Toddler Speech & Language Development UK.
Milestones, delays & how to help.
What typical speech development looks like from 12 months to 4 years, the difference between a late talker and a speech delay, the red flags that warrant referral, and evidence-based ways to support language at home.
Milestones are ranges, not deadlines. This guide is for information only — if you have concerns about your child’s speech or language development, speak to your health visitor or GP. In most areas you can also self-refer to NHS Speech and Language Therapy. Early assessment is always better than waiting.
Speech and language milestones 12 months–4 years
Language development has two components that develop at different rates: receptive language (what a child understands) and expressive language (what they can produce). Receptive language typically leads expressive language by several months — a child usually understands considerably more than they can say. Both should be considered when assessing development.
Receptive vs expressive language — why this matters
The distinction between what a child understands and what they can say is one of the most important and most overlooked aspects of toddler language assessment. A child with strong receptive language and limited expressive language has a very different profile — and very different prognosis — from a child whose receptive language is also behind.
A child who doesn’t say much but clearly understands everything — follows instructions, responds to their name, points to named objects, understands “no” — has a different type of delay than a child who is behind on both. If your child understands well but speaks little, the expressive delay is far more likely to resolve naturally. If understanding is also behind, earlier specialist input is important.
Late talkers — what the evidence says
A “late talker” is a child who is producing fewer words than expected for their age but whose receptive language, social communication, motor development and cognitive development are all within normal limits. Around 15–20% of toddlers are late talkers at age 2.
The evidence on late talkers is genuinely reassuring in one sense and genuinely cautionary in another. The reassuring part: around 70–80% of late talkers at age 2 — children with expressive delays only, intact comprehension, good social communication — will catch up without formal intervention. This group are sometimes called “late bloomers.” The cautionary part: 20–30% do not catch up and go on to have persistent language difficulties that affect literacy and learning. The problem is that it is not reliably possible to identify at age 2 which child will be in which group.
This is why the current NHS guidance — and the recommendation of Speech and Language UK — is to refer children with expressive delays at age 2 for assessment rather than adopting a “wait and see” approach. Early assessment does no harm to a child who will catch up naturally, and provides critical support to the child who needs it.
Red flags — when to seek a referral
The following warrant a conversation with your health visitor and, if not already in place, a referral to NHS Speech and Language Therapy:
How to support language development at home
The most powerful thing any parent can do for their child’s language development costs nothing and requires no equipment. The research is unambiguous: the quantity and quality of language a child hears from birth is the strongest predictor of their own language development at every stage.
Talk more — narrate constantly
Narrate what you’re doing, what you’re seeing, what’s about to happen. “Now I’m putting your shoes on. First the left shoe, then the right shoe. Now we’re going outside.” Quantity of language heard is the primary predictor of language development. The mundane daily commentary matters more than structured “educational” interaction.
Read together daily — from birth
Shared book reading is the single most evidence-backed activity for language development. The effect is dose-responsive — more reading produces more language development. Point to pictures and name them. Ask simple questions. Follow the child’s interest in the book rather than reading every word. By age 2, pointing at pictures and naming them is highly effective. By age 3, asking “what’s happening here?” builds narrative language.
Expand what they say — don’t correct
When a toddler says “dog”, respond “yes, a big brown dog.” When they say “go car”, respond “yes, we’re going in the car.” This technique — called expansion or recasting — provides the correct model of what they were trying to say without correction, and consistently produces faster language development than direct correction. Correcting speech errors in young children is ineffective and can reduce willingness to attempt speech.
Respond to communication attempts, not just words
Respond to pointing, gesturing, vocalising and eye contact as if they were words. “Oh, you’re pointing at the dog! Yes, there’s a dog.” This teaches the child that communication works — which motivates more of it. A toddler who points and is ignored has less incentive to develop more sophisticated communication.
Turn off background TV and screens during conversation
Background television significantly reduces the quantity and quality of parent-child verbal interaction in research settings. It does not increase language development even when the content is educational. Conversational interaction — back and forth, responsive, child-led — is what builds language. Screens cannot provide this; adults can.
Pause and wait — create space for communication
Give your child time to respond before filling the silence. Many parents answer their own questions before the toddler has time to process them. A 5-second pause after a question or comment gives the child the processing time they need. This is harder than it sounds but significantly increases communicative attempts.
Getting help in the UK — SLT referral
In the UK, NHS Speech and Language Therapy (SLT) is available without cost to children with language delays. There are two routes to referral: through your GP or health visitor, or via self-referral in most areas. To find out if your area accepts self-referrals, search “[your local NHS trust] speech and language therapy self-referral” or ask your health visitor.
Waiting times for NHS SLT vary significantly by area — from weeks to over a year in some regions. If you are concerned and waiting times are long, ask for the referral to be made while also contacting your local NHS SLT team directly about their waiting list. In the interim, many areas offer SLT-designed parent guidance programmes (such as the Hanen programme or local equivalents) that can be accessed while waiting for assessment.
Speech and Language UK (speechandlanguage.org.uk) has excellent resources for parents, including a tool to check whether your child’s communication is on track and information about local services.
Trust your instinct. Seek a referral early rather than waiting to see.
The most common regret among parents of children who needed SLT support is that they waited longer than necessary before seeking assessment — often because they were told to “wait and see” or because they worried about over-reacting. Early referral does no harm to a child who will catch up naturally, and makes a significant difference to a child who needs support.
If you are concerned about your child’s speech, speak to your health visitor today. You know your child. If something seems different, that instinct is worth acting on.

