February 20, 2026
|By : Nichole Daher
Summary: ABA therapy demand is rising faster than clinics can keep up. This is not because of hype, but because more children are being diagnosed earlier, and families view ABA as essential care.
For franchise owners, this gap creates opportunity only when expectations are realistic. High demand does not guarantee easy growth or automatic revenue. Sustainable clinics are built through disciplined staffing, strong systems, payer readiness, and hands-on leadership.
SOS Franchising is designed around these realities. It supports owner operators with structured systems, training, and quality standards, while making it clear that long-term success depends on preparation, accountability, and consistent execution, not shortcuts or promises.
Families across the U.S. are looking for ABA therapy and waiting longer than they expect.
This isn’t because autism services are optional or trendy. It’s because demand has grown faster than the system that delivers care. Clinics, clinicians, and infrastructure simply haven’t caught up yet.
For people exploring ABA franchise ownership, this gap matters. It shapes how clinics open, how they scale, and what “success” really looks like in this industry.
Before talking about supply problems, it helps to understand why demand has stayed strong year after year.
According to the CDC, about 1 in 31 eight-year-old children in the U.S. is identified with autism spectrum disorder. That number has steadily increased over time.
This rise is not driven by a sudden change in biology. It’s largely the result of better screening, broader awareness, and earlier evaluation. Earlier diagnosis means earlier intervention. And earlier intervention usually means longer engagement with therapy services.
That alone keeps demand high.
ABA therapy isn’t viewed as an add-on by most families. It’s often considered a core part of autism care. Pediatricians, specialists, and school systems regularly recommend behavioral and educational interventions. ABA fits squarely into that category.
Because of this, demand doesn’t follow consumer cycles. Families seek care when it’s needed, not when it’s convenient.
State and federal insurance mandates changed the autism care landscape. Coverage for ABA services became more common across both commercial insurance and Medicaid programs. This expanded access. It also introduced layers of administrative work.
Authorizations, documentation requirements, re-evaluations, audits, and billing timelines now shape how care is delivered. Coverage exists, but access still depends on operational execution.
Strong demand does not automatically create supply. ABA therapy has built-in limits that slow expansion.
ABA clinics operate under healthcare regulations, not retail rules.
Payer credentialing takes time. Mistakes create delays. Shortcuts create risk. Opening a clinic requires patience and precision. Scaling one requires consistency.
Launching an ABA clinic involves far more than securing a lease.
Owners must think through:
For first-time owners, especially non-clinicians, these layers can slow expansion if not handled correctly.
How ABA clinics are owned influences how access grows.
Large healthcare groups and private equity-backed platforms now operate many ABA clinics nationwide. They bring capital, technology, and standardized systems. This can accelerate expansion in certain markets.
Growth still depends on people, supervision, and compliance.
Owner-operated clinics grow differently.
Leadership stays close to daily operations. Owners see staffing issues early. They feel scheduling pressure immediately. They hear feedback directly from families.
Growth tends to be slower, but often steadier. Capacity expands when teams are ready, not before.
Demand exists almost everywhere. Supply expands only where execution allows it.
Staffing, culture, payer relationships, and leadership discipline determine how much care a clinic can actually deliver.
Access to ABA therapy varies widely across the country.
Some urban areas have multiple clinics and shorter wait times. Other regions have few providers or none at all. Families in underserved areas may travel long distances or wait months for services. In some cases, care is delayed entirely.
The need exists everywhere. Infrastructure does not.
This uneven distribution explains why national demand can look strong while local access remains limited.
This gap creates opportunity, but only for owners who understand its limits.
Waitlists reflect unmet need, not guaranteed enrollment or revenue.
Actual growth depends on:
Ignoring these realities leads to operational strain.
In ABA, staffing is not a support function. It is the business.
Clinics scale when clinicians stay, feel supported, and can work sustainably. That requires thoughtful leadership, supervision, planning, and culture.
Owners who invest here protect long-term stability.
ABA clinics are not passive businesses.
Owners influence outcomes through presence, decision-making, and accountability. Engagement affects staff morale, family trust, and care consistency.
Hands-on leadership is not a preference in this industry. It is a requirement.
Success On The Spectrum does not promise to remove industry constraints. It is structured to help owners operate responsibly within them.
SOS provides structured operating systems, templates, and workflows designed specifically for ABA clinics. These systems help owners avoid early mistakes and focus on execution. They do not remove responsibility or guarantee outcomes.
Training covers:
This prepares owners for what the business actually involves, not just what it looks like on paper.
Quality oversight and brand standards protect families, clinicians, and franchisees. Consistency builds trust. Trust supports retention. Retention supports sustainability.
ABA therapy demand will continue to outpace supply for the foreseeable future. Workforce limitations, healthcare rules, and operational complexity are not going away.
The clinics that last will not be the fastest to expand, they will be the most disciplined.
That’s what closes the gap responsibly.
The growing demand for ABA therapy reflects a real need. It also reflects real responsibility. For entrepreneurs exploring franchise ownership, this industry rewards preparation, patience, and involvement.
SOS Franchising supports hands-on owners who want to build high-quality ABA clinics with structure, transparency, and accountability.
If you’re considering this path, start with clarity.
Visit SOS Franchising to learn how the SOS franchise system is designed to help owners prepare for the realities of operating an ABA therapy clinic.
Why is ABA therapy access limited despite high demand?
Workforce shortages, regulatory requirements, and operational complexity limit how quickly clinics can expand.
Does higher demand guarantee financial success?
No. Outcomes depend on staffing, payer processes, leadership, and day-to-day execution.
Can non-clinicians own an ABA franchise?
Yes. Owners manage operations while licensed clinicians deliver care.
Is ABA franchise ownership passive?
No. Successful clinics require active, hands-on leadership.
How does SOS support owners without guarantees?
Through training, systems, and guidance, owners remain responsible for decisions and outcomes.

Nichole Daher is an American entrepreneur, book author, autism advocate, and founder of Success On The Spectrum (SOS)-the first autism treatment franchise in the United States-known for its parent viewing rooms and quality-driven ABA services. She currently serves as CEO of SOS Franchising, where she provides support, resources, and opportunities for entrepreneurs to open their own Success On The Spectrum autism centers.
