Best Early Intervention ABA Therapy Companies (2026)
Your toddler was just flagged or diagnosed, everyone says start early, and you are trying to pick a company while the clock feels like it is ticking.
The best early intervention ABA companies in 2026 start young, teach through play, coach parents, and skip the long waitlist. Below are the 8 things to look for, and how Colorado families choose. At Budding Futures, early in-home ABA is built around your child and your routine, with plans led by Rachel Blackburn, BCBA.
What Makes an Early Intervention ABA Company Good?
The best early intervention ABA company is the one that can start your young child soon, teaches through play, and coaches you along the way. Early matters, but how the care is delivered matters just as much.
About 1 in 31 eight-year-olds is now identified with autism, and the AAP recommends screening at 18 and 24 months (CDC, 2025). Research shows ABA benefits follow a dose-response pattern, so a thoughtful early start tends to help more (Choi et al., 2022).
Use the 8 points below to compare companies, then ask each one how soon a young child can actually start.
Our recommendation for Colorado families is Budding Futures. We start young children fast with no current waitlist, teach through play in your home, and build parent coaching into every plan, all led by Rachel Blackburn, BCBA.
“My newly 2 year old son got diagnosed with level 3 autism. He got recommended the gold standard, ABA therapy for at least 20 hours a week. I'm trying to figure out the right setup for him.”
— a parent, r/Autism_Parenting8 Things to Look For in the Best Early Intervention ABA
Early intervention works best when it actually starts early. A long waitlist eats the very window that makes it valuable. Budding Futures currently has no waitlist, so most young children can begin in-home ABA within weeks.
Good early ABA looks like play on the floor, following your child's interests. Our therapists use naturalistic teaching, sometimes called NET, to build skills inside real moments. It should never feel like a child being drilled at a table, and with Budding Futures it does not.
You are with your child far more than any therapist. Budding Futures builds parent coaching into every plan so the skills carry into daily life. One parent said reinforcing things at home would make a world of difference, and that is exactly what we set out to do.
Progress should be measured with tools made for young children, like VB-MAPP and ABLLS-R. We use these to set goals and show whether the plan is working, instead of relying on a gut feeling.
Toddlers learn where they live, eat, and play. Budding Futures teaches skills in your home, in the place they are actually used, so a word learned at the kitchen table sticks at the kitchen table.
The old 40-hour figure is outdated for most young children. Hours should match your child's age, stamina, and goals. We recommend a schedule that fits a toddler's day, not a fixed package.
Your child's plan should belong to a real, named expert, not an anonymous team. At Budding Futures, Rachel Blackburn, BCBA, designs and supervises the plan, so you always know who is responsible.
Early ABA is about small, real wins in communication, play, and daily routines. Budding Futures never promises a cure and never tries to make a child seem less autistic. Harmless behaviors like stimming are left alone.
What Early ABA Looks Like, by Age
Early intervention is not one thing. Here is how good in-home ABA usually shifts as a young child grows.
| Age | Common early goals | What it looks like |
|---|---|---|
| 18 months - 2 years | Joint attention, early requests, play | Floor play, following your child's lead, simple back-and-forth |
| 2 - 3 years | First words, signs or device, routines | Naturalistic teaching during snacks, dressing, and play |
| 3 - 4 years | Communication, turn-taking, transitions | Play with peers and siblings, handling changes calmly |
| 4 - 5 years | Social skills, independence, school readiness | Practice for preschool routines and group settings |
Sources: CDC, 2025; Choi et al., 2022; AAP, 2020. Goals are examples; your BCBA sets a plan for your child.
Early ABA, Built Around Your Child
With no current waitlist, most young children can begin in-home ABA within weeks, while the early window still counts.
Care happens on the floor of your home, through play, so skills land in the place your child actually uses them.
We coach you to carry skills into mornings, meals, and bedtime, so progress does not stop when the session ends.
Questions Parents Ask About Early Intervention ABA
It can begin around 18 months to 2 years, once there are concerns or a diagnosis. The AAP recommends screening at 18 and 24 months. Earlier starts tend to help more, though it is rarely too late to begin.
Usually far less than the old 40-hour figure. Many young children do well with a schedule matched to their age and stamina. Your BCBA recommends hours at the evaluation and adjusts as your child grows.
Good early ABA is play-based and follows your child's lead. It teaches through real moments like snacks, dressing, and play, not rigid drills. Harmless behaviors like stimming are left alone.
Budding Futures currently has no waitlist, so most young children can begin in-home ABA within weeks once coverage is confirmed. See ABA for toddlers.
More on Early ABA and Getting Started
Parent-first guides on toddlers, the first weeks after diagnosis, and Medicaid.
Start Early With a Colorado BCBA
Tell us about your child. We will explain what early in-home ABA looks like, walk through Medicaid or insurance, and book the first evaluation. No waitlist, no pressure on that first call.