Therapy Guide for Disabilities in Canada
One of the first questions after a diagnosis: “What therapy is needed, and where is it available?” This guide covers therapy types, evidence, costs, and provincial funding across Canada.
How to Use This Guide
Start with a condition
Find a therapy plan tailored to a specific diagnosis below
Explore therapy types
Learn what each therapy involves, costs, and evidence
Check provincial funding
See what each province covers and how to reduce costs
Therapies by Condition
Select a condition to see a therapy plan with priorities, life stages, and cost estimates.
Autism Spectrum Disorder
10 recommended therapies
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
8 recommended therapies
Learning Disabilities
7 recommended therapies
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
9 recommended therapies
Down Syndrome
10 recommended therapies
Intellectual Disability
9 recommended therapies
Cerebral Palsy
11 recommended therapies
Spinal Cord Injury
9 recommended therapies
Spina Bifida
9 recommended therapies
Vision Loss
8 recommended therapies
Hearing Loss
8 recommended therapies
Multiple Sclerosis
8 recommended therapies
Epilepsy
7 recommended therapies
Muscular Dystrophy
9 recommended therapies
Brain Injury
10 recommended therapies
ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis)
8 recommended therapies
Mental Health Conditions
9 recommended therapies
Rare Conditions
8 recommended therapies
All Therapy Types
Speech & Language
Speech-Language Therapy (SLP)
Works on communication skills including speech sounds, language comprehension, expression, fluency, voice, and social communication.
Augmentative & Alternative Communication (AAC)
Provides alternative ways to communicate for people who are non-speaking or have limited verbal ability, using devices, apps, picture systems, or sign language.
Feeding & Swallowing Therapy
Addresses difficulties with eating, drinking, and swallowing, including food refusal, texture sensitivities, oral motor challenges, and aspiration risk.
Occupational Therapy
Occupational Therapy (OT)
Helps develop independence in daily activities including self-care, play, school tasks, and sensory processing through skill-building and environmental adaptations.
Fine Motor & Handwriting Therapy
Develops hand strength, coordination, and dexterity for writing, cutting, buttoning, and other precise hand movements required for school and daily life.
Activities of Daily Living (ADL) Training
Teaches practical life skills including dressing, grooming, toileting, cooking, cleaning, and community navigation for greater independence.
Physical & Motor
Physiotherapy (Physical Therapy)
Improves movement, strength, balance, and physical function through exercises, manual therapy, and mobility training.
Hydrotherapy (Aquatic Therapy)
Uses the properties of water — buoyancy, resistance, and warmth — to improve movement, strength, and function in a therapeutic pool setting.
Hippotherapy (Therapeutic Horseback Riding)
Uses the movement of a horse to improve posture, balance, coordination, strength, and sensory processing in a therapeutic setting.
Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy (CIMT)
Improves use of an affected arm/hand by constraining the stronger arm, forcing intensive practice with the weaker limb over a concentrated period.
Behavioral & Developmental
Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA)
Uses principles of learning and behaviour to build skills, reduce challenging behaviours, and improve quality of life through structured, evidence-based teaching strategies.
Early Intervention (EI)
Comprehensive developmental support for infants and toddlers (0-5) with developmental delays or disabilities, combining multiple therapy approaches in natural settings.
Pivotal Response Treatment (PRT)
A naturalistic, play-based behavioural approach that targets pivotal areas of development — motivation, self-management, response to multiple cues, and self-initiations.
DIR/Floortime (Developmental, Individual Difference, Relationship-Based)
A relationship-based developmental approach that follows the child's lead through play to build emotional connections, communication, and thinking skills.
Social Skills Training
Teaches social interaction skills including conversation, friendship-building, reading social cues, perspective-taking, and navigating social situations.
Psychological & Mental Health
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
Helps identify and change unhelpful thought patterns and behaviours that contribute to anxiety, depression, and emotional difficulties.
Play Therapy
Uses play as the primary means of communication and expression, helping children process emotions, develop coping skills, and work through difficult experiences.
Family Therapy & Counselling
Supports the whole family in coping with the impact of disability, improving communication, reducing stress, and strengthening family relationships.
Trauma Therapy (EMDR, CPP, TF-CBT)
Specialized therapeutic approaches for processing traumatic experiences including medical trauma, abuse, and adverse experiences common in disability populations.
Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)
Teaches skills for managing intense emotions, improving relationships, tolerating distress, and building a life worth living through mindfulness and practical strategies.
Educational & Academic
Special Education & IEP Support
Provides individualized educational programming, accommodations, and modifications within the school system to support learning for students with disabilities.
Assistive Technology (AT)
Provides tools and devices that help people with disabilities perform tasks they would otherwise have difficulty with, from low-tech aids to high-tech systems.
Vision Therapy
Treats functional vision problems including eye tracking, focusing, eye teaming, and visual processing that can affect reading, learning, and daily activities.
Auditory Training & Processing Therapy
Improves how the brain processes auditory information, addressing difficulties with listening in noise, following directions, and distinguishing speech sounds.
Specialized Tutoring & Academic Support
Provides individualized academic instruction using evidence-based approaches tailored to specific learning needs and disabilities.
Social & Recreational
Social & Recreational Programs
Provides structured opportunities for social participation, recreation, physical activity, and community inclusion for people with disabilities.
Supported Employment & Vocational Training
Helps people with disabilities find and maintain competitive employment through job coaching, workplace adaptations, skill development, and ongoing support.
Life Skills & Independent Living Training
Teaches practical skills for independent or supported living including money management, cooking, transportation, personal safety, and community navigation.
Peer Mentoring & Support
Connects people with disabilities to mentors who share similar experiences, providing guidance, emotional support, role modelling, and practical advice.
Sensory & Integration
Sensory Integration Therapy
Helps the brain process and respond to sensory information more effectively, addressing over- or under-sensitivity to touch, sound, movement, and other sensory input.
Vision Rehabilitation & Low Vision Services
Teaches people with vision loss to use remaining vision effectively and develop skills for independence using adaptive techniques and technology.
Orientation & Mobility Training (O&M)
Teaches people with vision loss to travel safely and independently using white canes, guide dogs, environmental awareness, and wayfinding strategies.
Complementary & Supportive
Music Therapy
Uses music-based interventions — singing, playing instruments, rhythm, and songwriting — to address communication, motor, cognitive, emotional, and social goals.
Art Therapy
Uses creative expression — drawing, painting, sculpture, and other art forms — as a therapeutic medium for processing emotions, building skills, and improving wellbeing.
Animal-Assisted Therapy (AAT)
Incorporates trained therapy animals into treatment sessions to improve emotional, social, cognitive, and physical functioning.
Adaptive Yoga & Mindfulness
Modified yoga practices and mindfulness techniques adapted for people with disabilities to improve flexibility, strength, body awareness, emotional regulation, and mental wellbeing.
Understanding Therapy Costs in Canada
Therapy costs vary widely across Canada — from free through the public system to $200+ per private session. Most families use a combination of provincial funding, private insurance, and out-of-pocket payment.
Key tip: Apply for the Disability Tax Credit as soon as possible. It unlocks the Child Disability Benefit ($3,411/year) and lets you claim all therapy expenses on your Medical Expense Tax Credit.
Each therapy page includes a detailed cost table and provincial funding breakdown. See the condition therapy plans for full annual cost estimates.
Know of a service we should list?
This directory grows because people in the community help us find what we've missed. Let us know about organizations, programs, or services across Canada.