For Atlanta families starting ABA therapy, one of the first real decisions is where the therapy actually happens. Most providers in our area offer one of two settings, in-home or center-based, and some offer both.
It is not a small choice. The setting shapes what your child learns, how quickly skills transfer to real life, how your daily schedule looks, and even how your insurance dollars get spent. There isn’t a universal right answer, but there is a right answer for your child.
This guide breaks down both options honestly. We will cover what each looks like, the trade-offs, who tends to do better in each setting, and the Atlanta-specific factors (yes, including traffic) that genuinely matter.
If you only have two minutes, here is the short summary.
In-home ABA is usually the better fit for:
Center-based ABA is usually the better fit for:
Many Atlanta families do in-home for the first 1to 3 years, then transition to center-based as their child approaches schoolage. Some use a hybrid model from the start. Some stay in-home long term and never need center-based at all.
The rest of this guide unpacks why.
A therapist, usually a Registered Behavior Technician (RBT), comes to your home for sessions that typically run 2 to 4 hours each. Most children receive 10 to 40 hours per week depending on age, goals, and BCBA recommendation.
The therapist works with your child wherever the day naturally happens: the living room floor, kitchen table, backyard, bedroom for getting-dressed practice, or even the grocery store run for some goals. A Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) supervises the program, designs the treatment plan, and meets with you regularly.
The strengths of in-home ABA:
Skills transfer to real life. This is the single biggest clinical advantage. A child who learns to request a snack at their own kitchen counter has already practiced the skill in the place they actually need it. Skills generalize automatically because they were never artificially separated from real life.
Family is integrated. Siblings, grandparents, caregivers, and parents are all part of the environment. Therapists can directly teach parents strategies in the moments those strategies will be used.
Zero commute. For Atlanta families, this is real. A 30-minute commute each way to a clinic eats 5 hours a week of your life. In-home recovers all of it.
Comfort and consistency. For children with sensory sensitivities or transition difficulties, the home environment removes a major source of dysregulation. Sessions start with the child already in their regulated zone, not after they have melted down in a parking lot.
Family routines become treatment targets. Bedtime resistance, mealtime challenges, sibling conflict, morning routines. These are some of the most impactful skill areas, and they only happen at home.
The trade-offs of in-home ABA:
Less peer interaction. Unless explicitly built in (community outings, playdates), your child mostly interacts with their therapist and family. For social goals specifically, this can be limiting.
Your home becomes a workspace. Therapists are in your space multiple times a week. For some families, that’s fine. For others, it takes adjustment.
Distraction risks. TVs, siblings, pets, food, electronics. The home is full of competing stimuli that a clinic eliminates. Good therapists work around this, but it is real.
Less structured environment. For children who specifically need to practice working in a school-like setting, in-home does not provide that naturally.
Your child attends a clinic on a regular schedule, often resembling a school day, with sessions running 4 to 8 hours daily, several days a week. Clinics typically have multiple therapy rooms, structured learning areas, sensory rooms, and outdoor play space. Children work one-on-one with an RBT, with periodic group activities and peer interactions.
The strengths of center-based ABA:
Peer interaction is built in. Children practice social skills with other children, not just with adults. For goals around play, turn-taking, group instruction, or peer engagement, this is invaluable.
Distraction-controlled environment. Clinics are designed for focused learning. No TVs, no siblings interrupting, no doorbells. For children with attention challenges, this can be a major advantage.
Structured preparation for school. A center-based day mimics the demands of a classroom. Following a schedule, transitioning between activities, sitting at a table for instruction, and complying with group expectations. This is excellent preparation for kindergarten and beyond.
Specialized equipment and space. Centers often have resources you can’t replicate at home: sensory gyms, structured play environments, picture exchange systems, and specialized materials.
Team-based supervision. BCBAs and other clinical staff are physically present, which can mean more immediate problem-solving and observation.
Reliable hours. You drop off and pick up at scheduled times. For working parents, the predictability is valuable.
The trade-offs of center-based ABA:
Skills don’t always transfer to home. This is the big one. A child who masters a skill at the clinic does not automatically use it at home or in the community. Generalization has to be deliberately programmed and often requires additional in-home work.
Atlanta commute reality. If the center is 30+ minutes from your house in good traffic, you’re looking at significant daily driving. And a child who is already in therapy 4 to 6 hours does not always have patience for a long ride home.
Less family involvement. Parents are physically separated from sessions. Parent training still happens, but it is less embedded in the day-to-day work.
Higher dysregulation risk for some children. For children with severe transition difficulties or new-environment anxiety, the drop-off can be its own therapeutic challenge. Sometimes productive, sometimes overwhelming.
Capacity constraints. Atlanta’s better center-based programs often have waitlists. Wait times of 6 to 12 months are not uncommon.
Pure decision frameworks oversimplify, but hereis a way to think through your choice.
Your child’s age and developmental stage
Children under 4 typically benefit more from in-home therapy, especially in the first year of therapy. Early intervention is fundamentally about building communication, regulation, and daily living skills, all of which live at home.
Children 4 to 6 can do well in either, depending on their specific goals and temperament.
Children 6 and older often benefit from at least some center-based time, particularly if school is on the horizon or if peer skills are a focus.
Your child’s goal profile
Make an honest list of what you most want your child to gain in the next year. Map each goal to the environment where it is most likely to develop:
If most of your goals fall into the first three buckets, in-home is the right starting point. If most fall into the last three, center-based may be better.
Your family logistics
Honest questions to ask yourself:
If your home is small, chaotic, or in a constant state of flux, that is a real factor. And it is okay to acknowledge it. Center-based may be the better fit even if the clinical reasons favor in-home.
Your child’s temperament
How does your child respond to new environments? To transitions? To being in spaces with other unfamiliar children? Some children thrive on the predictability of a clinic. Others would spend the first three months of center-based therapy in fight-or-flight mode, learning nothing.
You know your child. Trust what you know.
Some Atlanta providers offer hybrid models. For example, three days at home and two days at a clinic, or in-home sessions during the school year supplemented by clinic-based summer programs.
When done well, hybrid can capture the benefits of both. When done poorly, it can fragment your child’s care across two locations with two different teams.
If you’re considering hybrid, ask:
A hybrid program with one supervisor and consistent staffing is meaningfully different from one where home and clinic operate as separate silos.
How Insurance and Cost Compare
For most Georgia families, insurance covers ABA in both settings at similar rates. There is typically no major financial difference between in-home and center-based at the per-session level.
Under Georgia’s Ava’s Law, insurance plans regulated by the state are required to cover ABA therapy for individuals up to age 21, with a maximum annual benefit of $35,000. This applies to both in-home and center-based services, though some plans have specific authorization requirements that vary by setting.
A few practical notes:
Your provider should walk you through your specific plan’s coverage before you decide.
A few things genuinely worth weighing in Atlanta specifically.
Traffic. A 12-mile drive to a center in Buckhead from, say, Smyrna or Tucker can be 45+ minutes during morning rush. Twice a day, five days a week. Be honest about whether that is sustainable for your family.
Geographic distribution of centers. Atlanta’s center-based ABA programs are concentrated in certain areas (north metro, midtown, and parts of the perimeter). If you are in a more outlying area, in-home may be your only practical option.
Waitlists. Some Atlanta center-based programs have multi-month waitlists. In-home providers generally have shorter wait times. If your child needs to start soon, in-home is often the faster path to services.
School coordination. If your child is in school (or starting soon) in Atlanta Public Schools, DeKalb, Fulton, or Cobb, after-school center-based hours are limited. In-home is often the only way to get meaningful hours after school.
We specialize in in-home ABA in Atlanta, Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. That is our deliberate clinical choice. We believe most children, especially younger children, make the fastest meaningful progress when therapy happens where life happens.
That said, we do not think in-home is right for every child. If we evaluate your child and conclude they would be better served by a center-based program, we will say so and help you find the right placement. Clinical integrity matters more than filling our caseload.
Our founders, Yedida Teichman, MA, CCC-SLP, and Rita Schwartz, MA, CCC-SLP, both came from speech-language pathology backgrounds before building My Team ABA. That clinical lens shapes how we think about communication, family involvement, and skill transfer, all of which are central to why in-home works for the families we serve.
Yes, and many families do. As children grow and goals shift toward school readiness, transitioning to center-based therapy (or adding some center-based hours) is common. Just make sure your new provider does a fresh assessment rather than copying the old plan.
Not sure whether in-home or center-based ABA is right for your child? Reach out to our team for a no-pressure conversation. We will talk through your child’s needs and help you think it through, even if the answer ends up being a different provider than us.
About the Author
Keyann Griffin, BCBA, LBA Director of Clinical Growth and Expansion, MyTeam ABAKeyann Griffin, BCBA, LBA, is the Director of Clinical Growth and Expansion at My Team ABA, where she works to expand access to compassionate, evidence-based ABA therapy for families across Georgia and beyond. A Board Certified Behavior Analyst and Licensed Behavior Analyst, she is passionate about supporting parents and children at every step of their autism journey. Verify her credentials through the Behavior Analyst Certification Board.
Sources and Further Reading
1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.“Treatment and Intervention for Autism Spectrum Disorder.”https://www.cdc.gov/autism/treatment/index.html
2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.“Data and Statistics on Autism Spectrum Disorder.”https://www.cdc.gov/autism/data-research/index.html
3. Autism Speaks. “Georgia State-RegulatedInsurance Coverage.”https://www.autismspeaks.org/georgia-state-regulated-insurance-coverage
4. Georgia State Senate. “At Issue: InsuranceCoverage for Autism Spectrum Disorders (Ava’s Law).” 2015.https://www.senate.ga.gov/sro/Documents/AtIssue/AtIssue_May15.pdf
5. Behavior Analyst Certification Board. Credentialverification and ethics code. https://www.bacb.com
6. National Institute of Mental Health. “AutismSpectrum Disorder.”https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/autism-spectrum-disorders-asd
7. Health Resources and Services Administration.“Autism Spectrum Disorder Resources.”https://mchb.hrsa.gov/programs-impact/focus-areas/children-youth-special-health-care-needs/autism
8. U.S. Department of Education. “Individuals withDisabilities Education Act (IDEA).” https://sites.ed.gov/idea/
9. Autism Society of America.https://autismsociety.org
10. Autism Society of Georgia.https://www.autismsocietyga.org