Tongue Thrust in Children: When Speech Therapy Can Help
Tongue thrust can affect lisps, resting mouth posture, and speech clarity. Learn what parents notice and how speech therapy addresses tongue thrust patterns in children.
Direct answer: Tongue thrust is a forward tongue posture or swallowing pattern that may contribute to interdental lisps, open-mouth resting posture, and persistent sound errors. Speech therapy can help when tongue thrust is affecting speech clarity or when dental providers recommend oral placement training alongside orthodontic care.
What Parents Often Notice
- Tongue visible between the teeth at rest
- Interdental lisp on /s/ and /z/
- Difficulty keeping the tongue on the roof of the mouth
- Dentist or orthodontist mentioning forward tongue posture
Speech Therapy Goals for Tongue Thrust
Treatment may include resting tongue posture training, swallowing pattern correction, and articulation work for sounds affected by forward tongue placement. Therapy is individualized—not every child with tongue thrust needs the same intensity.
Is tongue thrust the same as a tongue tie?
No. Tongue tie is a structural restriction of the lingual frenulum. Tongue thrust is a habitual posture or movement pattern. A child can have one, the other, or both. Evaluation determines what is driving the speech concern.
Learn more on our speech sound disorders page.
Local Speech Therapy Options
Front Range Speech Therapy serves children, teens, and young adults birth through age 21 from Greeley, Colorado. Families commonly visit from Greeley, Fort Collins, Loveland, Windsor, Evans, Johnstown, Berthoud, Firestone and Carbon Valley, and Mead.
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Ready to Talk Through Your Child's Needs?
If you are wondering whether speech therapy is the right next step, call (720) 798-6930 or apply to become a patient. We will tell you honestly whether Front Range Speech Therapy is a fit for your child's age, needs, and timeline.
This article is educational and does not replace an individualized evaluation or medical advice.
