A wooden block that becomes a phone, a spoon that turns into a rocket, a child carefully “teaching” stuffed animals at a tiny desk — this kind of play is more than cute. Pretend play and symbolic play are ways children practice language, thinking, problem-solving, and social understanding in the middle of everyday play.

It’s when children use one thing to stand for another during play, like a block becoming a phone.
What pretend play looks like at home
Pretend play usually starts in small, ordinary ways. A child may feed a doll, drive a spoon like a car, or make animal sounds while lining up toy figures. Symbolic play is the same idea at work: one object, action, or sound stands in for something else. A cardboard box becomes a bus. A towel becomes a cape. A child “cooks” with empty bowls and a plastic carrot.
This matters because children are not only copying what they see. They are practicing flexible thinking. They are also learning that the same object can mean different things depending on the moment, which is an important early thinking skill.

Why children use symbols in play
Children begin to use symbols once they can hold an idea in mind and act it out. That takes growing memory, language, attention, and imagination. It is one reason pretend play and symbolic play often appear as children move from toddlerhood into the preschool years.
There is also a strong social side to it. A child may replay a doctor visit, a family meal, or a school day because those experiences are meaningful. Sometimes pretend play helps children test out feelings in a safe way. If a child keeps making the doll “sad” or “brave,” they may be working through something they have noticed in real life.
A child who uses a block as a bus is doing symbolic play just as much as a child with a full toy kitchen setup.
What to expect by age
There is a wide range of normal here. Some children jump into pretend play early. Others need more time, more examples, or more comfort playing beside an adult.
Toddlers
At this stage, pretend actions are usually simple and short. A child may feed a teddy, stir an empty cup, or put a toy to bed. They may repeat the same small action again and again.
Preschoolers
Play often becomes more connected. Children may give roles to toys, build a story, or let one object stand for another in a more intentional way. This is also when you may notice more make-believe conversations, pretend problem-solving, and play that follows a loose storyline.
Older children
As children grow, pretend play can become more detailed and social. They may create longer scenes with friends, negotiate rules, or use props in creative ways. Some children keep pretending in quieter, more private ways; that can still be completely typical.

Simple ways parents can support it
You do not need to teach pretend play in a formal way. Small, low-pressure support usually works best.
- Offer open-ended objects such as blocks, scarves, boxes, cups, or simple figures.
- Start with a short idea and let your child take over.
- Follow the child’s lead instead of correcting the story.
- Use everyday routines as play starters, such as shops, meals, or bedtime.
- Keep your questions light: “Where is the bear going?” is usually better than a long set of prompts.
If you are looking for more ways to build play without overthinking it, the play and learning ideas section has practical suggestions you can use at home.
Parents sometimes worry that they need the right toy or a perfect setup. They do not. A good pretend play space is often just a few simple items and enough time to stay with the play for a minute or two. If you want a quick way to notice patterns in your child’s development while keeping things simple, the milestone checker can be a useful place to start.
Try one short line, such as “The bear is hungry,” and give your child space to continue the story.
When it may be worth asking for advice
Children develop at different speeds, and a child who prefers other kinds of play is not automatically behind. Still, it can be worth speaking with a professional if pretend play is very limited and your child also seems to have difficulty with communication, back-and-forth interaction, or flexible play more generally.
It may also help to ask about symbolic play if your child rarely uses objects for anything other than their literal purpose and seems unable to copy simple pretend actions after seeing them modeled many times. Concerns make more sense when they appear alongside other patterns, not from one play moment alone.
If you are unsure whether what you are seeing fits a broader development pattern, the development and behavior articles section offers more context. And if you would like a quick check of age-related skills, the milestone checker is a practical next step.

A simple home idea: set out three items — a box, a spoon, and a soft toy — and see what your child turns them into. If you need something more structured later, a printable growth and milestone journal can help you keep notes on play, language, and everyday development without making it feel like homework.
Pretend play and symbolic play do not have to look polished to matter. What counts is that your child is using ideas to stand for real things, building stories, and making sense of the world in a way that feels natural to them.