Sibling Aggression & Abuse

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Aggressive and abusive behaviors like kicking, punching, threatening, humiliating, or purposefully destroying cherished items sometimes happen between siblings. Unfortunately, these behaviors are often mislabeled and dismissed as harmless rivalry and a normal experience of growing up with a sibling. The research evidence is clear, however, that these behaviors can have harmful and potentially long-lasting impacts on mental, physical, and relationship health—and should not be ignored.

Certain family dynamics are associated with sibling aggression and abuse. Parents may unknowingly model negative behaviors that children then repeat. Parental conflicts, intimate partner violence, and child maltreatment are all associated with a sibling being harmed. Family adversity—such as job loss, illness and death—is also linked to sibling aggression and abuse.

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    One-third of children aged 0-17 experienced sibling victimization in the past year.

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    For 20% of children, victimization by a sibling is chronic.

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    Sibling victimization is more common for brother-brother and closer-in-age sibling pairs.

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    Sibling victimization peaks at 45% for 2-5 year olds and 46% for 6-9 year olds.

What is Sibling Aggression?

Sibling aggression includes psychological, physical, and property aggression. It can be one-sided but is often mutual. Sometimes, mutual sibling aggression is minimized as "fair" or "just a fight," but mutual sibling aggression does not mean the exchange is harmless. Sibling aggression can be mild or severe.

  • Mild aggression includes pushing, grabbing, insulting, and taking personal items. While mild aggression does not cause a physical injury, it may cause emotional and relationship harm, especially if it persists or escalates over time.
  • Severe aggression leaves a physical or emotional injury and can involve the use of a weapon or weapon-like object. Examples of severe aggression include kicking, punching, beating, repeatedly calling a sibling dumb, ugly, unloved, or threatening significant harm. Such behaviors usually peak during adolescence.

Sibling aggression may happen for a number of reasons, including a lack of emotion regulation and problem-solving skills. At toddler and preschool ages, aggression between siblings can be developmentally appropriate as children are learning how to deal with frustration and anger. Still, it should not be ignored. Parents and professionals should stop aggressive behaviors immediately and consistently, increase supervision, and guide siblings on socio-emotional skills, like listening and conflict management.  Learn More

Is it Sibling Abuse?

"My brother's abuse and how he terrorized me has impacted every day of my life negatively. I don't feel safe."

- Survivor of sibling abuse, from the SAARA Story Archive

Sibling abuse is one-sided and occurs in the context of a power differential between siblings based on age, gender, physical size, ability, social competence, family role, or parental favoritism. Sometimes, the sibling who causes harm has an underlying issue, like a compulsion, externalizing disorder, developmental disorder, or trauma experience.

Potentially abusive sibling behaviors include serious threats of harm, sexual contact, and physical violence. Abuse is often chronic, intense, and long-standing, but a severe one-time event may also fall under the definition of abuse. The harmed child may attempt to fight back or act in self-defense, but this should not be mistaken for mutuality.

Sibling sexual abuse shares much in common with physical and psychological abuse, and siblings can experience more than one type of sibling abuse. But there are also some unique features of sibling sexual abuse, including more frequent confusion about mutuality and sometimes greater secrecy and shame.  Learn More

Sibling abuse leads to serious and enduring physical, emotional, and/or sexual harm and often results in estrangement. If a child tells a family member they are being harmed, they should be believed. Children rarely lie about abuse. Sibling abuse requires professional help to address safety concerns, family dynamics, parenting, and the mental health of all family members.

Learn More about Sibling Aggression & Abuse

The Encyclopedia of Child and Adolescent Development cover
Sibling Victimization in Childhood
January 13, 2020
Encyclopedia entry about sibling victimization in the Encyclopedia of Child and Adolescent Development.
Family predictors of sibling versus peer victimization
September 5, 2019
We explore whether there are common family characteristics (family climate, interparental conflict, parenting) in the prediction of sibling and peer victimization. Knowledge of shared familial elements of sibling and peer victimization could benefit family violence and antibullying programs to promote positive interactions and lessen and stop aggression in both sibling and peer relationships.
Perpetration of sibling aggression and sibling relationship quality in emerging adulthood
August 26, 2019
This study examined how emerging adults' perpetration of aggression toward a sibling closest in age was longitudinally associated with their sibling relationship quality. Perpetration of sibling aggression was predictive 4 years later of less sibling warmth, involvement, and emotional help.
Patterns of sibling victimization as predictors of peer victimization in childhood and adolescence
November 21, 2018
We document four patterns of sibling victimization (Persist, New, Desist, and None) across two time points and their association with peer victimization at time two and whether these linkages are apparent in early childhood, middle childhood and adolescence.
combination of sibling victimization and parental child maltreatment
January 8, 2018
Sibling victimization was related to more mental health problems and delinquency over and above the effect of child abuse and neglect.
Journal cover
October 1, 2017
Sibling conflict and aggression is often a pervasive part of family life that parents want help managing and can have negative effects on children’s well-being. The purpose of this systematic review is to evaluate current research regarding programs to reduce sibling conflict and aggression and promote positive sibling relationships.
Victimization by siblings in children with disability or weight problems
July 28, 2017
Controlling for other forms of maltreatment and individual and family characteristics, children with a physical disability and parent-perceived children who are thinner than average and children who are overweight experienced more sibling victimization.
Family adversity’s role in the onset and termination of childhood sibling victimization
December 12, 2016
To understand the role of family adversity in the onset and desistance of sibling victimization, we examined school-age children’s sibling victimization patterns using 2 waves of longitudinal data from a nationally representative sample. An increase in family adversity was associated with initiation of sibling victimization, and termination was related to a decline in family adversity.
Physical health of adolescent perpetrators of sibling aggression
October 24, 2015
Perpetration of aggression toward a sibling is common and has negative health consequences in late adolescence suggesting this issue should be targeted to improve adolescents' sibling dynamics and physical health.
a holistic appraoch to child maltreatment
A holistic approach to child maltreatment
April 28, 2015
Children and adolescents experience more violence, abuse, and criminal victimisation than do other segments of the population.
Family dynamics and young children's sibling victimization
August 11, 2014
This research examines how family dynamics like interparental conflict, family violence, and quality of parenting are associated with young children’s experiences of sibling victimization. We use nationally representative data from interviews with caregivers of 1,726 children aged 2 to 9 years of age.
Journal of Interpersonal Violence cover
July 8, 2014
We find that proactive sibling aggression increases risk for problem substance use and delinquent behavior, reactive sibling aggression increases risk for depressed mood and delinquent behavior, and such results are observed even with statistical adjustments for sociodemographic and family variables, stressful life events, and prior adjustment.
Siblng and peer victimization in childhood and adolescence
Sibling and peer victimization in childhood and adolescence
June 2, 2014
This study examined how victimizations by either a sibling or peer are linked to each other and to mental health in childhood and adolescence. This work establishes that for some children and adolescents, victimization at the hands of other juveniles happens both at home and school.
Pediatric Digest
July 1, 2013
Sibling aggression is common but often dismissed as benign. We examine whether being a victim of various forms of sibling aggression is associated with children’s and adolescents’ mental health distress. We also contrast the consequences of sibling versus peer aggression for children’s and adolescents’ mental health.
Prevalence and correlates of sibling victimization types
Prevalence and correlates of sibling victimization types
February 18, 2013
The goal of this study was to document the prevalence and correlates of any past year sibling victimization, including physical, property, and psychological victimization, by a co-residing juvenile sibling across the spectrum of childhood from one month to 17 years of age.
Journal of Family Violence cover
October 26, 2012
We describe sibling proactive and reactive aggression in middle and late adolescence. Participants were 8th and 12th grade adolescents who completed an in-school survey.