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You called your pediatrician. They said your child should see a speech therapist. You called three practices. Two aren't taking new patients. One has a six-month waitlist.
If that sounds familiar, you're not alone. And it's not your fault. The system is genuinely broken right now, and it's getting harder to ignore.
What's Actually Happening
In March 2026, the Children's Hospital Association released a federal policy report called Securing Kids' Futures that confirmed what families across the country already know: children are waiting more than 13 weeks for pediatric specialty appointments, including speech therapy, occupational therapy, and physical therapy. In some cases, the wait is closer to 20 weeks or longer.
The report identified the root cause clearly. Federal funding structures for pediatric care were built around adult medicine. Medicaid, which covers nearly half of all children in the United States, reimburses pediatric providers at rates so low that many therapists simply can't afford to take it. The pipeline for training new pediatric therapists is chronically underfunded. The result is what the report calls a workforce crisis that is affecting children and families right now.
At the same time, federal cuts to Medicaid through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act are squeezing state budgets further. Some states have already cut reimbursement rates for therapy services, which pushes more providers out of public insurance networks. Families who relied on those programs to access care are being left without options.
This is the context for what you're experiencing when you call a practice and hear that they're not accepting new patients.
Why the Waitlist Problem Is Especially Hard for Young Kids
The stakes of waiting are genuinely high for young children, not because parents are anxious, but because development is time-sensitive. The brain is most plastic in the first three to five years of life. Early intervention research consistently shows that children who receive therapy during this window make faster progress and often need less support over time.
A six-month wait when your child is 18 months old is not the same as a six-month wait when your child is 35. That gap matters. It's one of the most frustrating parts of navigating a system that treats pediatric care as an afterthought.
What You Can Do Right Now
The waitlist crisis is real, but it doesn't mean your child has to wait. Here are the most practical options families have right now.
Look for in-home therapy
Most of the therapists who are unavailable work in clinic settings that have fixed capacity. There's a growing network of therapists who practice independently and see children at home. These providers often have more scheduling flexibility, shorter intake timelines, and the added benefit of working with your child in their actual environment, not a clinic waiting room.
In-home therapy is covered by most major insurance plans, including commercial insurance through your employer. If your child's pediatrician gives you a referral for speech, OT, or PT, that referral is valid regardless of where the therapy happens. You can use it with an in-home provider the same way you'd use it at a clinic.
Start Early Intervention if your child is under 3
If your child is younger than 3, Early Intervention is a federally mandated program that provides free or low-cost therapy in your home. Every state has one. EI operates on a separate track from private therapy, so a waitlist at a private practice doesn't affect your EI eligibility.
To start the process, call your state's EI program directly or ask your pediatrician for a referral. An evaluation usually happens within 45 days of your request. If your child qualifies, services can begin shortly after.
EI isn't perfect. Some states have their own capacity constraints, and eligibility thresholds mean some children with mild concerns don't qualify. But for families with children under 3, it's often the fastest path to getting services started.
Don't wait for a diagnosis to start
You don't need a diagnosis to start therapy. A referral from your pediatrician saying your child has concerns with speech, motor development, or sensory processing is enough for an evaluation. The evaluation itself is covered by insurance. Many families wait because they think they need to know exactly what's going on first. But the evaluation is how you find out what's going on, and starting sooner is almost always better.
Get on multiple lists at once
Put your name on waitlists at multiple practices while you pursue other options. Spots open up. People cancel. Being on three lists instead of one meaningfully improves your odds of getting a slot faster than you'd expect.
Ask for a home program while you wait
If you're on a waitlist, ask the practice if they can provide any guidance in the meantime. Some practices will share a basic home activity program while you're waiting for your evaluation. Some pediatricians have access to developmental handouts or online tools. Even small activities that support development in your child's area of concern can make a difference during a wait.
What to Know About Insurance
One of the things that surprises families is how much of this is actually covered. Speech therapy, occupational therapy, and physical therapy are all covered services under most commercial insurance plans. The Affordable Care Act requires marketplace plans to cover habilitative and rehabilitative services, which includes these therapies for children.
Before your first appointment, call the number on the back of your insurance card and ask whether pediatric therapy is covered, whether you need prior authorization, and what your copay or coinsurance will be. Most in-home therapy practices will also verify your benefits for you before you commit to anything.
At Coral Care, we verify insurance for every family before their first session. No surprises at the door.
The Bottom Line
The headlines about pediatric therapy waitlists are real. The workforce shortage is real. The federal policy gaps are real. But none of that means your child has to wait months to get started.
In-home therapy, Early Intervention, and insurance-covered care are available right now. The path is less obvious than calling a clinic and booking an appointment, but it exists.
If you're trying to figure out your next step, we can help. Tell us about your child and we'll match you with a licensed therapist who can see them at home, covered through your insurance, without the six-month wait.


