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ABA Therapy in Savannah, Georgia
ABA Journey Savannah, Georgia
Email: [email protected]
Serving families across Chatham County — including Midtown, Ardsley Park, the Southside, Wilmington Island, Isle of Hope, and Pooler — and neighboring areas in Bryan and Effingham Counties. Our clinicians stay current with Georgia’s ABA practice guidelines and maintain active collaboration with Savannah-Chatham County Public School System teachers and specialists to keep therapy consistent across home and classroom settings.
Personalized ABA Therapy for Every Family
What We Offer in Savannah, Georgia
ABA Journey provides individualized ABA therapy for children with autism in Savannah, Georgia, with a focus on communication development, social skills, and the everyday routines families depend on. Each therapy plan is tailored through a comprehensive assessment and delivered across the settings that matter most — at home in neighborhoods like Kensington Park or Windsor Forest, during school coordination with Savannah-Chatham County Public Schools, and in community environments around the city. Our clinicians work directly with caregivers at every stage, ensuring that progress at home and progress in school reinforce each other.
Why Savannah Families Choose ABA Journey
Savannah is a city of distinct communities — each with its own pace, school culture, and daily geography. Families in Ardsley Park, Parkside, and the Gordonston area often walk their children to Savannah-Chatham County schools, while Southside households in Kensington Park and Windsor Forest rely on after-school scheduling built around the Abercorn Street corridor. Our clinicians know these rhythms. We support children across Midtown, the Southside, Wilmington Island, and Isle of Hope — and regularly coordinate with teachers at schools like Godley Station, Heard Elementary, and Marshpoint Elementary. Between sessions, families gather at Daffin Park, walk the trail at Lake Mayer, or spend afternoons at Forsyth Park’s splash pad, and we build those familiar community spaces into our therapy approach whenever it supports the child’s goals.
In-home, school, and community ABA therapy across Savannah's diverse neighborhoods
BCBA Supervision. Board-Certified Behavior Analysts guiding every treatment plan.
Adaptive Care. Programs that adjust as your child masters new skills.
Parent Partnership. Collaborative coaching to empower you at home.
How ABA Therapy Works for Savannah Families
Evidence-based ABA
Our Savannah ABA therapy at ABA Journey follows BACB ethical standards and guidelines, with consistent data collection to track your child’s developmental growth and behavioral outcomes week by week.
Family-focused process
ABA Journey in Savannah keeps families at the center of care because parents hold knowledge no assessment can fully capture. Your observations shape every goal and every adjustment we make in your child’s ABA therapy plan.
Local community expertise
ABA Journey understands the Savannah-Chatham County Public School System and collaborates with teachers across Midtown, the Southside, and Wilmington Island to support your child’s daily success in the classroom.
Freedom for your schedule
ABA Journey Savannah builds therapy sessions around your family’s actual week — with afternoon, evening, and weekend availability that fits school pickup, work shifts, and the routines already in place.
How We Support School Success in Savannah
Many children in Savannah benefit from structured behavioral tools that carry over from therapy into the school day. One approach our team uses when appropriate is token boards — a straightforward visual system that helps children follow routines, stay on task, and build motivation in classroom settings like those across Savannah-Chatham County schools. If you want to understand how token boards work and how they can support your child’s success at school, our full guide is here: How Token Boards Support Classroom Success
ABA Therapy Locations Across Savannah, Georgia
Our Savannah ABA team works across a wide range of neighborhoods and communities — from walkable Midtown streets shaded by live oaks to the broader residential corridors of the Southside and the island communities to the east. Each area has its own school culture, daily pace, and local spaces where children grow, and our therapists adapt session environments to fit the way your family actually lives.
You can also explore our full list of ABA therapy locations across Georgia.
Families, Neighborhoods, and Daily Rhythms in Savannah
Savannah draws families into a daily rhythm shaped by its neighborhood character — early morning drop-offs at Godley Station or Jacob G. Smith Elementary, afternoon pickups along Abercorn Street, and evenings winding down in the backyard communities of Windsor Forest or along the marsh-view streets of Wilmington Island. Many Savannah families begin exploring ABA therapy as part of an early intervention plan or as a school-year support alongside an IEP, and Georgia Medicaid — along with plans like Peach State, Ambetter, and CareSource — helps make that access real. Scheduling flexibility matters here: parents in the Southside and island communities often manage longer commute windows, and our team builds sessions around those constraints rather than asking families to work around ours. For parents looking to extend structured support between sessions, the everyday strategies in our guide on positive reinforcement for daily parenting translate naturally into the routines Savannah families already have in place.
Frequently Asked Questions
ABA Therapy FAQs for Savannah, Georgia Families
Families across Savannah’s neighborhoods — from Midtown and Ardsley Park to the Southside and Wilmington Island — tend to arrive at the same questions when they start looking into ABA therapy. This section covers what we hear most often, so you can understand how services work, what to expect from the process, and how ABA Journey fits into the life your family is already living in Savannah.
How do we get started with ABA therapy in Savannah?
The first step is reaching out to ABA Journey for an initial consultation — there’s no referral required to begin that conversation. From there, our intake team will verify your child’s insurance coverage and confirm a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder, which is required for ABA services. Once eligibility is confirmed, a Board-Certified Behavior Analyst will conduct a comprehensive assessment of your child’s skills, communication patterns, and behavioral needs. That assessment forms the foundation of an individualized treatment plan. For Savannah families, sessions can begin in the home, at school with the approval of Savannah-Chatham County Public School System, or in community settings. Most families move from initial contact to active therapy within a few weeks, depending on insurance authorization timelines.
Does insurance cover ABA therapy for my child in Savannah?
Yes — ABA therapy is covered by Georgia Medicaid and most major private insurance plans, and ABA Journey works with a broad range of carriers in Georgia. Medicaid managed care options including Peach State Health Management, Ambetter, CareSource, and Amerigroup all cover ABA services when medically necessary for a child with an autism diagnosis. Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield is also accepted. Our insurance coordination team handles verification, prior authorization, and ongoing claims management, so families in Savannah aren’t navigating that process alone. If you’re unsure what your plan covers, contacting our intake team is the fastest way to find out.
What does an ABA therapy session in Savannah actually look like?
Sessions vary based on the child’s treatment plan, their age, and the setting. In-home sessions typically run two to three hours and take place in the spaces where your child is most comfortable — the living room, the backyard, the kitchen table during breakfast. A Registered Behavior Technician works directly with your child using play-based activities, structured tasks, and natural reinforcement to target specific skills identified in their plan. The RBT is supervised by a Board-Certified Behavior Analyst who reviews data, adjusts goals, and meets regularly with your family. Community-based sessions in Savannah might include practicing communication or transitions at Forsyth Park, Lake Mayer, or a neighborhood library. School-based sessions, when appropriate and approved, take place directly in your child’s classroom within Savannah-Chatham County schools.
How does ABA Journey coordinate with Savannah-Chatham County Public Schools?
School collaboration is an important part of our clinical model. When a family authorizes it, our BCBAs connect directly with teachers, paraprofessionals, and special education staff within Savannah-Chatham County Public School System schools to align behavioral strategies between home and classroom. This is especially relevant for children who have an IEP or are receiving special education services. If a child attends a school like Heard Elementary, Godley Station, or Derenne Middle, we can work with that team to ensure consistent language, shared reinforcement tools, and coordinated behavioral expectations. Our clinicians can also participate in IEP meetings when requested. This kind of cross-environment consistency typically accelerates progress and reduces the disconnect children sometimes experience between their school day and their therapy sessions.
How long does ABA therapy take, and how will I know my child is making progress?
There is no universal timeline — progress in ABA is deeply individual. Some children make significant gains in six to twelve months; others benefit from longer-term support that evolves as their needs change across developmental stages. What doesn’t change is the data. Every session generates objective behavioral data reviewed by your child’s BCBA, and that data drives every adjustment to goals and strategies. ABA Journey holds regular progress meetings with families in Savannah to review what the data shows, discuss what parents are observing at home, and collaboratively update the plan. Progress in ABA often looks like your child initiating more communication, handling transitions with less distress, completing self-care tasks with fewer prompts, or engaging more comfortably with peers in settings like Daffin Park or the school playground.
Can ABA therapy fit around our schedule in Savannah?
Yes — scheduling flexibility is something we build into every Savannah case. Families in neighborhoods like Windsor Forest or along the Wilmington Island corridor often manage school pickup, afternoon activities, and work schedules that don’t align with a standard nine-to-five window. ABA Journey offers afternoon, evening, and weekend sessions to accommodate those realities. When you begin services, your child’s clinical team will work with you to identify times that are genuinely sustainable for your household, rather than asking you to reorganize your week around a fixed slot. If your schedule shifts seasonally — such as during Savannah-Chatham County school breaks — we adjust along with it.
What is the difference between a BCBA and an RBT, and who will be working with my child?
Your child will work most directly with a Registered Behavior Technician, or RBT — a trained therapist who implements the session plan through direct interaction. The RBT is always supervised by a Board-Certified Behavior Analyst, who is the licensed clinician responsible for designing the treatment plan, collecting and analyzing session data, providing parent training, and making all clinical decisions. Think of it as a structure where the BCBA sets strategy and direction, while the RBT builds the daily relationship and carries sessions forward. In Savannah, our BCBAs are actively involved in each case and aren’t simply reviewing charts remotely — they maintain ongoing contact with families and are accessible when questions or concerns come up.
Are there autism or developmental support resources specific to Savannah?
Savannah has several community touchpoints that families navigating an autism diagnosis find helpful. The Savannah-Chatham County Public School System provides special education services and IEP support for eligible students, and the district’s early intervention programs serve children from age three through school entry. Georgia’s DOE Babies Can’t Wait program covers early intervention for children under three. Oatland Island Wildlife Center offers sensory-accessible nature programming that some families use as a community supplement to therapy. Families can also connect with local autism parent communities through national organizations like the Autism Society of America, which has Georgia chapter resources. ABA Journey can help connect Savannah families with local referral networks during the intake process.
How does ABA therapy support self-regulation and daily routines at home?
One of the most consistent goals we work on with Savannah families is helping children navigate the predictable stressors in their daily environment — transitions between activities, getting ready in the morning, moving from screen time to dinner, managing unexpected changes in plans. ABA strategies like visual schedules, first-then boards, and structured reinforcement give children concrete tools for managing these moments. Parent training is built into every ABA Journey plan: caregivers learn the same techniques the RBT uses so that strategies are consistent across the whole day, not just during session hours. For families in Savannah where both parents work outside the home or where daily routines involve school drop-offs in Midtown or commutes to the Southside, that kind of whole-family consistency is often what makes the difference.
Which zip codes in Savannah does ABA Journey serve?
ABA Journey provides ABA therapy services across Savannah, Georgia and the surrounding Chatham County area. Zip codes we serve include 31401, 31404, 31405, 31406, 31408, 31410, 31411, 31415, 31419, and 31421. We also extend services to families in adjacent communities including Pooler, Garden City, Richmond Hill, Wilmington Island, and parts of Effingham County. If you’re located just outside these areas, contact us directly — our team will confirm availability for your zip code.
If you’re building consistency at home, our guide on daily ABA routines offers practical ideas you can start using right away to support communication and independent skills.
TESTIMONIALS
Hear what families from Savannah
say about working with our team
These stories come from families across Midtown, the Southside, Wilmington Island, and other neighborhoods we serve.
Insurance Management
Insurance & ABA Therapy Support in Savannah
Understanding ABA therapy coverage doesn’t need to be another source of stress for Savannah families. ABA Journey works with Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Georgia Medicaid managed care plans — including Peach State Health Management, Ambetter, CareSource, and Amerigroup — to provide accessible autism services throughout Savannah and surrounding Chatham County communities. Families in the Southside, Wilmington Island, and Midtown can reach our insurance coordination team to verify benefits, manage prior authorization, and handle ongoing claims so that the focus stays on your child’s progress. We navigate the paperwork; you stay present for the therapy.
At ABA Journey, we assist each kid on the autism spectrum in realizing their full potential. Our compassionate, group-based ABA therapy promotes the growth of children and families. We promote growth, cultivate relationships, and welcome a brighter future by providing evidence-based care.
Information
GEORGIA
Address: 303 Perimeter Center North, Suite 300, Atlanta, GA, 30346
Phone: (404) 806-7587
Email: [email protected]
NORTH CAROLINA
Address: 525 N Tryon St, STE 1600, Charlotte, NC 28202
Phone: (704) 389-8700
Email: [email protected]





