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ABA Therapy vs Occupational Therapy: Key Differences Explained

Understand how ABA therapy and occupational therapy differ and how they can work together. Learn which therapy addresses which needs for your child with autism.

Published December 28, 2024

Shamay Selim, M.Ed., BCBA

Clinical Director at Foundations Autism

Reviewed December 28, 2024

ABA Therapy vs Occupational Therapy: What's the Difference?

ABA therapy and occupational therapy (OT) are both commonly recommended for children with autism, but they serve different purposes and use different approaches. Understanding these differences helps parents make informed decisions and coordinate care effectively.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Aspect ABA Therapy Occupational Therapy
Provider BCBA and RBT OTR (Occupational Therapist Registered) and COTA
Focus Behavior change, learning, communication, social skills Sensory processing, motor skills, daily living activities
Hours 10-40 hours/week typically 1-3 hours/week typically
Approach Behavioral principles, systematic teaching, data-driven Sensory integration, developmental, activity-based
Setting Home, center, school, community Clinic (sensory gym), school, occasionally home

What ABA Therapy Addresses

Core Focus Areas

  • Behavior change and skill acquisition
  • Communication and language
  • Social skills and peer interaction
  • Following directions and compliance
  • Reducing challenging behaviors
  • Daily living skills (behavioral approach)
  • Academic readiness

How ABA Approaches Daily Living Skills

ABA breaks skills into teachable steps, uses reinforcement, and focuses on independence. For example, teaching tooth brushing through task analysis and systematic prompting.

What Occupational Therapy Addresses

Core Focus Areas

  • Sensory Processing: How the brain interprets sensory input
  • Fine Motor: Hand skills, writing, cutting, buttoning
  • Gross Motor: Coordination, balance, body awareness
  • Self-Regulation: Managing arousal and attention
  • Activities of Daily Living: Dressing, eating, grooming
  • Visual Motor: Eye-hand coordination
  • Executive Function: Planning, organization, problem-solving

Sensory Processing in Autism

Many children with autism have sensory processing differences:

  • Over-sensitivity to sounds, lights, textures
  • Under-sensitivity requiring more sensory input
  • Difficulty with motor planning
  • Challenges with body awareness
  • Trouble regulating arousal levels

Where They Overlap

Daily Living Skills

  • Both address dressing, eating, grooming
  • ABA focuses on behavioral learning and motivation
  • OT addresses motor skills and sensory factors
  • Coordination between therapies is valuable

Self-Regulation

  • Both work on emotional regulation
  • ABA teaches behavioral coping strategies
  • OT addresses sensory-based regulation
  • Combined approaches often work best

Play and Social Skills

  • Both use play as a teaching tool
  • ABA targets social interaction directly
  • OT may address motor aspects of play
  • Both can work on peer interaction

How They Work Together

Complementary Approaches

  • OT identifies sensory needs that affect behavior
  • ABA implements sensory strategies throughout the day
  • OT addresses motor skills needed for tasks
  • ABA practices tasks in behavioral framework
  • Both communicate about child's progress

Example: Writing Skills

  • OT role: Develops hand strength, grip, posture, visual-motor skills
  • ABA role: Increases writing motivation, teaches letter formation behaviorally, practices generalization

Example: Tolerating New Foods

  • OT role: Addresses oral motor, sensory sensitivity, texture tolerance
  • ABA role: Uses gradual exposure, reinforcement, behavior momentum

When to Prioritize Each

Prioritize ABA When:

  • Communication is significantly delayed
  • Challenging behaviors are the main barrier
  • Social skills need intensive focus
  • Overall learning needs comprehensive intervention
  • More intensive hours are needed

Prioritize OT When:

  • Sensory issues significantly interfere with function
  • Fine motor delays affect daily activities
  • Handwriting is a major challenge
  • Self-regulation is driven by sensory needs
  • Feeding issues have sensory/motor components

Coordinating ABA and OT

For children receiving both therapies:

  • Request that providers communicate
  • Share assessments between teams
  • Coordinate on overlapping goals
  • Ask OT for sensory strategies ABA can use
  • Have ABA reinforce OT skills throughout the day
  • Include both in IEP meetings if applicable

Questions to Discuss with Your Team

  • What are my child's primary needs right now?
  • How do sensory issues affect behavior and learning?
  • What motor skills need development?
  • How will the therapies coordinate?
  • What can each therapy uniquely offer?
  • How will we avoid conflicting approaches?

Insurance Considerations

  • ABA: Typically covered under autism/behavioral health benefits
  • OT: Typically covered under medical/rehabilitation benefits
  • Both may require prior authorization
  • Hour limits may differ between therapies
  • School-based OT may be available through IEP

Got questions?

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this topic.

What's the difference between ABA and OT?

ABA therapy focuses on behavior and learning using behavioral principles, while occupational therapy addresses sensory processing, motor skills, and activities of daily living. ABA uses systematic behavior change strategies; OT uses sensory integration and developmental approaches.

Does my child need both ABA and occupational therapy?

Many children with autism benefit from both. ABA addresses behavioral learning and communication, while OT addresses sensory processing issues, fine motor skills, and helps children regulate their bodies. They complement each other well when coordinated.

Can ABA therapists address sensory issues?

ABA therapists can address behavioral responses to sensory input (like tolerance for different textures) but aren't trained in sensory integration therapy. An occupational therapist evaluates and treats underlying sensory processing differences.

Which therapy should we start first, ABA or OT?

This depends on your child's most pressing needs. If behavior and communication are the biggest barriers, start with ABA. If sensory issues significantly interfere with function, start with OT. Many families start both simultaneously, especially after an autism diagnosis.

Have more questions?Visit our FAQ·ABA Glossary

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