When Should My Child Start Speech Therapy?
Children should start speech therapy when communication delays affect daily life, frustration, intelligibility, feeding, learning, or social participation.
Direct answer: A child should start speech therapy when speech, language, feeding, fluency, or communication differences are affecting daily life. You do not need to wait until a child is failing in school or becoming highly frustrated before asking for an evaluation.
Earlier Is Often Easier
Early support can reduce frustration and help families learn how to practice communication naturally at home. This is especially important when a child is hard to understand, not using expected words, stuttering, or avoiding communication.
Signs It Is Time to Ask
- Your child is difficult for unfamiliar listeners to understand.
- Your child has fewer words or shorter sentences than expected.
- Stuttering is causing tension, avoidance, or worry.
- Feeding or swallowing concerns affect safety or nutrition.
- Reading, spelling, or phonological awareness are unexpectedly hard.
Waiting Versus Watching
Some children catch up with time, but watchful waiting should have a clear timeline. If concerns persist or get in the way of participation, an evaluation gives you better information than guessing.
Can babies start speech therapy?
Yes. Infants and toddlers may receive support for feeding, early communication, hearing-related listening skills, parent coaching, and developmental communication concerns.
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.
