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end|thewaitontario

End The Wait Ontario is a parent-led source for Ontario Autism Program (OAP) statistics and advocacy. Serving families, researchers, and journalists across Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton, London, and all regions of Ontario.

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end|thewaitontario

End The Wait Ontario is a parent-led source for Ontario Autism Program (OAP) statistics and advocacy. Serving families, researchers, and journalists across Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton, London, and all regions of Ontario.

Getting Started

  • Browse All Pages
  • Search
  • Diagnosis Guide
  • While You Wait
  • Facts (Citation Ready)

Common Questions

  • All Questions
  • How Long Is the Wait?
  • What Is the OAP?
  • How Many Are Waiting?
  • Options While Waiting
  • Funding Amounts

Tools

  • Parent Navigator
  • Next Steps Tool
  • Wait Estimator
  • Funding Estimator
  • Therapy Budget
  • Waitlist Tracker

Providers

  • Provider Directory
  • Choosing a Provider
  • Submit a Provider

Funding & Support

  • OAP Overview
  • Funding Guide
  • Eligibility
  • How to Register
  • DTC & RDSP

Your Region

  • Toronto
  • Ottawa
  • Hamilton
  • London
  • Mississauga
  • All Regions

Evidence & Data

  • Evidence Library
  • Data Hub
  • Waitlist Data
  • Cost Calculator
  • Data Stories
  • Where Does the Money Go?

Take Action

  • Action Hub
  • Write Your MPP
  • File Complaint
  • Advocacy Toolkit

About

  • Our Story
  • Transparency
  • Media References
  • Founder
  • Press
  • Contact
end|thewaitontario

End The Wait Ontario is a parent-led source for Ontario Autism Program (OAP) statistics and advocacy. Serving families, researchers, and journalists across Toronto, Ottawa, Hamilton, London, and all regions of Ontario.

  • Browse All Pages
  • Search
  • Diagnosis Guide
  • While You Wait
  • Facts (Citation Ready)
  • All Questions
  • How Long Is the Wait?
  • What Is the OAP?
  • How Many Are Waiting?
  • Options While Waiting
  • Funding Amounts
  • Parent Navigator
  • Next Steps Tool
  • Wait Estimator
  • Funding Estimator
  • Therapy Budget
  • Waitlist Tracker
  • Provider Directory
  • Choosing a Provider
  • Submit a Provider
  • OAP Overview
  • Funding Guide
  • Eligibility
  • How to Register
  • DTC & RDSP
  • Toronto
  • Ottawa
  • Hamilton
  • London
  • Mississauga
  • All Regions
  • Evidence Library
  • Data Hub
  • Waitlist Data
  • Cost Calculator
  • Data Stories
  • Where Does the Money Go?
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  • File Complaint
  • Advocacy Toolkit
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  • Transparency
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Legal Disclaimer: This website presents advocacy arguments based on publicly available data and legal frameworks. While we strive for accuracy, this content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or medical advice. Nothing on this website should be construed as a guarantee of any specific legal outcome.

Independence: End The Wait Ontario is a parent-led advocacy group. We are not affiliated with the Ontario government, the Ontario Autism Coalition, Autism Ontario, or the World Health Organization. We cite FOI data obtained by the Ontario Autism Coalition as a matter of public record. This does not constitute affiliation. References to these organizations are for informational purposes; no endorsement is implied.

Non-partisan policy advocacy: We advocate on policy outcomes for children and families and do not endorse any political party or candidate.

Statistics are current as of the dates cited and may change. For specific legal guidance, consult a licensed attorney. For medical advice, consult qualified healthcare professionals. Last updated: 2026.

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Speak softly and carry a big stick. — Theodore Roosevelt

Carroll v. Ontario · HRTO 2025-62264-I · our own pending, unadjudicated application

© 2026 End The Wait Ontario. All rights reserved. · Parent-led advocacy · Not a government agency

What percentage of registered children receive autism services in Ontario?

Of **89,799 children registered** in the Ontario Autism Program (March 4, 2026), only **23%** are receiving core clinical services funding. [FOI] The vast majority — approximately **77%** — remain on the waitlist during their most critical developmental years.

Source: OAC FOI Mar 2026

How long do families wait for Ontario autism services?

Ontario autism wait times for core clinical services now exceed **5+ years** (2026). Most families currently receiving invitations registered in 2020 or earlier. This delay far exceeds the sensitive early intervention window recommended by developmental specialists. [FAO]

Source: OAC FOI Mar 2026, FAO Report 2024

Is the Ontario Autism Program underfunded?

Yes. The Financial Accountability Office (FAO) determined that **$1.35 billion annually** is needed to serve all registered children at 2018-19 service levels. The 2026-27 Ontario Budget allocated **$965 million**, leaving an estimated **$385M+ annual shortfall**. [FAO, Ontario Budget 2026] This gap is the primary driver of the perpetual 89,799+ child waitlist.

Source: Financial Accountability Office of Ontario [FAO]

A warm, sunlit pediatric therapy room

Therapy Decision Guide

Music Therapy for Autism in Ontario

Music therapy is a clinical discipline where certified music therapists use musical experiences — singing, playing instruments, improvisation, songwriting, and listening — to address communication, social, emotional, cognitive, and motor goals for autistic individuals. A 2014 Cochrane Review by Geretsegger et al. found moderate evidence that music therapy improves social interaction, verbal communication, initiating behaviour, and social-emotional reciprocity in autistic children compared to placebo or standard care.

This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical guidance specific to your situation.

  1. Home
  2. ›Therapy
  3. ›Music Therapy for Autism in Ontario — Evidence, Approaches & OAP Coverage
Emerging EvidenceOAP Coverage Varies

Music Therapy, Quick Summary

  • Music Therapy for Autism typically costs $80–$140/hour (individual); $40–$80/session (group); $800–$1,500 per term in Ontario.
  • Recommended frequency: 1–2 sessions per week, 30–60 minutes each.
  • Best suited for ages All ages — from infants through adults.
  • OAP coverage varies for this therapy, check with your service coordinator.
  • Music therapy is generally not covered under OAP core clinical services because music therapists (MTAs) are not regulated health professionals in Ontario. However, if a regulated professional (e.g., SLP, OT) uses music-based strategies within their scope, those sessions are OAP-eligible. Some families use interim one-time funding for music therapy at their discretion.

At a glance

Evidence level
Emerging Evidence
OAP funding
Coverage varies, confirm with your service coordinator
Typical cost
$80–$140/hour (individual); $40–$80/session (group); $800–$1,500 per term
Typical frequency
1–2 sessions per week, 30–60 minutes each
Target age range
All ages — from infants through adults

OAP Coverage Note

Music therapy is generally not covered under OAP core clinical services because music therapists (MTAs) are not regulated health professionals in Ontario. However, if a regulated professional (e.g., SLP, OT) uses music-based strategies within their scope, those sessions are OAP-eligible. Some families use interim one-time funding for music therapy at their discretion.

Who provides this therapy

Ask any prospective provider which of these credentials they hold, and confirm the credential with the relevant regulatory college before starting.

Certified Music Therapists (MTA — Music Therapist Accredited)Neurologic Music Therapists (NMT)Some speech-language pathologists with music therapy training

What sessions involve

  1. 1

    How Music Therapy Works for Autism

    Music therapy for autism leverages the often-observed affinity that autistic individuals have for music and musical structure. Music engages multiple brain regions simultaneously — auditory, motor, emotional, and social processing areas — creating a multisensory learning environment. Structured musical activities provide predictable patterns that can support regulation while embedded social demands (turn-taking, joint attention, shared timing) create natural opportunities for social skill development.

    Approaches include Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy (creative, improvisational), Neurologic Music Therapy (NMT, which uses standardized techniques based on neuroscience), and developmental music therapy approaches. A session might involve turn-taking on instruments, finishing familiar song phrases (promoting vocalizations), composing songs about feelings (emotional literacy), or rhythmic activities that support motor planning and coordination.

    In Ontario, certified music therapists (MTA credential through the Canadian Association of Music Therapists) work in private practice, children's treatment centres, hospitals, and school settings. The MTA credential requires a bachelor's degree in music therapy, 1000 hours of clinical internship, and a certification exam. While not a regulated health profession in Ontario, it is a recognized professional credential with established standards of practice.

  2. 2

    Research Evidence

    The 2014 Cochrane Review by Geretsegger, Elefant, Mössler, and Gold analyzed 10 studies (165 participants) and concluded that music therapy may help autistic children improve social interaction, verbal and non-verbal communication, initiating behaviour, and social-emotional reciprocity. The quality of evidence was rated moderate for several outcomes. An updated Cochrane Review (Geretsegger et al., 2022) included additional studies and reinforced these findings.

    The TIME-A trial (Bieleninik et al., 2017), a large multisite RCT published in JAMA, found that improvisational music therapy did not show significant differences from enhanced standard care on the primary outcome (ADOS symptom severity) at five months. However, there were some positive secondary outcomes in parent-reported social responsiveness. This highlights the importance of distinguishing between different music therapy approaches and outcome measures when evaluating evidence.

Before you commit

Questions worth asking any provider

  • What certification or regulatory college licenses you to deliver this therapy, and can I verify it?
  • How will you measure progress, and how often will you share results with our family?
  • What does a typical session look like, and can we observe one before committing?
  • How does this approach get adjusted if it is not working after a few months?
  • What happens to our data, our schedule, and our funding if you leave or the practice closes?

Signs to slow down

  • The provider cannot name a regulatory college or certifying body, or asks you not to check it.
  • You are asked to sign a long-term contract before seeing a session or meeting the therapist.
  • Progress is described only in general terms, with no way to see or measure it over time.
  • The provider discourages you from getting a second opinion or asking about other approaches.
  • Fees, cancellation terms, or what OAP funding covers are unclear or change after you sign up.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is music therapy covered by OAP?
Music therapy is generally not covered under OAP core clinical services because music therapists are not regulated health professionals in Ontario. However, families can use interim one-time funding at their discretion for music therapy. If a regulated professional (SLP, OT) uses music-based strategies within their clinical sessions, those sessions remain OAP-eligible.
Is there evidence that music therapy helps autistic children?
Yes, there is emerging-to-moderate evidence. A Cochrane Review (Geretsegger et al., 2014, updated 2022) found that music therapy may improve social interaction, communication, and social-emotional reciprocity in autistic children. However, the large TIME-A trial (2017) showed mixed results. The evidence is strongest for social and communication outcomes within structured music therapy programs.
How do I find a qualified music therapist in Ontario?
Search the Canadian Association of Music Therapists (CAMT) directory at musictherapy.ca for accredited music therapists (MTA) in your area. Look for therapists with experience working with autistic individuals. Children's treatment centres in Ontario may also offer music therapy programs. Verify the MTA credential, which requires specialized training and supervised clinical hours.

Sources

1

Geretsegger et al. (2014)

Music therapy for people with autism spectrum disorder. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, (6), CD004381.

2

Bieleninik et al. (2017)

Effects of improvisational music therapy vs enhanced standard care on symptom severity among children with autism spectrum disorder: The TIME-A randomized clinical trial. JAMA, 318(6), 525-535.

Related Therapies

Ayres Sensory Integration Therapy

Limited Evidence

Social Skills Group Therapy

Moderate Evidence

Structured Play Therapy for Autism

Moderate Evidence

Verified References & Sources

Updated: Mar 2026

Government Reports & Data

  • [2023]
    Exclusion of Students With Disabilities — 2023 SurveyVerified FAO Data
    Community Living Ontario • Report • 2023-10-01
    View
  • [2024]
    Inclusion Without Proper Support Is AbandonmentVerified FAO Data
    Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario • Report • 2024-06-01
    View
  • [2020]
    Autism ServicesVerified FAO Data
    Financial Accountability Office of Ontario (FAO) • Report • 2020-07-21
    View
  • [2024]
    Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services: Spending Plan ReviewVerified FAO Data
    Financial Accountability Office of Ontario (FAO) • Report • 2024-06-05
    View
  • [2026]
    MCCSS bi-weekly OAP Core Clinical Services progress reports (FOI release CSS2026-0749)Verified FAO Data
    Ministry of Children, Community and Social Services (Ontario) • Report • 2026-03-04
    View

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About This Article

Written by Spencer Carroll

Founder & Autism Advocate

Parent of autistic child navigating OAP system

Evidence on this page

The source chain stays visible.

Key claims are paired with their source, evidence tier, and verification date so readers can inspect the public record directly.

Facts5
Sources5

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

Government / peer-reviewedDawson G, Rogers S, Munson J, et al. (2010)Verified 2010-01-01

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)

Government / peer-reviewedReichow B, Hume K, Barton EE, Boyd BA (2018)Verified 2018-05-09

WHO recommends accessible, community-based early interventions for children with autism — timely evidence-based psychosocial interventions improve communication and social engagement

Government / peer-reviewedWorld Health Organization (2023)Verified 2023-11-15

89,799

children are registered in the Ontario Autism Program

Secondary sourceMCCSS FOI · Mar 2026Verified 2026-06-13

23%

Only 20,633 children have active funding agreements — less than one in four

Secondary sourceMCCSS FOI · Mar 2026Verified 2026-06-13
Last system verification: 2026-06-13. Next scheduled update: 2026-09-10.
View methodologyBrowse every source