Music Therapy
Uses music-based interventions — singing, playing instruments, rhythm, and songwriting — to address communication, motor, cognitive, emotional, and social goals.
What Is Music Therapy?
Music therapy is the clinical and evidence-based use of music by a credentialed professional (Music Therapist Accredited — MTA in Canada) to address individualized goals. It is not music lessons or passive listening to music, though it often looks like joyful music-making.
Music is uniquely powerful because it engages multiple brain areas simultaneously — motor, language, emotional, memory, and social. For people with disabilities, music can bypass damaged pathways and access abilities that other modalities cannot reach.
Music therapy interventions include singing to develop speech and language, playing instruments to improve motor function, rhythm-based activities to support movement and gait, improvisation for emotional expression, and songwriting for processing experiences.
Who Benefits from Music Therapy?
autism
Music therapy improves social engagement, joint attention, communication, and emotional regulation. Many autistic individuals have a strong affinity for music that makes therapy highly motivating.
cerebral palsy
Rhythmic auditory stimulation (RAS) improves gait parameters. Instrument play develops fine and gross motor skills in a motivating context.
brain injury
Neurologic Music Therapy (NMT) addresses speech, motor, and cognitive rehabilitation. Music can access language pathways even when speech areas are damaged (melodic intonation therapy).
mental health
Music therapy provides a non-verbal means of emotional expression, reduces anxiety and depression, and builds social connections through group music-making.
What to Expect in a Session
First Session
A music therapy assessment evaluates responses to music, musical preferences, functional abilities, and identifies how music can address the individual's specific goals.
Ongoing Sessions
Sessions involve active music-making — singing, playing instruments, moving to music, composing — tailored to address specific therapeutic goals. The therapist adapts in real-time to the participant's responses.
Your Child's Role
Your child or the adult engages in music activities at their own level. No musical ability is required. The therapist creates accessible music experiences that target therapeutic goals.
Caregiver's Role
Parents may observe or participate in sessions. The music therapist can teach musical activities to use at home for continued engagement and skill-building.
When to Start
Early Childhood (0-5)
Music therapy can begin in infancy. Young children respond naturally to music, making it an engaging medium for early intervention and developmental support.
School Age (6-17)
Music therapy can address academic, social, and emotional goals alongside other therapies. Group music therapy is particularly effective for social skill development.
Adults (18+)
Adults benefit from music therapy for rehabilitation, mental health, pain management, and maintaining cognitive function in neurodegenerative conditions.
General guidance: Music therapy is an excellent complement to traditional therapies. The unique properties of music allow therapeutic work to happen in a context that feels joyful and motivating rather than clinical.
| Item | Range | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Assessment | $100–$200 | Music therapy intake and assessment |
| Per Session | $80–$150 | 30-60 minutes |
| Insurance | Limited private insurance coverage; some plans cover it under mental health or rehabilitation benefits | |
| Tax Credit | Eligible for METC when provided by a certified music therapist (MTA) and prescribed by a physician | |
Money-Saving Tips
- Group music therapy sessions are typically 40-60% less expensive than individual sessions
- Some children's hospitals and rehabilitation centres include music therapy at no additional cost
- University music therapy training programs offer supervised sessions at reduced rates
| Province | Status | Program | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| BC | Not Funded | — | Not covered by MSP; autism funding may be applied if the therapy addresses functional goals in the child's plan. |
| AB | Not Funded | — | Not a standard funded service; FSCD may cover in rare cases if prescribed as part of an interdisciplinary treatment plan. |
| SK | No data | — | — |
| MB | Not Funded | — | Not publicly funded; some programs available through community organizations like the Canadian Music Therapy Trust Fund. |
| ON | Not Funded | — | Not covered by OHIP; some children's treatment centres and hospitals include music therapy in their programs; otherwise private-pay. |
| QC | Not Funded | — | Not covered by the public system; some hospital programs and community organizations offer music therapy at low or no cost. |
| NB | No data | — | — |
| NS | No data | — | — |
| PE | No data | — | — |
| NL | No data | — | — |
| NT | No data | — | — |
| NU | No data | — | — |
| YT | No data | — | — |
Evidence & Research
Music therapy has moderate evidence across multiple disability populations. Cochrane reviews support music therapy for autism (social interaction, communication) and for mental health conditions. Neurologic Music Therapy (NMT) has growing evidence for stroke and brain injury rehabilitation.
Red Flags to Watch For
Be cautious of any provider who:
- The provider is not a credentialed Music Therapist Accredited (MTA) — music teachers and musicians are not music therapists
- Sessions have no therapeutic goals and are essentially music lessons or passive listening
- The therapist does not individualize interventions based on assessment and goal-setting
- The provider makes claims about curing conditions through music
- There is no progress measurement or reporting
How to Find a Provider
- 1
Search the Canadian Association for Music Therapy (CAMT) directory at musictherapy.ca
- 2
Ask your children's treatment centre if they offer music therapy
- 3
Contact your children's hospital — many have music therapy programs
- 4
Look for community-based music therapy clinics in your area
- 5
Ask music therapy training programs at Canadian universities about supervised clinical services
Conditions That Use Music Therapy
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