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Falling Is Part of Learning to Walk. But How Much Is Normal?
Toddlers fall. A lot. When your child is first learning to walk, they'll take a few steps and topple. They'll trip over their own feet. They'll lose their balance reaching for a toy. This is completely normal and expected. Learning to walk is one of the most complex motor tasks your child will ever master, and falling is how they calibrate their balance system.
But at some point, you might start wondering whether your toddler is falling more than they should. Maybe they've been walking for several months but still seem unsteady. Maybe they trip and fall on flat surfaces with nothing to trip on. Maybe other kids their age seem more stable and coordinated. That nagging feeling is worth paying attention to.
What Normal Toddler Falling Looks Like
In the first few months of walking (roughly 12 to 16 months for most kids), frequent falling is completely expected. New walkers fall an average of 17 times per hour. That's a lot of falling, and it's a sign that their balance system is working hard to figure things out.
Normal toddler falling typically looks like this:
It improves over time. Week by week, the falling decreases. Your toddler goes from falling every few steps to falling a few times a day. The trend is clearly heading in the right direction.
They recover well. When they fall, they catch themselves with their hands, get back up quickly, and keep going. They have good protective reactions that prevent face-plants and hard impacts.
It happens more when they're tired, excited, or on challenging surfaces. Toddlers fall more at the end of the day, when they're running (a new and exciting skill), or when navigating stairs, curbs, or uneven ground. This is context-dependent clumsiness, and it's developmentally normal.
Their walking pattern is maturing. Over time, you should see their base of support narrow (feet closer together), their arms come down from the "high guard" position (arms up at shoulder level), and their steps become more even and rhythmic.
When Falling Might Signal a Problem
Here are the patterns that pediatric PTs look for when determining whether a toddler's falling is within normal limits or suggests an underlying issue:
Falling isn't decreasing over time. If your toddler has been walking for 3 to 6 months and is still falling as often as they did in the first few weeks, this plateau is worth investigating.
They fall on flat, familiar surfaces. Occasional trips happen to everyone. But if your toddler is regularly losing their balance on flat ground with nothing to trip on, their balance system may not be working efficiently.
They don't catch themselves well. By 15 to 18 months, toddlers should have good protective reactions. If your child consistently face-plants or falls without reaching out to catch themselves, this is a red flag for balance and protective reaction development.
One leg seems weaker or less coordinated. If your toddler stumbles more in one direction, or if one leg seems to give way more than the other, this asymmetry could indicate weakness or a neurological issue on one side.
They walk on their toes. Persistent toe walking (not just occasional tip-toeing) can affect balance and lead to more falling. Toe walking that persists beyond 2 years of age should be evaluated.
Their feet turn in or out significantly. Some in-toeing ("pigeon toes") or out-toeing is normal in early walkers, but significant rotation that causes tripping deserves a PT assessment.
They seem to avoid walking. If your toddler prefers crawling or being carried long after they've learned to walk, they may be avoiding walking because it feels unstable or effortful.
Falls seem to come out of nowhere. If your toddler loses their balance suddenly and without an obvious cause (like tripping or reaching), this could indicate a vestibular (inner ear balance) issue or a neurological concern.
What Could Be Causing Excessive Falling
Several underlying factors can contribute to a toddler falling more than expected:
Low muscle tone (hypotonia). Kids with low tone have to work harder to maintain stability because their muscles provide less passive support. This extra effort means they fatigue faster and their balance gives out more easily.
Core weakness. Strong core muscles are essential for maintaining an upright posture while walking. Toddlers with weak cores may compensate by walking with a wider base, leaning to one side, or using momentum rather than control.
Ankle or foot instability. The foot and ankle are the foundation of walking. Flat feet, ankle pronation (rolling inward), or hypermobile joints in the feet can all affect balance and lead to more frequent falls.
Vestibular processing issues. The vestibular system (inner ear) tells your brain where your body is in space and how fast you're moving. Kids with vestibular processing difficulties may have trouble with balance, coordination, and spatial awareness.
Visual processing issues. Vision plays a bigger role in balance than most people realize, especially for new walkers. If a toddler's visual system isn't processing depth perception or spatial information accurately, it can affect their stability.
Developmental coordination disorder (DCD). Some children have a motor planning difficulty that makes coordinated movements, including walking, more challenging. DCD affects about 5 to 6% of school-age children, but signs can appear in toddlerhood.
What a PT Evaluation Looks Like for a Falling Toddler
If you decide to get an evaluation, here's what to expect. The PT will watch your toddler walk, run (if they can), climb, and play. They'll look at the quality of movement, not just whether your child can do something, but how their body coordinates while doing it.
They'll assess muscle tone and strength, check range of motion in the hips, knees, ankles, and feet, evaluate balance reactions, and look at your toddler's overall posture and alignment. They'll also ask you about your toddler's movement history, daily activities, and the specific falling patterns you've noticed.
Based on the assessment, the PT may recommend a course of treatment (usually once a week for a period of weeks to months), home exercises, footwear recommendations, or in some cases, referral to other specialists like an orthopedist or developmental pediatrician.
What You Can Do at Home
While you're waiting for an evaluation or working alongside PT, these activities can help improve your toddler's balance and stability:
Walking on varied terrain. Grass, sand, gentle slopes, and uneven ground all challenge your toddler's balance system in ways that flat floors don't. Supervised outdoor walking on different surfaces is one of the best balance-building activities there is.
Stepping over obstacles. Set up small items (pool noodles, rolled towels, low blocks) for your toddler to step over. This builds the single-leg balance and foot clearance they need for smoother walking.
Climbing. Playground equipment, couch cushion obstacle courses, and stairs (supervised) all build the core and hip strength that supports walking balance.
Carrying objects while walking. Give your toddler a small, slightly weighted object to carry while walking. This changes their center of gravity and challenges their balance in a new way.
Dancing and movement play. Music and movement activities encourage weight-shifting, balance, and coordination in a fun, low-pressure way.
When to Act
If your toddler has been walking for more than 3 months and you're still concerned about how often they fall, or if you're seeing any of the red flag patterns described above, don't wait. An evaluation gives you clarity and, if needed, access to early intervention during the window when it's most effective.
At Coral Care, we match families with pediatric PTs who understand toddler motor development inside and out. Get matched with a pediatric PT who can assess your toddler's balance and give you a clear picture of what's going on.

