How does ABA therapy compare with occupational therapy for developmental milestones in autism?
According to the NHS and NICE, support for autistic children is built around helping with communication, daily living, sensory needs and independence, usually through a multidisciplinary team rather than a single branded programme. Within that team, Applied Behaviour Analysis ABA and occupational therapy OT are two approaches that may be used to support developmental milestones, although evidence suggests they work best as part of a broader, individualised plan.
Understanding the concept
Developmental milestones in autism usually refer to areas such as communication, play, fine and gross motor skills, self care and participation in everyday routines. The NHS describes these in terms of practical skills, like getting dressed, using cutlery and managing school routines, and encourages families to ask about support from speech and language therapy and occupational therapy.
ABA is a behaviour based framework that breaks skills into small steps, teaches them systematically and uses reinforcement to build new behaviours and reduce behaviours that get in the way of learning. In early intervention and school age work, ABA programmes may target language, play, self care and daily living skills.
Occupational therapists focus on helping children participate in everyday activities, including motor skills, sensory regulation, self care and play. The National Autistic Society NAS highlights the role of OT in assessing how sensory processing, posture and motor skills affect participation, then using environmental changes, equipment and graded activities to support function. NAS also notes that many autistic children have motor coordination differences that can benefit from targeted OT input.
Neither the NHS nor NICE endorse ABA or OT as branded packages. Instead they describe the principles of support, such as structured teaching, sensory friendly environments and coaching parents in everyday strategies.
Evidence and Impact
Most ABA outcome research looks at packages that combine reinforcement with other behavioural techniques. Reviews summarised by recent systematic work report that ABA‑based programmes can improve language, IQ, adaptive skills, and some social behaviours when started early and delivered intensively.
A recent large meta‑analysis (2025) in SpringerLink concluded that ABA‑based interventions (including early‑intensive and naturalistic approaches) have a large effect for receptive language and moderate effects on adaptive and cognitive skills when compared with control groups.
OT vs ABA direct comparative data
A newly published randomized comparative trial directly compared Ayres Sensory Integration (OT‑ASI) with an ABA‑based programme and a no‑treatment control in autistic children with sensory differences. The intervention was 30 one‑hour sessions. Results showed that both OT‑ASI and ABA produced comparable improvements in individually defined functional goals (Goal Attainment Scaling) and daily living skills.
This suggests that when designed carefully and delivered properly, both sensory‑based OT and structured ABA can support functional milestones rather than evidence strongly favouring one over the other.
Practical support and approaches
In everyday life, the strategies used by ABA practitioners and occupational therapists often overlap with the practical advice on the NHS. Helpful approaches can include:
- Breaking tasks such as dressing or toothbrushing into small, manageable steps
- Using visual sequences or checklists to guide routines
- Providing sensory friendly spaces and tools, drawing on resources like the NHS England sensory friendly resource pack
- Practising skills in natural contexts, for example mealtimes or bath time
NAS encourages professionals to combine approaches where appropriate, noting that behavioural strategies, structured teaching and sensory based OT can all play a role if they are respectful and person centred.
Challenges and considerations
There are several caveats when interpreting the evidence. The Schaaf trial and similar studies are short term and involve specific groups of children, so we cannot assume their findings generalise to all ages or levels of support need. Many OT studies come from single centres and use varied outcome measures, while ABA studies often prioritise cognitive and adaptive scores over motor or sensory outcomes.
NIce surveillance reports have repeatedly highlighted that evidence for early intensive ABA programmes is low to very low in certainty, largely due to non randomised designs and small samples. Occupational therapy is widely accepted within NHS care, but specific sensory integration approaches also have mixed evidence and should be monitored carefully.
Ethically, the NAS stresses that any behavioural support should follow positive behaviour support principles, avoid punitive methods and focus on quality of life. Similarly, OT interventions should be guided by the child’s own goals and comfort, particularly around sensory experiences.
How services can help
In the UK, children’s support is usually coordinated through local NHS community teams and education services. Occupational therapists often sit within community paediatrics or child development centres, as in services like West London Children’s Occupational Therapy. Behavioural input may come from clinical psychology, child and adolescent mental health services or specialist external providers.
NiCE recommends that autism teams provide advice and interventions to promote functional adaptive skills and independence, which can include OT, behavioural coaching and parent training. The NAS offers accessible information on sensory processing and motor skills that families can use to frame discussions with professionals.
Takeaway
Current evidence suggests that both ABA and occupational therapy can support important developmental milestones in autistic children, particularly daily living skills and participation in everyday routines. Early comparative research indicates that, in some settings, sensory based OT and ABA may offer broadly similar functional gains, although studies are small and short term. In line with NHS and NICE, the most reliable approach is to build a personalised, multidisciplinary plan that draws on both behavioural and occupational therapy principles as needed, always guided by the child’s goals, comfort and family context. This article is for general information only and is not a substitute for individual medical or therapy 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.

