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Texas Education Freedom Account funds can be used to pay for speech-language pathology services from a licensed SLP. This is explicitly covered under Texas Education Code Section 29.3522, which includes fees for educational therapies provided by licensed professionals. SLPs who hold valid Texas state licensure or the Certificate of Clinical Competence in Speech-Language Pathology (CCC-SLP) from ASHA are eligible to register as TEFA providers.
Coral Care is an approved TEFA provider with licensed SLPs serving Texas families through in-home sessions. We accept BCBS Texas, Baylor Scott & White, and Curative — families can combine insurance and TEFA funds to cover their care. Learn more and get started before July 1.
How Much TEFA Funding Is Available for Speech Therapy?
- Up to $30,000 per year for children with a qualifying IEP on file with TEA and household income at or below 500% of the Federal Poverty Level
- $10,474 per year for private school students without a qualifying disability designation
- $2,000 per year for homeschool families
To put those numbers in context: weekly speech therapy sessions in Texas typically run $100–$180 per session. At that rate, even the standard $10,474 tier covers 58–104 sessions — close to two years of once-weekly therapy. The $30,000 tier can support intensive, multi-session-per-week plans for children with apraxia, severe language delays, or complex communication profiles. Unused funds roll over year to year.
Does My Child Need an IEP?
No. An IEP determines how much funding you receive, not whether your child can participate. Children without an IEP qualify for the standard tier, which can still cover meaningful, consistent speech therapy. No referral, diagnosis, or IEP is required to get started with Coral Care. Read more about using TEFA without an IEP →
What Speech and Language Challenges Does TEFA-Funded SLP Cover?
Late Talking and Language Delays
Children who are not meeting expected language milestones — not saying words by 12 months, not combining words by 24 months, or having significantly fewer words than typical peers — benefit most from early, intensive SLP intervention. Language development is time-sensitive: the window between ages 1 and 3 is when the brain is most receptive to language learning. Starting TEFA-funded speech therapy before July 1 means your child does not lose that time.
Articulation and Phonological Disorders
Children who struggle to produce specific sounds clearly — substituting, omitting, or distorting sounds in ways that make them difficult to understand — work with SLPs on articulation and phonological awareness. Many families seek this support when a child's speech is getting harder for unfamiliar adults to follow, or when kindergarten readiness becomes a concern.
Childhood Apraxia of Speech
CAS is a motor speech disorder in which the brain has difficulty coordinating the movements needed for speech. It requires intensive, highly structured, frequent intervention from an SLP with specific apraxia training. Children with CAS often benefit from two or more sessions per week, making the $30,000 TEFA tier particularly meaningful for these families.
Stuttering and Fluency Disorders
Stuttering affects roughly 5% of children at some point in development. SLPs use evidence-based approaches to support fluency, reduce the negative impact of stuttering, and build confidence. Early treatment during preschool years has the best outcomes for natural recovery.
Receptive and Expressive Language
Some children understand language well but struggle to express themselves. Others have difficulty understanding what is said to them. Both are common targets for speech therapy and respond well to structured, consistent intervention.
Social Communication and Pragmatic Language
Children with autism spectrum disorder, social communication disorder, or ADHD often benefit from targeted support around the unwritten rules of conversation: turn-taking, staying on topic, reading social cues, and understanding figurative language. SLPs who specialize in this area use naturalistic, play-based approaches that work especially well in the home environment.
Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC)
For nonverbal or minimally verbal children, SLPs implement and teach AAC systems — including picture exchange (PECS), speech-generating devices, and robust vocabulary systems — to give children a reliable, functional means of communication. AAC therapy benefits enormously from in-home delivery, where the child uses the system in their natural contexts.
Feeding and Swallowing
SLPs with feeding specialties address oral motor dysfunction, food texture aversions, swallowing difficulty, and the mealtime anxiety that affects many children with developmental differences. Feeding therapy is often co-treated with OT when sensory processing is also a factor. TEFA covers this as an educational therapy when provided by a licensed SLP.
Literacy and Language-Based Learning Disabilities
Reading and writing are language-based skills. SLPs support children with dyslexia, language processing disorders, and related challenges that affect academic performance. Phonological awareness — understanding the sound structure of language — is a direct SLP target and a critical foundation for reading.
Why In-Home Speech Therapy Works
Where therapy happens matters. Children who feel regulated in their own space often engage more productively from the very first minute of a session. The SLP can observe how your child communicates in their actual environment — at the table, during play, in the spaces and routines that make up daily life. Parents are in the session, not the waiting room, learning the strategies they need to carry over the other 167 hours a week when the therapist isn't there. Skills practiced in context transfer immediately — there is no generalization gap between clinic and home.
How Payment Works: TEFA, Insurance, and Self-Pay
Coral Care accepts BCBS Texas, Baylor Scott & White, and Curative alongside TEFA funds. Many families use insurance as the primary payer and TEFA to cover remaining costs, co-pays, or sessions beyond insurance limits. Starting July 1, 2026, families with TEFA awards can direct funds to Coral Care through the Odyssey portal. Families who start before July 1 can transition their payment method to TEFA on that date without interrupting the therapist relationship.
Use code TEXASFAMILIES for $100 off your first evaluation with Coral Care.
What If the TEFA Application Window Has Closed?
The 2026–27 window closed March 31, 2026. If you applied, award notifications go out in April. If you missed this cycle, the next window opens in early 2027. Either way, your child can start speech therapy with Coral Care right now. Early intervention in speech and language is one of the most time-sensitive areas of pediatric development — the research consistently shows that earlier support produces better long-term outcomes. The TEFA calendar is not a reason to wait.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common signs vary by age. Under 12 months: not babbling, not responding to their name, limited eye contact. By 18 months: fewer than 10 words, not pointing to show you things. By 24 months: fewer than 50 words, not combining two words, speech that's hard for family members to understand. School age: difficulty following multi-step directions, problems with reading, being hard to understand for unfamiliar adults, or avoiding conversation. If you have a concern at any age, an evaluation is the right next step — you do not need a referral with Coral Care.
Yes. Coral Care accepts BCBS Texas, Baylor Scott & White, and Curative alongside TEFA. Insurance typically functions as the primary payer, and TEFA funds can be used to cover the remainder — including co-pays, sessions beyond insurance limits, or services your insurance plan doesn't cover. Many families find that combining both sources allows for higher frequency and longer duration of therapy than either alone would support.
CAS is a motor speech disorder in which the brain has difficulty planning and coordinating the precise movements needed to produce speech sounds. Unlike an articulation disorder where a child consistently mispronounces sounds, CAS involves inconsistent errors and difficulty with voluntary movement for speech. CAS requires intensive, highly structured, frequent intervention — typically two to three sessions per week — from an SLP with specific CAS training. The $30,000 TEFA tier is particularly meaningful for these families, as the cost of intensive apraxia treatment can be significant.
Yes. Speech-language pathology for children with autism — including social communication, pragmatic language, AAC implementation, and articulation — is a covered TEFA educational therapy. Children with autism who have a qualifying IEP on file with TEA may qualify for up to $30,000 per year, which can support the intensive, frequent sessions that autistic children often benefit from most. No IEP is required to get started with Coral Care.
TEFA eligibility begins at age 3. Private speech therapy with Coral Care is available starting at 12 months, and families can begin before TEFA funds open using insurance or self-pay. Early intervention in speech and language development — particularly during the toddler years — has the strongest evidence for long-term outcomes. Starting therapy now and transitioning payment to TEFA on July 1 is the approach we recommend for most families.
Yes, when provided by a licensed SLP. Feeding therapy addressing oral motor dysfunction, food texture aversions, swallowing difficulty, and mealtime anxiety qualifies as an educational therapy under TEFA. For children with both sensory and oral motor components to their feeding challenges, OT and SLP may work together — both are covered under TEFA when delivered by licensed providers.



