Coral Care content is reviewed and approved by our clinical professionals so you you know you're getting verified advice.
Find effective support for developmental delays, quickly.
Concerned about your child's development?
Our free screener offers guidance and connects you with the right providers to support your child's journey.
There's a moment most parents of late walkers know well. You're at the playground, or a birthday party, or the pediatrician's waiting room, and every other child your toddler's age is walking. Running, even. And yours is still cruising along furniture or crawling to get where they need to go.
If your toddler is 18 months old and not yet walking independently, it's natural to feel concerned. Here's what a pediatric physical therapist wants you to know.
When Do Most Kids Start Walking?
The average age for first independent steps is around 12 months, but the normal range is broad: anywhere from 9 to 18 months. The CDC lists walking independently as a milestone to watch for by 18 months, meaning most pediatricians will want to evaluate further if a child has not taken independent steps by that age.
Important context: the age a child starts walking has not been shown to predict their long-term athletic ability, intelligence, or overall development. Late walkers who are otherwise developing typically catch up completely and show no lasting differences from their early-walking peers.
What Counts as "Walking"
Walking milestones happen in stages, and each stage matters:
- Pulling to stand (typically 8-10 months). Using furniture, people, or objects to pull themselves up to standing.
- Cruising (typically 9-12 months). Walking sideways while holding onto furniture.
- Standing independently (typically 10-14 months). Letting go and standing without support for several seconds.
- Walking with one hand held (typically 11-14 months). Taking steps while holding a parent's hand or pushing a toy.
- Independent walking (typically 12-18 months). Taking steps on their own without holding onto anything.
If your 18-month-old is cruising confidently and taking steps with one hand held, they're likely very close. If they're not yet pulling to stand or cruising, the gap is larger and worth evaluating sooner.
Common Reasons for Late Walking
Personality and preference. Some babies are simply more cautious. They want to feel completely stable before letting go. These children often cruise for months, testing their balance over and over until they feel confident enough to take that first independent step. There's nothing wrong with being careful.
Efficient alternative mobility. If your child is a fast crawler or skilled bottom-scouter, they may have less motivation to walk because they can already get everywhere they want to go. Why switch to a harder, slower method when crawling works so well?
Low muscle tone. Children with mild hypotonia may take longer to build the core, hip, and leg strength needed for independent walking. They often reach all their motor milestones on the later end of the range.
Premature birth. If your child was born premature, milestones are typically assessed using their corrected age (adjusted for how early they were born) until age 2. A baby born two months early who walks at 14 months is walking at 12 months corrected, which is right on track.
Body proportions. Children with larger heads or heavier builds sometimes take a bit longer to master the balance required for walking. More weight up top means more balance work for the brain and body.
Limited opportunity. Babies who spend a lot of time in strollers, bouncers, walkers, or being carried may have fewer opportunities to practice the skills that lead to walking. This doesn't mean you've done anything wrong. It's just something to adjust.
When to Be Concerned
An evaluation is recommended if:
- Your child is 18 months old and not taking any independent steps
- They're not pulling to stand or cruising by 12-14 months
- They were walking and have stopped (regression)
- They walk only on their toes and can't seem to get their heels down
- One leg seems weaker or stiffer than the other
- They seem fearful of standing or bear very little weight on their legs
- Walking delays are accompanied by other developmental concerns (speech delay, difficulty with fine motor tasks)
How Pediatric PT Helps Late Walkers
A pediatric PT will assess your toddler's strength, balance, muscle tone, joint range of motion, and overall motor development. From there, they'll determine whether your child just needs a little more time and encouragement, or whether targeted intervention will help.
Therapy for late walkers typically focuses on:
Building leg and core strength. Squatting to pick up toys, stepping up onto low surfaces, and standing play at a table all build the strength needed for walking.
Improving balance. Activities that challenge your toddler's balance in standing, like reaching for toys placed to the side or slightly above them, help develop the postural control walking requires.
Building confidence. Many late walkers have the physical ability to walk but lack the confidence. Your PT will create situations where your child experiences success, gradually building their trust in their own abilities.
Reducing reliance on cruising. Strategically placing furniture further apart, offering push toys, and creating motivating reasons to let go all help transition from cruising to independent walking.
Home program. Your PT will give you specific activities to practice daily. For late walkers, the home program is often more important than the therapy session itself because the repetition of daily practice is what tips the scales.
What You Can Do at Home Right Now
- Create walking motivation. Set up furniture with gaps between pieces so your toddler has to take a step or two between cruising surfaces.
- Use push toys. A sturdy push walker (not a sit-in walker, which can actually delay walking) gives your toddler the support to practice stepping without you being the support system.
- Walk with one hand. Offer one finger instead of two hands. This forces your toddler to rely more on their own balance.
- Make standing play irresistible. Set up a favorite activity at a standing-height table. The longer they stand and play, the stronger their legs get.
- Limit container time. Reduce time in strollers, high chairs, and carriers when you're home. The more time on the floor, the more practice they get.
- Celebrate attempts, not just success. Clap and cheer when they let go of the couch, even if they immediately sit down. That moment of independent standing is progress.
The 18-Month Mark
If your toddler turns 18 months without independent walking, most pediatricians will recommend an evaluation. This is not an alarm bell. It's a checkpoint. Many children evaluated at 18 months start walking within weeks of beginning PT, or even before their first appointment, because the evaluation process itself often reveals simple things parents can adjust at home.
At Coral Care, our PTs come to your home to evaluate late walkers. We watch your toddler move in their own environment, on their own surfaces, with their own furniture. This gives us the most accurate picture of where they are and what they need.
Schedule a free consultation if your toddler isn't walking yet. Whether they need PT or just a few home adjustments, we'll make sure you have a plan.
