Youth and adult sitting on couch, child has a solemn look and adult is holding their hands.

8 questions to ask your child to check their mental health

August 11, 2025
shisu_ka // Shutterstock

8 questions to ask your child to check their mental health

It can be tough to know what鈥檚 going on in your child鈥檚 world. Little kids may not have the language to name their feelings, while older kids and teens may be resistant to opening up.

Counselors recommend checking in with your children regularly. If we鈥檙e not asking, how can we really know what they鈥檙e experiencing? Plus, mental health challenges don鈥檛 discriminate by age鈥攌ids of all ages can experience anxiety and depression. ages three to 17 in the U.S. has a mental, emotional, developmental, or behavioral disorder.

Intentionally checking in with your child doesn鈥檛 have to feel clinical. Think of these as 鈥渟oft鈥 check-ins that naturally open up conversation and help you understand what鈥檚 really happening in their daily life. shares the most important questions to ask by age group, plus exactly what their answers reveal about their mental health.

Highlights

  • Ask different questions based on your child鈥檚 age. Younger kids (6-11) need help naming emotions, while teens (12-18) can discuss specific worries and their support systems.
  • Focus on specific situations, not general feelings. Ask about recess, lunch, or weekly highs and lows rather than 鈥淗ow was your day?鈥 to get meaningful responses.
  • Physical symptoms often reveal mental health struggles. Changes in sleep, appetite, energy, or unexplained aches can signal anxiety or depression before emotional signs appear.
  • Know when responses signal serious concern. Immediate professional help is needed for self-harm talk, unexplained injuries, substance use, or overwhelming emotions they can鈥檛 control.
  • Create the right conversation conditions. Timing, staying calm, and choosing side-by-side activities (like car rides) make kids more likely to open up honestly.

The 8 Essential Questions by Age Group

The questions you ask should match your child鈥檚 developmental stage. Grade school kids often respond with wide-open answers and may struggle to understand their feelings. Tweens and teens may give more vague responses, but can use more sophisticated feeling words.

Questions for Younger Kids: Ages 6-11

Younger children are still learning how to put words to their feelings. , for example, but lack the vocabulary to express that to you. The goal of these questions is to help them understand and articulate their emotions.

1. 鈥淭ell me about something you did today. Who did you hang out with at recess or sit with at lunch?鈥
This question is more specific than 鈥渉ow was your day?鈥 which usually gets you a one-word 鈥渇ine鈥 response. Asking about recess or lunchtime helps you learn about their social interactions and provides a story that reveals the temperature of their peer relationships.

You might discover that someone is picking on them or one of their friends, which opens the door for additional questions and problem-solving together.

2. 鈥淚 see you鈥檙e [crying/pushing/stomping]. Can you try to put a word to how you鈥檙e feeling?鈥
It鈥檚 completely normal for younger kids to have big feelings they don鈥檛 fully understand. If they鈥檙e in a happy, safe home, they often aren鈥檛 trying to hide their emotions鈥攜ou see it all. As they respond, reflect back what you hear: 鈥淲ow, sounds like so-and-so really hurt your feelings.鈥

But resist the urge to immediately fix the problem, even though that鈥檚 what we want to do as parents. The goal is to help them experience negative emotions, ride the wave, and then check in with them again when they鈥檝e calmed down.

3. 鈥淲hat do you mean when you say [you don鈥檛 want to go to school/your mind is driving]?鈥
Parents might want to put words in their children鈥檚 mouths, but it鈥檚 better to listen carefully and ask clarifying questions. When children mention something concerning, let them try to work through it a bit first. Then you can help them identify those feelings: 鈥淚t sounds like you鈥檙e feeling anxious,鈥 or 鈥淚t sounds like it鈥檚 hard for you to focus in class.鈥

Questions for Tweens and Teens: Ages 12-18

The advantage with older kids is that you can communicate with them on a more adult level. They don鈥檛 want to be treated like little kids, and with their improved ability to verbalize thoughts and feelings, you can have more productive conversations.

4. 鈥淲hat is one high and one low from your week?鈥
This question is helpful because it requires more description than 鈥淗ow was your day?鈥 Some weeks, you鈥檒l notice it鈥檚 easy for them to talk about something good, and other weeks, it鈥檚 easier to mention the bad. This is valuable insight into their current mental state.

It鈥檚 also a natural conversation starter that shows you鈥檙e genuinely interested in their life. If your teen mentions someone you don鈥檛 know, you can follow up with 鈥淲ho鈥檚 that again?鈥 or 鈥淩emind me what you like about them as a friend?鈥

5. 鈥淲hat happened here?鈥 [pointing to a cut, bruise, etc.]
It鈥檚 possible that bruise is from lacrosse practice, but go ahead and ask in a non-judgmental, non-accusatory way. It鈥檚 easy for parents to avoid potentially difficult topics, but it鈥檚 worth the gentle inquiry.

If it is something concerning, you鈥檒l probably get a deflective answer. That鈥檚 OK鈥攊t draws awareness to the issue and shows you鈥檙e paying attention.

6. 鈥淲hat are things that are worrying you lately?鈥 or 鈥淵ou鈥檝e seemed [sad/upset/angry] this week. I鈥檇 love to know if something happened that you want to talk about.鈥
Teens are smart and insightful, but remember, their brains are still developing. Their responses may seem outsized or 鈥渨orld is falling apart鈥 in nature. You can use this as an opportunity to validate their feelings while helping challenge automatic thought processes.

Two examples:

  • Your teen says: 鈥淚鈥檓 so stupid, I鈥檓 so bad at math.鈥
  • You might respond: 鈥淗old on. Remember last month when you got 100 on that test?鈥
  • Your teen says: 鈥淓verything is falling apart!鈥
  • You might respond: 鈥淚 hear you, but there are parts of your life that are stable and not falling apart. And you have people who care about you and want you to succeed.鈥

7. 鈥淲ho do you feel like you can talk to when things get tough?鈥
This question gives you insight into their support system鈥攚ho they feel is truly in their corner. Their peers have enormous influence at this age, so you want to ensure they鈥檙e maintaining healthy relationships.

Parents often want to be the person their teen turns to for every problem, but there may be situations where they don鈥檛 feel they can come to you. While their answers will probably include friends, it鈥檚 also encouraging if they can name other trusted adults in their life.

8. 鈥淗ow are you sleeping and eating lately? Do you have headaches or stomach aches?鈥
Depression and . Along with persistent sadness or worries, watch for fatigue, loss of energy, changes in sleeping habits (either too little or too much), and appetite changes that cause weight loss or gain.

If they answer 鈥渇ine,鈥 you can point out something specific you鈥檝e observed: 鈥淚鈥檝e noticed it鈥檚 harder for you to wake up for school. Can you tell me what that鈥檚 about?鈥

How to Read Their Responses

Here鈥檚 what to watch for when trying to determine if something more serious is happening with your child鈥檚 mental health:

Green Light Responses: Keep Communication Open

Depending on your child鈥檚 age and personality, they may be more willing to open up and provide details. It鈥檚 a positive sign if they can express and name their emotions, point to coping strategies that help them, and identify trusted, safe people in their life.

This doesn鈥檛 mean everything is perfect. Children regularly face situations that they need help processing or that require extra attention. Sometimes there鈥檚 an active problem they鈥檙e responding to appropriately. For example, if there鈥檚 bullying at school, it would be completely normal for your child to feel sad.

You can provide support, help them work through the problem, and decide if additional people should be involved (like bringing in a teacher) if you need more information or intervention.

Yellow Light Responses: Monitor Closely

If you notice concerning behavior that doesn鈥檛 align with your child鈥檚 baseline, continue monitoring the situation closely. Maybe they鈥檙e usually happy-go-lucky but are now consistently down. Maybe they鈥檙e using negative self-talk like 鈥渘o one likes me鈥濃攁n indicator that their confidence is suffering.

Getting an evaluation from a healthcare provider like your child鈥檚 pediatrician is always worthwhile. They can help assess whether a child鈥檚 words or behaviors are a normal part of development or require further evaluation.

Red Light Responses: Seek Help Immediately

If your child is displaying aggression or expressing any desire to hurt themselves, these are serious warning signs requiring immediate professional help. Self-harming statements include phrases like 鈥淚 want to die鈥 or 鈥淚 wish I was never born.鈥

could include cutting (visible cuts or scars on their body), head-banging, punching themselves, consuming harmful substances, or intentionally trying to injure themselves in other ways.

How to Make These Conversations More Effective

These conversations aren鈥檛 always easy, but you can make them more comfortable and productive for your child with these strategies:

  • Time it right: Some questions work well at the dinner table or around bedtime when things are naturally quiet. For tougher topics, choose activities where you鈥檙e together but side-by-side鈥攍ike car rides or walks. Make sure you have enough time to talk and that it鈥檚 during a calm period, not in the middle of an argument.
  • Check in regularly: Some of these questions you might ask weekly. Others may be situational鈥攚hen you sense a problem or notice changes in their behavior.
  • Stay calm: Leave space for them to explain without jumping in to dominate the conversation. Avoid letting your emotions take over, even when what they share is concerning. Ask listening questions that start with phrases like 鈥淚 hear you鈥檙e saying鈥︹
  • Leave the door open: If they don鈥檛 want to talk or only give you part of the story (and your gut tells you there鈥檚 more), let them know you鈥檙e available when they鈥檙e ready. Then gently follow up again later.

When to Get Professional Help

Self-harming behaviors or thoughts, substance abuse issues, overwhelming emotions they can鈥檛 cope with or control (anger, sadness, extreme worries), or panic attacks are all situations that are difficult to address at home鈥攆ind professional help immediately.

include racing heartbeat, dizziness, shortness of breath, and trembling.

Even without red flag problems, connecting your child with a therapist can be valuable if they seem reluctant to open up with you or express interest in talking to a neutral third party who鈥檚 there to support and listen to them.

Let them know it鈥檚 completely OK if they want to connect with someone who isn鈥檛 you, but reassure them that you鈥檒l be here when they鈥檙e ready.

was produced by and reviewed and distributed by 麻豆原创.


Trending Now