Physical Therapy
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March 20, 2026

Signs Your Child Might Need Physical Therapy

Worried about your child's movement, balance, or coordination? Here are the signs pediatric PTs look for — by age — and what to do if something feels off.

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Coral Care
Coral Care
Pediatric physical therapist helping a toddler practice walking during an in-home PT session

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Signs Your Child Might Need Physical Therapy

You might think physical therapy is mainly for injury recovery — for adults who've had knee surgery or athletes rehabbing a strain. For children, pediatric PT is something different: it supports motor development, strength, coordination, balance, and the physical foundation that underlies everything from learning to walk to keeping up on the playground.

What Pediatric Physical Therapists Do

A pediatric physical therapist (PT) evaluates and treats children with challenges in gross motor development, muscle strength and tone, balance and coordination, gait and movement patterns, and postural control.

Gross Motor Milestones: What to Watch

By 6 months: Rolls in both directions, beginning to push up on arms during tummy time.

By 12 months: Pulls to stand, cruises along furniture, beginning to walk independently or close to it.

By 18 months: Walks independently, beginning to climb, can squat to pick up objects.

By 24 months: Runs, kicks a ball, begins to jump.

By 3 years: Climbs stairs with alternating feet (with support), rides a tricycle, jumps with both feet.

By 4-5 years: Hops on one foot, skips, throws and catches a ball.

Signs That May Warrant a PT Evaluation

  • Not meeting gross motor milestones at expected ages
  • Walking on tiptoes consistently past age 3
  • Unusual gait — waddling, toe-walking, in-toeing or out-toeing that seems significant
  • Falling frequently or seeming significantly clumsier than peers
  • Muscle tone that seems unusually low (floppy) or high (stiff)
  • Avoiding physical play or tiring unusually quickly
  • Asymmetry — consistently favoring one side of the body
  • Flat feet with associated pain or tripping
  • Core weakness affecting sitting posture, handwriting readiness, or endurance

Frequently Asked Questions

Does my child need a referral to see a pediatric PT?
No referral is required to get an evaluation or start services at Coral Care.

My child walks on their toes. Should I be worried?
Toe-walking is common in toddlers learning to walk. Persistent toe-walking past age 3 warrants evaluation by a PT to rule out underlying causes and address any tightness or motor patterns.

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