What autism services are available in Ontario while waiting for OAP?
While waiting for OAP Core Clinical Services, families can access: Foundational Family Services (free, no waitlist), school-based IEP supports, Preschool Speech and Language programs, EarlyON Child and Family Centres, private therapy (if financially able), and DSO registration for transition planning.
Source: Ontario Autism Program
How long does autism diagnosis take in Ontario?
Before joining the OAP waitlist, Ontario diagnostic waitlists average **12–24 months** at public hospitals. [OAP] This pre-waitlist delay means total time from first concern to therapy often exceeds **5–7 years**, an invisible bottleneck in official statistics.
Source: Ontario Autism Program [OAP]
What does the WHO say about early autism intervention timing?
The WHO Fact Sheet on Autism Spectrum Disorders (2023) states that timely access to early evidence-based psychosocial interventions can improve the ability of autistic children to communicate effectively and interact socially. Dawson et al. (2010, Pediatrics; PMID 19948568) confirmed in an RCT that ESDM (Early Start Denver Model) at 18–30 months produced significant developmental gains.
Source: WHO Fact Sheet: Autism Spectrum Disorders (2023); Dawson et al., Pediatrics 2010 (PMID 19948568)
Speech-Language Therapy in Peterborough-Kawartha, Quick Summary
OAP-funded speech-language therapy in Peterborough-Kawartha has a community wait of 18–30 months (community services).
Private SLP clinics in Peterborough-Kawartha typically have shorter waits of 6–12 weeks at $150–$250/session.
OAP Childhood Budget funding can be used for SLP immediately after registration on AccessOAP.
Speech-language therapy helps with verbal communication, AAC, social language, and feeding.
All SLPs in Ontario must be registered with CASLPO — always verify credentials before starting.
Peterborough-Kawartha · Ontario Autism Program
Speech-Language Therapy in Peterborough-Kawartha: What It Costs and How Long You Wait
OAP-funded wait is 18–30 months (community services). Private therapy runs $150–$250/session. Here is how to navigate both options.
OAP vs Private: Cost and Wait Comparison
How OAP-funded and private speech-language therapy compare in Peterborough-Kawartha
Factor
OAP-Funded
Private (Out-of-Pocket)
Cost
Eligible under Childhood Budget and Core Clinical Services
$150–$250/session per session
Annual Budget
$5,000–$65,000/year (combined with other OAP-eligible therapies)
$600–$2,000/month (4–8 sessions)
Wait Time
18–30 months (community services)
6–12 weeks
OHIP Coverage
N/A (OAP, not OHIP)
Not covered by OHIP for most children; hospital-based services may differ
Private Insurance
N/A
Many employer plans cover $500–$2,000/year for SLP; check your plan details
Local Providers
18+ registered SLPs accepting autism clients
Many private clinics available
Wait times and costs are estimates based on regional data and provider surveys. Individual experiences vary. Last updated: 2026-04-10.
Speech-Language Therapy Providers in Peterborough-Kawartha
Key organizations offering speech-language therapy in the Peterborough-Kawartha area. Always verify OAP eligibility and current availability directly with the provider.
Peterborough Regional Health Centre — Pediatric SLP
OAP Provider
SLP AssessmentCommunication Therapy
Hospital-based; confirm OAP billing eligibility
Autism Ontario — Peterborough Chapter
Community Organization
SLP provider referralsFamily resources
This is not a complete directory. Search AccessOAP for the full list of approved providers in your area.
How to Get Speech-Language Therapy in Peterborough-Kawartha
Three steps to access speech-language therapy through OAP or private funding.
1
Get a referral or self-refer
Ask your pediatrician or family doctor for a referral to a speech-language pathologist (SLP). You can also self-refer to private SLP clinics — no physician referral is required in Ontario. School boards also provide SLP services, but availability varies.
2
Register on AccessOAP
If your child has an autism diagnosis, register on accessoap.com to unlock OAP funding. Your Childhood Budget can be used for speech-language therapy with any OAP-approved SLP. You don't need to wait for Core Clinical Services.
3
Find a registered SLP
All speech-language pathologists in Ontario must be registered with the College of Audiologists and Speech-Language Pathologists of Ontario (CASLPO). Search caslpo.com to verify credentials. Look for SLPs with autism or AAC experience.
Start with AccessOAP
Registering on AccessOAP is free and unlocks your Childhood Budget immediately. You do not have to wait for Core Clinical Services to start using OAP funding.
Common Questions About Speech-Language Therapy in Peterborough-Kawartha
Private speech-language therapy in Peterborough-Kawartha typically costs $150–$250 per session. At 4–8 sessions per month, families pay $600–$2,000/month without funding support.
Community-funded SLP services in Peterborough-Kawartha have wait times of 12–36 months. School-board SLP services are available during the school year but are limited. Private SLP clinics often have shorter waits of 4–12 weeks.
Yes. Speech-language therapy is eligible under OAP funding. Families can use their Childhood Budget ($5,000–$20,000/year) with any CASLPO-registered SLP who is approved by AccessOAP.
SLPs help children develop verbal communication, alternative and augmentative communication (AAC), social language, pragmatics, articulation, and feeding skills. Goals are individualized based on each child's profile.
Yes, but availability is limited. Ontario school boards employ SLPs, but the ratio is often 1 SLP to 500+ students. School SLP services focus on educationally relevant goals. Private therapy can be used to supplement school services.
Disclaimer: This page provides general information only. Costs, wait times, and provider availability change frequently. Always verify directly with providers and AccessOAP. Nothing on this page constitutes medical or legal advice.
About This Article
Written by:Spencer Carroll - Founder & Autism AdvocateParent of autistic child navigating OAP system
Early Start Denver Model (ESDM) delivered to children aged 18–30 months produced significant gains in IQ, adaptive behaviour, and autism severity — some children no longer met diagnostic criteria at follow-up
Cochrane systematic review finds evidence that early intensive behavioural intervention (EIBI) may produce positive effects on adaptive behaviour and communication for young children with ASD (low certainty of evidence)
WHO recommends accessible, community-based early interventions for children with autism — timely evidence-based psychosocial interventions improve communication and social engagement