Phonics blog

Is My Child Ready to Read? 10 Signs of Reading Readiness

The 10 signs that predict reading success — rhyme awareness, phoneme isolation, print concepts, blending — with what to do if signs are missing.

7 min read

Parents often ask “is my child ready to read?” at two very different moments: when a 3-year-old shows unusual interest in letters, or when a 6-year-old still isn’t clicking. Both are worth understanding. Here are the 10 signs that a child is ready — and what to do if some signs are missing.

What reading readiness actually means

Reading readiness is a cluster of skills, not a single switch that flips. A child who checks all 10 boxes will typically learn to read quickly and easily. A child who checks 5 can still begin — they just need more scaffolding. Missing key foundations doesn’t mean “wait longer”; it usually means “build the missing skill now.”

Sign 1 — Phonological awareness: Can hear rhymes

Does your child recognize that “cat, bat, hat” rhyme? Can they supply a rhyme when you ask (“what rhymes with dog?”)? Rhyme awareness is one of the earliest predictors of later reading ability.

Build it: Read rhyming books aloud. Pause before the rhyme and let your child fill it in.

Sign 2 — Can clap syllables in words

“Clap the beats in ‘butter.’” (2 claps) This is syllable awareness — the ability to hear how a word is chunked into beats. Most 4-year-olds can do this with familiar words.

Build it:Tap syllables on the table. Try names — “how many beats in E-li-za-beth?” (4 claps)

Sign 3 — Can hear the first sound in a word

“What sound does ‘sun’ start with?” A child who can isolate the initial phoneme has crossed a big cognitive threshold. This is the earliest phoneme awareness skill, and it directly enables decoding.

Sign 4 — Knows 6+ letter sounds (not names)

Can your child hear /s/ and say “s” — or see the letter s and say its sound? Letter sound knowledge — not letter names — is the key predictor. See letter sounds vs letter names.

Sign 5 — Shows print awareness

Knows that print goes left-to-right and top-to-bottom. Understands that the words on the page (not the pictures) carry the story. Knows what a “word” and a “letter” are. These seem obvious to adults but are genuinely learned concepts for young children.

Build it:When reading aloud, follow the text with your finger occasionally. Ask “which word is ‘cat’?”

Sign 6 — Can blend 3 oral sounds into a word

You say “/d/-/ɒ/-/g/” slowly. Can your child hear “dog”? Oral blending without print is a prerequisite for print blending. See the full blending guide.

Sign 7 — Sustained attention for 10+ minutes

Reading requires focused attention to decode each word while simultaneously holding the story in working memory. A child who can’t maintain attention for a 10-minute read-aloud will find decoding mentally exhausting. This is developmental — most children get there between 4 and 5.

Sign 8 — Curiosity about words and letters

Points to signs in the street. Asks what words say. Tries to copy letters. Notices when two words start with the same sound. Intrinsic motivation won’t make a child skip prerequisites, but it makes every lesson easier.

Sign 9 — Can hold a pencil / stylus correctly

Writing reinforces reading — tracing or writing letters activates more brain regions than visual recognition alone. A child who can’t hold a pencil comfortably will find phonics seatwork frustrating. Fine motor development typically matures by age 5–6.

Sign 10 — Can segment a 3-letter word into sounds

The flip side of blending. You say “cat.” Your child says “/k/-/æ/-/t/.” Segmentation is the foundation of spelling and confirms that blending isn’t a fluke.

What age should all 10 signs be present?

Most children check all 10 boxes between ages 5 and 6. Signs 1–5 are typically in place by 4. Signs 6–10 develop between 4½ and 6 with appropriate input.

See the full phonics stages by age guide for expected milestones at each year.

If signs are missing

Signs 1–3 missing at age 4: focus on phonological awareness games — rhyme, alliteration, syllable clapping. Signs 4–6 missing at age 5: begin a structured phonics program. Signs 7–10 missing at age 6 despite instruction: consider a formal evaluation for dyslexia or auditory processing concerns.

Start with the phoneme map to assess which sounds are known, and use Sound Match for daily 5-minute practice on the missing ones.

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