Is my toddler “behind”? What the milestone charts actually mean

The word “behind” does an enormous amount of damage in the toddler years. It turns a normal, wide range of development into a pass/fail test — and almost no part of early development actually works that way.
A milestone is a typical age, not a deadline. When the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics updated their milestone checklists in 2022, they deliberately set each item at the age by which about 75% of children reach it — a “most kids can do this by now” marker, not an average. So a child who hasn’t hit a given milestone on the dot is, very often, simply somewhere else on a perfectly normal curve.
What the research says
Development is uneven by design. A toddler can sprint ahead on movement while taking their time with words, then flip the pattern a month later. Skills also tend to arrive in bursts and plateaus rather than a smooth line. Reading a single chart as if every domain should advance in lockstep is the most common way parents scare themselves unnecessarily.
Milestones describe populations. Your child is a sample size of one — compare them mostly to themselves, last month.
Try this today
- Track gestures and understanding, not just talking — pointing, following simple directions, and bringing you things are real milestones too.
- Note progress over 4–8 weeks. Direction of travel matters more than any single date.
- Bring your specific questions to well-child visits, where milestones are meant to be checked.
Educational content, not medical advice. toddcovery does not diagnose. If something about your child’s development worries you, your pediatrician is the right first call.


