Résumé : During somatosensory neurogenesis, neurons are born in an unspecialized transcriptional state, with several transcription factors following a broad-to-restricted expression dynamic as development proceeds, supporting neuron subtype identities. The relevance of this temporal refinement remains however unclear as these broad-to-restricted transcription factors are selectively involved in neurons in which they are ultimately maintained. Here we found that Dach1 encodes for a bona fide broad-to-restricted transcription factor retained and required in tactile somatosensory neurons. Within developing nociceptors, we demonstrate that Prdm12 contributes to Dach1 extinction. Using genetic approaches to prevent its temporal restriction during somatosensory development, we reveal that Dach1 refinement is a prerequisite for the acquisition of an appropriate transcriptional profile in somatosensory subtypes from which it becomes ultimately excluded. These findings highlight the essential role played by Dach1 during somatosensory neuron development. They further demonstrate that the broad-to-restricted temporal pattern followed by several transcription factors is physiologically relevant to achieve appropriate development of somatosensory neurons.