Is My Child Autistic?
Common signs parents notice and why assessment clarity matters.
Most parents arrive at this question the same way: a pattern of things that don't quite fit. A child who finds certain sounds unbearable, who needs routines to hold the day together, who connects deeply with specific interests but struggles to read a room. You're not imagining it - and you're not overreacting.
Autism looks different in every child. Some common things parents describe include:
- Difficulty with back-and-forth conversation or reading social cues
- Intense, focused interests that feel different in depth from typical enthusiasm
- Sensitivity to sensory input - lights, sounds, textures, tastes
- Strong preference for routines and distress when they change unexpectedly
- Repetitive movements or phrases that feel self-regulating
- A feeling that social situations take enormous effort, even if they look fine on the outside
None of these signs alone means your child is autistic. But if several feel familiar - especially over a long period and across different settings - it is worth pursuing an assessment.
Getting clarity on an assessment route matters for one simple reason: it moves you from wondering to knowing. A formal assessment, wherever it happens, gives your child and your family a shared language for how they experience the world - and opens doors to the right support.
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