How are home practice expectations different in ABA therapy versus play therapy for autism?Â
According to the NHS, autism is a lifelong difference and families usually provide most of the day to day support at home. NICE highlights the importance of parent and carer involvement in psychosocial interventions but does not prescribe a specific ABA or play therapy homework plan.
Understanding the concept
In many ABA based programmes, home practice means carrying out short, structured exercises that follow a clear protocol. Parents are often asked to set up specific situations, prompt a new skill such as functional communication and then provide planned rewards, sometimes while recording simple data.
Play based models such as DIR Floortime are also used with autistic children, but home practice looks quite different. Instead of scripted tasks, parents are encouraged to spend extended time in child led play, following the child’s interests, building back and forth interaction and focusing on emotional connection. This approach fits with messages from the NHS, NICE, the National Autistic Society (NAS) and Newcastle Hospitals about non punitive, autism affirming support.
Evidence and impact
Research on ABA style home practice suggests that relatively brief, protocol driven sessions can make a real difference when parents are well supported. In one study of telehealth Functional Communication Training, parents practised for around 10 to 15 minutes per day at home, in addition to coached sessions, and children’s behaviours that challenge reduced by more than 90 percent on average when parents followed the plan accurately.
For play based DIR Floortime approaches, home practice typically involves much more time but in a more natural form. An observational study of a Floortime programme found that parents spent about two hours per day using Floortime strategies in play, and higher quality engagement and more time spent in this kind of interaction were linked with better developmental outcomes for children.
Another systematic review of DIR/Floortime for children with autism found evidence of improved emotional functioning, communication, daily-living skills and stronger parent–child interaction.
Practical support and approaches
In ABA home practice, parents are often given written instructions and stepwise procedures, for example how to set up a situation, what prompts to use and when to provide reinforcement. Behaviour analysts may coach families in person or via telehealth and check progress using direct observation, video review and simple data sheets.
In play based or DIR style home practice, parents are more likely to be coached through video feedback and discussions about interaction quality. Professionals help parents notice small signals, follow the child’s lead, create enjoyable shared moments and gently stretch communication. There may be targets such as increasing circles of communication, but the tone remains playful and relational rather than task like. This aligns with guidance from the NHS, NICE, NAS and Newcastle Hospitals that support should respect autistic communication and sensory needs.
Challenges and considerations
Short, structured ABA homework blocks can be easier to fit into busy routines but may feel rigid or stressful if goals focus too much on appearing less autistic. Longer play based expectations such as two to three hours per day of Floortime can be difficult to sustain practically, especially for carers managing work, siblings and other demands.
The NHS, NICE, NAS and Newcastle Hospitals all stress that behaviour is often linked to anxiety, sensory overload and communication difficulties, and they warn against approaches that are punitive or that push masking. Families may therefore want to check whether any home practice plan focuses on wellbeing, communication and emotional safety rather than simply on stopping behaviours that others find difficult.
How services can help
In the UK, most structured support is coordinated through NHS and multi disciplinary teams that follow NICE guidance on parent training and psychosocial interventions. Clinicians should explain clearly what is expected at home, how long practice is likely to take, and how it fits with autism affirming principles described by NHS, NICE, NAS and Newcastle Hospitals.
Takeaway
ABA home practice usually involves shorter, more scripted daily tasks, while play based approaches like Floortime expect longer periods of child led interaction that focus on emotional connection and development. In line with NHS and NICE guidance, the key is that any home programme is realistic for the family, non punitive and centred on the autistic person’s communication, comfort and goals. This article is for general information only and is not a substitute for personalised medical or mental health advice.
If you or someone you support would benefit from early identification or structured autism guidance, visit Autism Detect, a UK-based platform offering professional assessment tools and evidence-informed support for autistic individuals and families.

