Different Types of ABA Therapy for Children
Not all ABA looks the same. The real question for your family is simple: what kind of program would your child be in, and where would it happen?
The real types of ABA for children differ two ways: how much therapy (comprehensive vs focused) and where it happens (in-home, center-based, or school-based). Models like the Early Start Denver Model sit inside those. At Budding Futures, care is in-home and BCBA-led, then matched to your child's age and goals.
Comprehensive and Focused Programs
The clearest way to think about types is the two-model framework behavior analysts use: comprehensive and focused.
A comprehensive program targets many skills at once and usually means more weekly hours. It is common for young children with broad needs.
A focused program targets a few specific goals, like communication or safety, with fewer hours. Many school-age children do well with focused care. The right choice is about your child, not a sales pitch.
Early Models You May Hear About
Within comprehensive and focused care, providers use named models and teaching methods. Here are the ones parents hear most, and who they tend to fit (Cleveland Clinic).
| Type or model | Best fit |
|---|---|
| Early intensive behavioral intervention (EIBI) | Young children needing many hours across many skills. |
| Early Start Denver Model (ESDM) | Play-based early intervention, roughly ages 1–4. |
| Focused ABA | A few key goals, often for older or part-time learners. |
| Naturalistic ABA (NET/PRT) | Teaching inside everyday play and routines. |
Source: Cleveland Clinic.
In-Home, Center-Based, or School-Based
A therapist comes to you. Skills are taught in the rooms and routines your child actually lives in, so they transfer. This is what Budding Futures focuses on across Colorado.
Center care happens at a clinic; school-based ABA supports the classroom. Both can work, and we can add school collaboration when it helps.
The best setting depends on your child's goals, age, and family routine. Our provider guide walks through the trade-offs honestly.
More on Types of ABA
A BCBA recommends a type after assessing your child's age, needs, and routine. Younger children with broad needs often start comprehensive; many school-age children do well with focused care.
Both can work. In-home helps skills carry over to daily life and suits many families. Budding Futures focuses on in-home ABA across Colorado. We explain the trade-offs at intake.
Comprehensive programs use more hours, focused programs fewer. Hours should follow goals, not a default package, and most children get 10 to 20 a week.
Colorado Medicaid covers medically necessary ABA across types. We help verify coverage first.
Related Guides
See the specific techniques and a real in-home session.
Talk with a Colorado BCBA
Tell us a little about your child. We will explain whether ABA is a fit, walk through Medicaid or insurance, and book the first evaluation. No waitlist, no pressure on that first call.