Gifted Children
Signs Your Child Is Gifted: What to Look For
By the Quizvo Team ยท 8 min read ยท Updated April 2026
โ Back to Blog
What Does "Gifted" Actually Mean?
Giftedness in children is typically defined as performance in the top 2โ5% of the population on standardised cognitive assessments โ an IQ of approximately 130 or above. However, experts recognise that giftedness extends beyond IQ to include exceptional creativity, specific academic talent, leadership ability, and artistic or physical performance.
Identifying gifted children early matters because their educational and emotional needs differ significantly from their peers. Without appropriate challenge, gifted children often underperform, disengage, or develop social difficulties.
Cognitive Signs of Giftedness
- Early language development โ talking in sentences earlier than peers, unusually large vocabulary for their age, asking complex questions before age 3
- Early reading ability โ many gifted children teach themselves to read between ages 3โ5, before formal instruction begins
- Exceptional memory โ remembering events, facts, and conversations with unusual detail and accuracy
- Rapid learning โ mastering new concepts after minimal repetition; often frustrated by slow-paced instruction
- Abstract thinking โ ability to understand concepts like time, infinity, justice, or irony earlier than is typical
- Strong mathematical intuition โ solving mental arithmetic quickly, spotting numerical patterns without being taught
Behavioural Signs of Giftedness
- Intense curiosity โ relentless questioning, deep dives into specific topics (dinosaurs, space, history), collecting facts obsessively
- Preference for older companions โ finding more in common with older children or adults than same-age peers
- High energy and need for stimulation โ becoming restless, disruptive, or apparently inattentive when under-stimulated (often misdiagnosed as ADHD)
- Perfectionism โ setting extremely high personal standards, becoming distressed by errors or perceived failure
- Strong sense of justice and empathy โ unusually concerned with fairness, rules, and the feelings of others from an early age
- Humour โ advanced sense of irony, wordplay, and absurdist humour that peers don't understand
Giftedness and Emotional Intensity
Polish psychologist Kazimierz Dabrowski described "overexcitabilities" โ heightened sensitivities โ as common in gifted children. These include psychomotor overexcitability (high energy, need for movement), sensory overexcitability (heightened sensitivity to textures, sounds, tastes), intellectual overexcitability (insatiable curiosity), imaginational overexcitability (rich inner life, vivid imagination), and emotional overexcitability (intense feelings, deep empathy, heightened anxiety).
These traits can be challenging for parents and teachers who don't recognise them as signs of giftedness. A child who cries intensely over perceived injustice, or who refuses to move on from a topic that interests them, may simply be gifted.
Giftedness vs ADHD: The Overlap
Gifted children are frequently misdiagnosed with ADHD. The shared traits โ high energy, difficulty sustaining attention on uninteresting tasks, impulsivity, and emotional intensity โ can look identical on the surface. The key distinction: gifted children typically demonstrate exceptional sustained attention when engaged with stimulating material, while ADHD involves attention dysregulation across all contexts.
Many children are both gifted and have ADHD (called "twice exceptional" or 2e) โ and this combination is particularly likely to be missed, as the two conditions can mask each other.
What Should You Do If You Think Your Child Is Gifted?
- Request a formal psychoeducational assessment through your school or a private educational psychologist
- Explore gifted education programmes in your area
- Provide intellectual challenge at home โ books above grade level, logic puzzles, chess, coding, music
- Connect with other gifted children through enrichment programmes or gifted associations
- Focus on emotional development as much as academic โ gifted children often need extra support with social skills and frustration tolerance
IQ Testing for All Ages
Our free IQ test provides a useful benchmark for older children and adults. Get your score in under 15 minutes.
Take the Free IQ Test โ