Raising Brilliance

Speech Therapy for Autism in Colorado Springs, Colorado

Last verified: May 2026

Speech-language therapy supports communication in all its forms — spoken language, understanding, social communication, and AAC. This guide covers how to access it for autistic children in Colorado Springs.

Get autism resources in your inbox

Join over 1,000 families. Free, weekly.

About Speech Therapy

Speech-language therapy addresses communication — and for autistic children, communication means far more than pronunciation. A speech-language pathologist (SLP) works across a range of areas depending on the child.

What speech therapy can address for autistic children:

  • Expressive language — building vocabulary, sentences, and the ability to express needs and ideas
  • Receptive language — understanding what others communicate
  • Social communication (pragmatics) — conversation, turn-taking, interpreting tone and body language
  • Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) — tools from picture systems to speech-generating devices, for minimally speaking and non-speaking children
  • Articulation and speech clarity — when relevant
  • Feeding and swallowing — some SLPs also address these, relevant for autistic children with restrictive eating

AAC matters — and it doesn't delay speech. For minimally speaking and non-speaking autistic children, supporting AAC is some of the most important work an SLP does. Research is clear: AAC does not prevent or delay spoken language — it supports communication and often helps speech develop. Every autistic child deserves a reliable way to communicate, in whatever form works. A good SLP treats all communication as valid.

Affirming speech therapy. The best speech therapy for autistic children honors the child's communication rather than enforcing neurotypical norms — valuing every communication attempt, not suppressing scripting or echolalia that serve a purpose, building genuine functional communication for the child's own goals, and following the child's interests.

One of the least controversial autism therapies. Speech-language therapy is widely accepted and is often used alongside occupational therapy and other supports. Many autistic children benefit significantly from it.

Speech Therapy in Colorado Springs specifically

In Colorado Springs, speech-language therapy for autistic children is available through several channels.

Early intervention (under age 3). Early Intervention Colorado provides speech-language therapy for eligible children birth to 3, with service coordination through The Resource Exchange (the regional Community Centered Board). Eligibility is based on developmental delay — no autism diagnosis required — and services are delivered in natural environments. For young children with communication concerns, this is often the fastest route to speech support.

School-based speech therapy. For school-age children, speech-language therapy is provided through the school district as a related service on an IEP, when a student qualifies. The numerous Colorado Springs-area districts (D11, D20, D49, D2, D3, D8, D12, D38, and others) employ SLPs. School-based speech therapy is education-focused and provided at no cost.

Private clinic-based speech therapy. Private speech therapy is available through Colorado Springs health systems (including Children's Hospital Colorado Colorado Springs and UCHealth) and independent private practices across the metro. Private therapy can be more frequent, more individualized, and broader in scope than school-based services. It's typically funded through:

  • TRICARE — for military families, covers medically necessary speech therapy
  • Private insurance — speech therapy for autism is generally covered when medically necessary under Colorado's autism mandate (state-regulated plans)
  • Health First Colorado (Medicaid) — covers medically necessary speech therapy; through EPSDT, Medicaid-enrolled children under 21 have a strong entitlement

AAC support. For families pursuing AAC, look for Colorado Springs-area SLPs with specific AAC experience. AAC evaluation and device acquisition can involve insurance authorization; an experienced SLP guides families through it.

Military families. Speech therapy through TRICARE follows TRICARE's processes — confirm provider network status. For families who relocate, request complete records and get on waitlists at the next location early.

Telehealth. Speech-language therapy often works well via telehealth — useful for families in rural parts of El Paso County and surrounding areas.

Wait times. Private speech therapy wait times in Colorado Springs vary by provider. School-based and Early Intervention Colorado services follow legally required timelines.

How to find speech therapy in Colorado Springs

Here's how to access speech therapy for an autistic child in Colorado Springs.

Step 1: Identify the right pathway for your child's age.

  • Under 3: Contact Early Intervention Colorado or The Resource Exchange. Speech therapy is a core early intervention service, free, with no autism diagnosis required — usually the fastest route for young children.
  • Age 3 to school age: Transition from early intervention goes to school district preschool special education; private therapy is also an option.
  • School-age: Request a school evaluation in writing for IEP-based speech services, and/or pursue private therapy.

Step 2: For private therapy, understand your coverage. Call your insurer, TRICARE, or Health First Colorado and ask: Is speech therapy for autism covered? Is an autism diagnosis or physician referral required? What authorization is needed? How many sessions? Which providers are in-network? Most plans require a physician referral.

Step 3: Build a provider list. For private therapy, contact Children's Hospital Colorado Colorado Springs, UCHealth, and independent speech therapy practices across the metro. If your child may need AAC, ask whether the SLP has AAC experience.

Step 4: Ask questions when choosing an SLP.

  • What's your experience with autistic children specifically?
  • How do you approach communication for a minimally speaking or non-speaking child?
  • What's your view on AAC?
  • How do you involve parents in therapy?
  • How do you handle echolalia and scripting?

Listen for an SLP who values all forms of communication, supports AAC readily, and follows the child's motivation rather than imposing neurotypical norms.

Step 5: Coordinate school and private services. If your child receives both school-based and private speech therapy, it helps when the providers communicate. With your consent, they can coordinate goals.

Step 6: Stay involved. Speech therapy works best when communication strategies extend into daily life. A good SLP coaches you on supporting communication at home. Ask what you can reinforce between sessions.

Know of a Colorado Springs-area speech therapy provider we should reference, or have feedback? Tell us.

Frequently asked questions

Weekly autism resources, delivered free

Join over 1,000 families and autistic adults who read Raising Brilliance every week. Practical, affirming, and always free.

No spam. Unsubscribe any time.