Fine motor skills are the small, controlled movements children make using the muscles in their hands, fingers and wrists. These movements allow children to grasp, manipulate, rotate, pinch, hold and control objects with increasing precision. While they often develop gradually through everyday experiences, fine motor skills play an important role in many tasks children encounter throughout childhood.
Young children use fine motor skills when picking up small objects, turning pages, stacking pieces, using utensils, fastening clothing and eventually drawing and writing. Although these actions may appear simple to adults, they require a complex combination of strength, coordination, control and accuracy.
Fine motor development occurs through repeated opportunities to practise these movements over time. Children gradually learn how much pressure to apply, how to coordinate both hands together and how to perform increasingly precise actions. These skills rarely develop overnight and often improve through many small experiences that challenge the hands in different ways.
As children gain confidence and control, fine motor skills often support greater independence in both play and everyday activities.