why children lie - Why Children Lie: Understanding Kids' Lies & Positive Parenting | IMS Sotogrande
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Why Children Lie: Understanding Kids’ Lies & Positive Parenting | IMS Sotogrande

· By Viviane Dumont
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Mentiras infantiles – Madre hablando con su hijo: la clave está en la conexión, no en el castigo — Foto vía Unsplash

When you discover your child has lied, something inside you contracts. You wonder if you’ve done something wrong, if it’s normal, or if you should be worried. Children’s lies are one of the most common concerns in pediatric and educational circles, and most of the time, they are part of typical development. It’s not a character flaw: it’s a window into a brain still under construction. In this article we explore why children lie in depth with practical examples.

Key Points

  • Children begin lying between ages 3 and 4, which indicates their cognitive capacity is advancing.
  • Children’s lies vary by age: from 3 to 6 they are fantasy, from 6 to 12 they aim to avoid consequences.
  • Severe punishment doesn’t eliminate lying; it reinforces it. Connection and adult modeling are more effective.
  • At IMS Sotogrande, we support each family with practical tools based on Montessori pedagogy.
Mentiras infantiles - Aula Montessori: un entorno donde la verdad es segura
Mentiras infantiles – Aula Montessori: un entorno donde la verdad es segura — Foto vía Unsplash

Why Do Children Lie at Different Ages?

Children’s lies don’t mean the same thing at age 3 as they do at age 10. Canadian pediatrician Kang Lee, a researcher at the University of Toronto, has shown that 96% of children lie at least once between ages 2 and 17. The type of lie changes because the brain changes. When it comes to why children lie, it pays to listen to what families and lead guides actually report.

Ages 3 to 6: The World of Fantasy

At this age, the line between reality and fiction is blurry. A 4-year-old might tell you they flew with their grandmother or that a dinosaur ate their snack. They’re not lying to deceive you: their imagination outpaces their ability to separate the real from the invented. The Montessori Association of Spain notes that this stage is key for symbolic and creative development. Daily practice with why children lie reveals nuances no handbook fully captures.

In our Nido and Children’s House at IMS Sotogrande, we observe this daily. When a child tells us their stuffed animal “spoke,” we don’t correct them harshly. We accompany their story and, little by little, help them distinguish fantasy from reality without stifling their creativity. Understanding why children lie from inside the classroom reshapes everyday decisions.

Ages 6 to 12: Protecting Themselves from Consequences

From age 6 onward, a child can already distinguish reality from fiction. If they lie, it’s usually to avoid punishment or reprimand. Phrases like “it wasn’t me” or “I already did it” appear when the child fears the adult’s reaction. This doesn’t indicate chronic dishonesty: it indicates the environment doesn’t feel safe for making mistakes. Concrete data on why children lie is worth reviewing before acting on assumptions.

This is where the Montessori approach makes a difference. In the Elementary workshops (ages 6-12) at IMS, we don’t use rewards or punishments. We work with natural consequences: if you break a material, you repair it; if you spill water, you clean it up. This way, the child learns that owning the truth has manageable, not threatening, consequences.

mentiras de los niños - Familia conversando: prevenir las mentiras empieza en casa
mentiras de los niños – Familia conversando: prevenir las mentiras empieza en casa — Foto vía Unsplash

Why Do Children Lie: The Real Causes

Understanding the reason behind children’s lies is the first step to responding well. There are four main causes, and they often combine.

  • Fear of punishment: if every mistake receives a scolding, the child learns that lying is safer than confessing.
  • Desire to please: “I ate all my food” when they haven’t. The child seeks adult approval.
  • Overflowing imagination: especially between ages 3 and 5, when symbolic play dominates.
  • Testing autonomy: from ages 7 or 8, lying can be a clumsy way to test limits and build identity.

The Association Montessori Internationale (AMI) emphasizes that the adult is the model. If children see us lying in small things (“tell them I’m not here” or “don’t tell them it cost so much”), they internalize that lying is acceptable when it suits us.

At IMS Sotogrande, we work on this in our “Family in Tribe” sessions, a workshop where mothers and fathers reflect on these patterns. Because children’s lies almost always reflect the emotional climate of the home.

engaños infantiles - Niño dibujando: la imaginación desborda a los más pequeños
engaños infantiles – Niño dibujando: la imaginación desborda a los más pequeños — Foto vía Unsplash

How to Respond When Your Child Lies

Your reaction matters more than the lie itself. If you yell, threaten, or humiliate, the child won’t learn to be honest: they’ll learn to lie better.

Step 1: Breathe Before Reacting

When you catch your child in a lie, stop for three seconds. Breathe. Your goal isn’t to “win” or catch them out, but for them to understand why the truth matters. A calm tone opens the door to conversation; an accusatory tone closes it.

Step 2: Describe What You See, Not What You Assume

Instead of “you’re lying!”, try “I see the glass is broken on the floor. Can you tell me what happened?” This approach, used in respectful parenting, prevents the child from becoming defensive and opens space for them to tell the truth.

Step 3: Separate the Action from the Person

Don’t say “you are a liar.” Say “lying isn’t okay, but you are a good person who had a bad moment.” Children internalize labels: if you repeatedly tell them they lie, they’ll end up believing they are naturally dishonest.

Step 4: Offer a Way Out

Give them the chance to make amends: “if you tell me what really happened, we can fix it together.” If they face the consequence without fear, it will be easier for them to tell the truth next time. This principle is central to Montessori pedagogy: responsible autonomy.

If you’d like to see how we apply this in the classroom, book a personalized school visit and discover our approach firsthand.

Children’s Lies: What NOT to Do

Some reactions, although intuitive, make the problem worse.

  • Don’t set traps: if you know they ate the cookie, don’t ask “did you eat the cookie?” to see if they lie. State directly what happened.
  • Don’t demand public confessions: forcing a child to admit their lie in front of others humiliates them and encourages more secrecy.
  • Don’t compare: “your sister never lies” creates rivalry, not honesty.
  • Don’t use the lie as a weapon: reminding them of a past lie months later undermines trust.

How to Prevent Children’s Lies in the Long Term

Prevention isn’t about monitoring more, but about creating a home where the truth is safe. Three practical keys that work.

First: value honesty when it appears. If your child confesses something difficult, thank them for their courage before addressing the problem. “Thank you for telling me. You know I might get angry, but I always prefer the truth.”

Second: be consistent with your own honesty. If you ask them to say you’re not home when an uncomfortable person calls, you’re teaching them that lying is a valid tool.

Third: don’t ask for what you can’t control. If you ask “have you brushed your teeth?” when you haven’t checked, you’re inviting a lie. Better to accompany the habit rather than police it.

At IMS Sotogrande, we support families through these processes via our “Parenting Tea” workshops, where we share real tools for daily parenting. Because children’s lies decrease when the child knows their family is a safe space.

Frequently Asked Questions

At what age do children start lying?

Most children lie for the first time between ages 3 and 4. This is a positive sign of cognitive development: it indicates the child understands that other people have different beliefs than their own. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) notes that habitual lying at age 4 is within normal expectations and does not require professional intervention unless accompanied by other concerning behaviors.

Should I be worried if my child lies a lot?

If the lies are frequent and systematic after age 7 or 8, it’s worth observing the context. It could indicate anxiety, excessive fear of punishment, or social difficulties. Consult with your pediatrician or the school counselor. At IMS, we have the Rainbow Room for learning support, where we assess each case sensitively.

Do children lie more in a Montessori school?

No. In fact, the Montessori approach reduces the need to lie because it eliminates punishments and rewards as motivational systems. When a child doesn’t fear punitive consequences, they don’t need to hide the truth. AMI studies confirm that children in Montessori environments develop greater intrinsic responsibility.

Key Takeaways

Children’s lies are part of your child’s normal development, not a cause for alarm. Most disappear when the environment is safe, consistent, and respectful. Your role as a parent isn’t to eliminate lying at all costs, but to build a relationship where the truth is always the safest option.

If you feel lost on these topics, you’re not alone. At IMS Sotogrande, we support families in the Campo de Gibraltar and Costa del Sol with practical tools and a close-knit team. Write to us at [email protected] or call +34 653 04 17 39. Your child deserves a space to grow with honesty.

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