KIDBEAST

🎨 Developmental Milestone Tracker

Choose your child's age band to see the motor, language, and social milestones many children reach at that stage.

🌱 Milestones by Age

🎨 Typical milestones — 4–6mo

  • Holds head steady without support
  • Rolls from tummy to back
  • Reaches for and grasps toys
  • Babbles and laughs out loud

Every child develops at their own pace, so these are general guides — not a checklist to pass or fail. This tool is informational only and not medical advice. If you have concerns about your child's development, talk to your pediatrician.

Please note:this tracker is informational only and is not medical advice. If you have any concerns about your child's development, consult your pediatrician.

What is the Milestone Tracker?

It shows the typical skills — moving, communicating, and interacting — that many children reach in each age band from newborn through age five, so you know roughly what to look for and what to nurture next.

Use it to celebrate progress and plan play that gently stretches your child. These are general guides, not a checklist to pass or fail: children develop on their own timeline, and a pediatrician is the right person to turn to with any concerns.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What are developmental milestones?

They're the physical, language, and social skills most children pick up around a certain age — like rolling over, first words, walking, or playing alongside other children. Tracking them helps you know what to expect and gently support what's coming next.

My child hasn't hit a milestone — should I worry?

Every child develops at their own pace, and the ages here are broad ranges, not deadlines. Many children are early with some skills and later with others. If a skill is well behind or your child seems to lose one they had, that's worth raising with your pediatrician.

How can I support my child's development?

Talk and read together, give plenty of floor and outdoor play, offer age-appropriate toys, and follow your child's interests. Responsive, everyday interaction does more for development than any single activity or gadget.

When should I talk to a doctor?

Trust your instincts. If you're concerned that your child is significantly behind on several milestones, has lost skills, or something just feels off, bring it up at a check-up — early support is most effective, and your pediatrician can screen and reassure or refer.