy using your child's own environment — your floors, stairs, furniture, yard, and the activities your child naturally does. This allows the therapist to design interventions around real daily challenges rather than clinic-based simulations. Sessions include direct treatment, caregiver coaching, and home exercise programs. In-home PT is billed to insurance the same as outpatient therapy.

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An SLP comes to your home at scheduled appointment times and conducts therapy in your child's natural environment using your child's own toys, books, and daily routines as the therapy context. Sessions are play-based and parent-inclusive — the therapist coaches you on strategies to use between visits. Insurance billing works the same as outpatient clinic therapy. In-home SLP is covered by most major insurers and is often more effective for young children because skills are practiced where they'll actually be used.

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Signs include: speech that's difficult for teachers or peers to understand, avoiding verbal participation in class, word-finding difficulties (frequent "um," pausing, or substituting words), social communication challenges (difficulty in conversations or group settings), stuttering, voice disorders, and reading or writing difficulties linked to phonological awareness. Teachers are often the first to notice these patterns across different classroom contexts.

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Signs include: messy or illegible handwriting that doesn't improve with instruction, significant difficulty with scissors, buttons, or zippers, sensory sensitivities that disrupt classroom participation, emotional dysregulation that interferes with learning, avoidance of fine motor tasks, trouble with self-care tasks, and difficulty organizing materials or following multi-step instructions. Any of these patterns, when persistent, warrants a referral for OT evaluation.

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Key signs include: frequent unexplained falls or clumsiness, difficulty keeping up with peers in physical activity, avoiding movement or physical play, significant asymmetry in how they use their body, complaints of pain or fatigue during ordinary activities, toe-walking, and poor core strength evident in posture or sitting endurance. Teachers often notice these signs first because they observe children across many physical contexts throughout the day.

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Children progress through solitary play (playing alone, typical under age 2), parallel play (playing alongside but not with peers, 2–3 years), associative play (interacting with peers around shared materials without organized goals, 3–4 years), and cooperative play (organized games with rules and shared objectives, 4+ years). These stages don't replace each other — children move fluidly between them. Significant delays in progressing through stages can indicate social communication or developmental differences worth evaluating.

Occupational Therapy
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March 2, 2026

Top occupational therapy activities for preschoolers: boost skills and fun

Discover fun and effective occupational therapy activities for preschoolers to boost motor skills, coordination, and developmental growth.

author
Coral Care
Coral Care
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Occupational Therapy Activities for Preschoolers: A Parent's Guide

Preschool years are filled with remarkable growth—your child is learning to dress themselves, use scissors, play with friends, and navigate their world with increasing independence. But what happens when certain tasks feel harder for your child than they should? When buttons are frustrating, playground equipment seems intimidating, or sensory experiences lead to meltdowns?

This is where occupational therapy can make a meaningful difference. And between therapy sessions, the activities you do at home play a crucial role in your child's development.

If you're looking for practical, fun ways to support your preschooler's occupational therapy goals—or simply want to boost their developmental skills through everyday play—this guide is for you. These activities are designed by occupational therapists to build essential skills while keeping things playful and engaging for young children.

Why Occupational Therapy Matters for Preschoolers

Occupational therapy for preschoolers focuses on helping children develop the physical, cognitive, sensory, and social skills they need for everyday activities—what therapists call "occupations." For a preschooler, these occupations include:

  • Getting dressed independently (buttons, zippers, shoes)
  • Using utensils and drinking from cups
  • Holding crayons and scissors correctly
  • Playing with peers and sharing toys
  • Sitting still during circle time
  • Navigating playground equipment
  • Managing sensory experiences (loud noises, messy textures, bright lights)
  • Following multi-step directions

When children struggle with these tasks, it's not about effort or behavior—it's often about underlying skills that need support and practice. Occupational therapists help identify these skill gaps and create strategies to bridge them.

The goal? To help your preschooler participate fully in their world with confidence and independence.

How to Use These Activities

Before diving into specific activities, here are some principles to keep in mind:

Follow your child's lead: Activities work best when they match your child's interests. Love dinosaurs? Incorporate them into fine motor tasks. Obsessed with vehicles? Use toy cars in sensory bins.

Keep it playful: These activities should feel like play, not work. The moment something becomes a battle, take a break and try a different approach.

Start where your child is: If an activity feels too hard, simplify it. If it's too easy, add challenge. Your child's occupational therapist can help you gauge the right level.

Consistency matters more than perfection: Five minutes of practice most days beats an hour of frustration once a week.

Celebrate small wins: Notice and celebrate effort and progress, not just perfect execution.

Now, let's explore activities organized by the skills they develop.

Fine Motor Skills Development

Fine motor skills involve the small muscles of the hands and fingers. These skills are essential for countless daily tasks—writing, buttoning, using utensils, tying shoes, and more.

Peeling Stickers

What it develops: Pincer grasp (thumb and pointer finger), hand-eye coordination, finger strength

How to do it: Give your child a sheet of stickers and a piece of paper. Let them peel stickers off the backing and place them wherever they want. To add challenge, draw circles on the paper and ask them to place stickers inside the circles.

Why it works: The precise movement of grasping and peeling a sticker strengthens the exact muscles needed for holding a pencil and manipulating small objects.

Make it fun: Use themed stickers (animals, favorite characters) or create a sticker story together.

Stringing Beads

What it develops: Bilateral coordination (using both hands together), hand-eye coordination, focus and concentration

How to do it: Provide large beads and a shoelace, pipe cleaner, or sturdy string. Show your child how to thread beads onto the string. Start with larger beads and progress to smaller ones as their skills improve.

Variations:

  • Use cereal like Cheerios and uncooked pasta for edible stringing fun
  • Create patterns (red, blue, red, blue) to add cognitive challenge
  • Make jewelry they can actually wear to boost motivation

Why it works: Threading requires precise hand movements and the coordination of both hands working together—one holding steady while the other threads.

Using Clothespins

What it develops: Grip strength, pincer grasp, hand strength

How to do it: Give your child clothespins and something to clip them onto—the edge of a container, cardboard, felt shapes, or even their clothes.

Activity ideas:

  • Clip clothespins around the rim of a paper plate to make a "lion's mane"
  • Transfer pom-poms from one bowl to another using clothespins
  • Hang doll clothes on a mini clothesline
  • Sort by color, clipping matching clothespins to colored paper

Why it works: The squeezing motion strengthens the same muscles used in gripping a pencil and manipulating fasteners like buttons.

Additional Fine Motor Activities

Playdough play: Squishing, rolling, pinching, and molding playdough is one of the best fine motor workouts available. Add cookie cutters, plastic knives, and small objects to hide and find.

Scissors practice: Start with play dough or thick paper strips. Progress to cutting along lines as skills develop. Look for spring-loaded training scissors if regular scissors are too difficult.

Tweezers and tongs: Use child-sized tweezers or kitchen tongs to pick up small objects (pom-poms, cotton balls, small toys) and transfer them between containers.

Sensory Play Activities

Sensory play engages your child's senses—touch, sight, smell, sound, and movement—and is crucial for brain development, emotional regulation, and learning. For children with sensory processing challenges, these activities help them gradually build tolerance and understanding of different sensations.

Playdough Creations

What it develops: Tactile exploration, hand strength, creativity, sensory tolerance

How to do it: Provide playdough (homemade or store-bought) and let your child explore freely. Add tools like rolling pins, cookie cutters, plastic knives, or small toys to press into the dough.

Make your own:

  • 2 cups flour
  • 1 cup salt
  • 2 tablespoons cream of tartar
  • 2 cups water
  • 2 tablespoons oil
  • Food coloring

Mix and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until it forms a ball.

Why it works: The resistive texture of playdough provides deep pressure input to hands while allowing creative expression. The process of making playdough together also incorporates measuring, mixing, and following steps.

Sensory Bins

What it develops: Tactile exploration, fine motor skills (scooping, pouring, pinching), focused attention, sensory tolerance

How to do it: Fill a large plastic bin or container with a base material (rice, dried beans, kinetic sand, water beads, shredded paper). Add scoops, cups, funnels, and small toys. Let your child explore freely.

Theme ideas:

  • Ocean bin with blue water beads, shells, and plastic sea creatures
  • Construction bin with kinetic sand, small trucks, and rocks
  • Farm bin with dried corn, plastic animals, and small cups for "feeding"

Why it works: Sensory bins provide controlled exposure to different textures in a playful context, helping children build sensory tolerance while developing motor skills.

Bubble Popping

What it develops: Hand-eye coordination, tracking skills, sensory processing, motor planning

How to do it: Blow bubbles and let your child pop them using different methods—clapping, stomping, using one finger, using just their pointer fingers together.

Variations:

  • Pop bubbles while jumping on one foot
  • Catch bubbles on a wand
  • Pop only big bubbles or only small bubbles

Why it works: The unpredictable movement of bubbles challenges visual tracking and motor planning, while the sensory experience of popping provides satisfying feedback.

Gross Motor Skills Enhancement

Gross motor skills involve large muscle groups and whole-body movements. These skills are essential for playground play, sports, balance, coordination, and overall physical confidence.

Obstacle Courses

What it develops: Balance, coordination, motor planning, strength, body awareness

How to do it: Create an indoor or outdoor course using household items:

  • Couch cushions to jump on or step over
  • Tape on the floor to walk along (like a balance beam)
  • Blanket tunnel to crawl through
  • Hula hoop to jump in and out of
  • Stairs to climb up and down

Why it works: Obstacle courses challenge multiple motor skills in a fun, adventurous format. Children love the game-like quality and the sense of accomplishment.

Pro tip: Let your child help design the course. Ownership increases engagement.

Animal Walks

What it develops: Core strength, coordination, motor planning, body awareness

How to do it: Move like different animals:

  • Bear walk: On hands and feet, bottom in the air
  • Crab walk: Sitting position, hands behind, walk backward on hands and feet
  • Frog jump: Squat low and jump forward
  • Snake slither: Army crawl on belly
  • Flamingo stand: Balance on one foot
  • Bunny hop: Jump forward with feet together

Why it works: These movements engage core muscles, build upper body strength, and challenge coordination in playful, imaginative ways.

Ball Games

What it develops: Hand-eye coordination, gross motor control, timing, bilateral coordination

How to do it:

  • Roll a ball back and forth while sitting
  • Throw bean bags or soft balls into a basket or target
  • Kick a ball toward a goal
  • Catch and throw with a partner (start with large, lightweight balls like beach balls)
  • Bounce and catch

Progression: Start with large, slow-moving objects. Progress to smaller, faster ones as skills improve.

Visual Motor Integration

Visual motor integration is the ability to coordinate what the eyes see with what the hands do. This skill is essential for handwriting, reading, sports, and countless daily tasks.

Tracing Shapes

What it develops: Hand-eye coordination, pencil control, pre-writing skills, shape recognition

How to do it: Start with large, simple shapes (circle, square, triangle). Your child can trace with their finger first, then with crayons or markers. Progress to more complex shapes and smaller sizes.

Variations:

  • Trace in shaving cream, sand, or on a fogged mirror
  • Use stencils and templates
  • Draw shapes with chalk on the driveway and have them walk along the lines

Puzzle Assembly

What it develops: Visual perception, problem-solving, spatial awareness, fine motor control

How to do it: Provide age-appropriate puzzles. For preschoolers, start with 4-12 piece puzzles with large pieces and clear images. Progress to more complex puzzles as skills develop.

Tips:

  • Start with knob puzzles (pieces have handles) for younger preschoolers
  • Choose puzzles featuring your child's interests
  • Work on puzzles together, narrating your problem-solving process

Why it works: Puzzles require children to analyze shapes, rotate pieces mentally, and coordinate hand movements to fit pieces—all critical visual motor skills.

Dot-to-Dot Drawings

What it develops: Visual tracking, number recognition, pencil control, hand-eye coordination

How to do it: Start with simple dot-to-dots with large dots and numbers 1-10. Progress to more complex images and higher numbers as skills develop.

Why it works: Following dots in sequence challenges visual tracking (a skill essential for reading) while requiring precise hand movements.

Everyday Household Activities

Some of the best occupational therapy happens during everyday routines. These activities build real-world skills while giving your child a sense of contribution and competence.

Sorting Laundry

What it develops: Sorting and categorizing, bilateral coordination, visual discrimination

How to do it:

  • Match socks together
  • Sort laundry by color or type (shirts vs. pants)
  • Fold washcloths or match hand towels
  • Transfer clothes from washer to dryer

Why it works: These tasks involve sorting (a cognitive skill), manipulation of fabrics (sensory and motor), and contributing meaningfully to family routines (self-esteem).

Cooking Tasks

What it develops: Fine motor skills, bilateral coordination, following directions, sensory exploration

How to do it: Involve your preschooler in simple, safe kitchen tasks:

  • Stirring batter or mixing ingredients
  • Pouring pre-measured ingredients
  • Spreading with a butter knife
  • Kneading dough
  • Washing vegetables
  • Using cookie cutters
  • Sprinkling toppings

Why it works: Cooking involves so many skills—measuring, pouring, mixing, following steps—all while being purposeful and ending with something delicious.

Cleaning Windows

What it develops: Upper body strength, bilateral coordination, crossing midline (reaching across the body)

How to do it: Give your child a spray bottle with water and a cloth. Let them spray and wipe windows, mirrors, or sliding glass doors.

Why it works: The spraying motion builds hand strength, while wiping in big circular motions develops arm strength and coordination.

Creative Art Projects

Art activities are natural occupational therapy—they build fine motor skills, encourage creativity, provide sensory experiences, and support emotional expression.

Finger Painting

What it develops: Tactile exploration, creativity, sensory tolerance, fine motor control

How to do it: Provide washable finger paints and large paper. Let your child explore freely—no rules, no expectations. This is about the process, not the product.

For sensory-sensitive children: Start with shaving cream, whipped cream, or pudding if traditional paint feels too messy. Let them use tools (brushes, cotton swabs) if fingers aren't comfortable yet.

Collage Making

What it develops: Fine motor skills (tearing, gluing), creativity, planning and execution

How to do it: Provide magazines, colored paper, tissue paper, or other materials. Let your child tear or cut pieces and glue them onto paper to create a collage.

Variations:

  • Specific themes (animals, nature, colors)
  • Texture collages using different materials (fabric scraps, sandpaper, cotton balls)
  • Seasonal collages

Why it works: Tearing paper strengthens hands, applying glue requires precision, and arranging pieces involves planning and spatial awareness.

Clay Sculpting

What it develops: Hand strength, creativity, tactile exploration, three-dimensional thinking

How to do it: Provide air-dry clay, modeling clay, or homemade salt dough. Let your child mold, roll, pinch, and create freely.

Why it works: Working with resistive materials like clay provides excellent hand strengthening while encouraging creative expression.

Hand-Eye Coordination Activities

Hand-eye coordination—the ability to synchronize visual information with hand movements—is foundational for so many tasks.

Threading Laces

What it develops: Bilateral coordination, focus, hand-eye coordination, fine motor precision

How to do it: Start with large lacing cards with big holes. Progress to smaller holes and lacing actual shoes as skills develop.

Make your own: Punch holes around the edge of a paper plate and let your child lace yarn through the holes.

Catching Games

What it develops: Timing, hand-eye coordination, gross motor control, visual tracking

How to do it:

  • Start with large, slow objects (balloons, beach balls)
  • Progress to smaller, faster balls
  • Try bean bags, which don't roll away when dropped
  • Practice underhand throws before overhand

Button Practice

What it develops: Fine motor precision, bilateral coordination, patience and persistence

How to do it: Create a "button snake" by sewing large buttons onto one end of a felt strip and cutting buttonholes in the other end. Your child practices buttoning in a fun, low-pressure format.

Alternative: Practice on actual clothing, starting with large buttons and loose buttonholes.

Core Strengthening Exercises

Core strength is essential for posture, balance, stability, and nearly every physical activity. A strong core supports all other motor development.

Plank Variations

What it develops: Core strength, shoulder stability, body awareness

How to do it:

  • Regular plank: Hold push-up position on hands and toes
  • Modified plank: On hands and knees
  • Plank walks: Walk hands forward and backward while holding plank
  • Kangaroo kicks: From plank position, hop feet toward hands

Keep it short: Preschoolers might hold for just 5-10 seconds at first. That's perfect! Focus on proper form.

Therapy Ball Activities

What it develops: Core strength, balance, body awareness

How to do it:

  • Sit on therapy ball and bounce
  • Lie on belly over ball and "walk" hands forward
  • Lie on back over ball for gentle stretching
  • Sit on ball during table activities (drawing, puzzles)

Safety: Always supervise ball activities and ensure the ball is appropriately sized for your child.

Wheelbarrow Walks

What it develops: Upper body strength, core stability, shoulder strength

How to do it: Hold your child's legs while they walk on their hands. Start with just a few "steps" and build up gradually.

Variations:

  • Wheelbarrow races to a target
  • Collect objects while wheelbarrow walking
  • Vary the distance based on strength

When to Work With an Occupational Therapist

While these activities can support any preschooler's development, professional occupational therapy may be beneficial if your child:

  • Struggles with tasks that peers master easily
  • Shows extreme frustration during fine motor activities
  • Avoids certain textures, movements, or sensory experiences
  • Has difficulty with balance, coordination, or body awareness
  • Struggles to sit still during age-appropriate activities
  • Has trouble following multi-step directions
  • Shows delays in self-care skills (dressing, feeding)
  • Avoids social play or has difficulty with peer interactions

An occupational therapist can assess your child's specific needs, identify underlying challenges, and create a personalized treatment plan.

How Coral Care Supports Preschoolers' Development

At Coral Care, we understand that getting help for your preschooler shouldn't mean months of waiting or major disruptions to your family's routine. That's why we've built a platform that makes accessing pediatric occupational therapy simple and stress-free.

What We Offer

Licensed pediatric occupational therapists who specialize in preschool development and bring therapy directly to your home

In-home sessions where your child feels most comfortable and therapy can address real-world skills in their natural environment

Insurance-covered services across major plans, with all the billing and verification handled for you

Fast access with no waitlists – start therapy within 1-2 weeks instead of waiting months

Flexible scheduling that works around preschool, nap times, and your family's routine

Parent coaching so you learn strategies to support your child's development between sessions

Comprehensive care – if your child also needs speech or physical therapy, we can coordinate all services through one platform

Getting Started Is Simple

Not sure if your child needs OT?

Take our free developmental screener to get clarity on your child's strengths and areas where support might help.

Take the 5-minute screener →

Ready to find a therapist?

Search for licensed occupational therapists in your area who can begin working with your preschooler right away.

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Have questions?

Our care navigation team is here to help you understand your options and get started.

Email us: hello@joincoralcare.com

Making Development Feel Like Play

The beauty of occupational therapy for preschoolers is that it doesn't feel like therapy—it feels like play. When your child is squishing playdough, they're building hand strength. When they're helping you cook, they're developing motor skills and following directions. When they're popping bubbles, they're working on coordination.

These activities work because they meet children where they are developmentally while gently challenging them to grow. And when practiced consistently in a playful, pressure-free way, they lead to real, meaningful progress.

Remember: every child develops at their own pace. Some preschoolers master buttons and scissors easily, while others need more time and support. Neither path is wrong—what matters is meeting your child where they are and celebrating their unique journey.

Whether you're supporting your child at home or working with an occupational therapist through Coral Care, these activities provide a foundation for building essential skills while keeping things fun, engaging, and age-appropriate.

Coral Care is a national pediatric an in-home pediatric therapy provider offering licensed, insurance-covered occupational, speech, and physical therapists who provide care in your home. We're making pediatric therapy easier, faster, and more accessible for families and clinicians alike.

All Coral Care content is reviewed and approved by our clinical professionals so you know you're getting verified advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do if I have concerns about my child's development?

If you're worried about your child's development, don't hesitate to consult an occupational therapist who can empower your child to reach their full potential. Taking this step can lead to positive changes and improvements in their independence and skills.

How can I incorporate core strengthening exercises into my child's routine?

Incorporating fun activities like plank variations, therapy ball exercises, and wheelbarrow walks can make core strengthening engaging for your child. Let's turn exercise into playtime and watch their physical abilities flourish!

What are some fun ways to improve hand-eye coordination in preschoolers?

To boost hand-eye coordination in preschoolers, try threading laces, playing catching games, and practicing buttoning. These enjoyable activities will not only keep them engaged but also help develop their essential skills!

How can sensory play activities benefit my child?

Sensory play activities significantly benefit your child by helping them explore their senses and develop crucial skills like language and motor abilities. Encourage these activities to boost their self-confidence and promote holistic growth!

Why are fine motor skills important for preschoolers?

Fine motor skills are vital for preschoolers as they empower independence in daily activities, like dressing and feeding. Developing these skills lays the foundation for successful writing and manipulation of objects, enhancing their confidence and capabilities!

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