What virtual reality tools are used in autism vocational training?
Virtual reality (VR) is emerging as a valuable support tool in autism vocational training, helping autistic people prepare for job interviews and workplace environments in realistic but low-pressure settings. According to recent NIHR- and university-led projects in the UK, immersive VR experiences can reduce anxiety and build confidence around work-related social situations.
How VR supports work-readiness skills
Research from the University of Plymouth and University of Birmingham’s BRIDGING and BReaDING projects (2023–2025) shows how VR environments can simulate interviews and workplace interactions, allowing users to practise communication, manage stress, and receive feedback safely.
A 2025 Frontiers in Virtual Reality study highlighted UK and EU tools such as WorkplaceVR and ViRCAS, which create interactive office or teamwork scenarios. Participants reported improved self-efficacy, collaboration, and anxiety management, particularly when the software was co-designed with autistic adults.
A 2025 systematic review in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders confirmed these benefits, noting consistent gains in confidence and social participation, though the evidence remains early-stage.
Key platforms and approaches
Most current VR tools are still in research or pilot phases rather than NHS deployment. UK-developed systems like WorkplaceVR and ViRCAS focus on personalised, sensory-aware training that lets users practise skills repeatedly in realistic yet controllable settings. Some programmes integrate cognitive behavioural principles (VR-CBT) to help users understand and adapt to social demands at work.
Importantly, NICE guidance (NG213, 2022) recognises technology-assisted employability training as “promising but developing.” No specific VR platform is currently recommended, but ongoing NIHR and university research is building the evidence base needed for broader adoption.
The outlook for VR in autism training
Overall, VR-based vocational tools show meaningful potential to improve workplace readiness and confidence for autistic people. Studies (Frontiers in Virtual Reality, 2025) report reduced interview anxiety and stronger social communication after training, though larger, long-term UK trials are still needed to confirm effectiveness.
As evidence grows, immersive tools like WorkplaceVR and ViRCAS could play a supportive role in helping autistic adults bridge the gap between training and employment, alongside traditional occupational and behavioural support programmes.
Takeaway
Virtual reality isn’t yet part of routine NHS autism employability support, but early UK-led studies show encouraging results. Co-designed, sensory-informed VR environments can safely help autistic adults practise key workplace and interview skills, with the potential to make vocational training more inclusive and confidence-building in the years ahead.

