ABA Therapy Insurance Coverage in Georgia
Understand how ABA therapy is covered in your state — including Medicaid, private insurance, and the autism insurance mandate.
Updated Jun 8, 2026
The three coverage paths in Georgia
Most families in Georgia get ABA therapy covered one of three ways: state Medicaid (including waiver programs), a state-regulated private plan subject to the autism insurance mandate, or a self-funded employer plan regulated by federal ERISA rules. Coverage rules differ depending on which one you have.
Medicaid in Georgia
For children under 21, Georgia Medicaid covers medically necessary ABA through the federal EPSDT benefit (Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment). You generally need an autism spectrum disorder diagnosis from a qualified provider and a written treatment plan. Georgia may also offer disability-specific waivers (sometimes called Katie Beckett or TEFRA-style waivers) that allow children with significant needs to qualify regardless of household income.
Private insurance and the autism mandate
All 50 states have passed some form of autism insurance mandate, but the details — age caps, dollar limits, and which plans are covered — vary. The mandate applies to state-regulated, fully insured plans purchased in Georgia. Self-funded employer plans (common at large companies) follow federal law instead and are not bound by Georgia's mandate, though many cover ABA voluntarily.
Ask HR whether your plan is fully insured or self-funded. The answer determines which appeal rights and external review options you have.
Real wait times by insurance in Georgia
Based on parent-reported data. Wait times are how long families waited from joining a provider's waitlist to starting services — they are not a measure of coverage itself.
If you're denied coverage in Georgia
- Request the denial in writing, including the medical necessity reason and the plan language cited.
- File an internal appeal with your insurer. There are deadlines — usually 180 days.
- If denied again, request an independent external review through the Georgia Department of Insurance for state-regulated plans, or follow ERISA rules for self-funded plans.
- Document everything. Keep names, dates, and reference numbers for every call.
See real wait times in Georgia
Coverage is one half of the picture. The other is how long providers actually take to start services after authorization.
Frequently asked questions
Is ABA therapy covered by insurance in Georgia?+
In Georgia, ABA therapy is typically covered by Medicaid for children under 21 through the EPSDT benefit when medically necessary. Most state-regulated private health plans are also required to cover ABA under autism insurance mandates. Coverage details, prior-authorization requirements, and benefit limits vary by plan.
Does Medicaid cover ABA therapy in Georgia?+
Georgia Medicaid generally covers medically necessary ABA therapy for children under 21 as part of the federally required EPSDT (Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment) benefit. A formal autism diagnosis and treatment plan from a qualified provider are usually required.
What if my insurance denies ABA therapy in Georgia?+
You have the right to appeal. Request a written denial, file an internal appeal with your insurer, and if denied again request an independent external review through the Georgia insurance department. Self-funded employer plans are regulated federally rather than by Georgia mandates.
How long is the ABA waitlist in Georgia?+
Based on 2 parent-reported wait times in Georgia, the median wait from joining a waitlist to starting services is 18 weeks (range 14–22 weeks). Wait times vary by provider, insurance, and region.
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