Tips and Resources

Where to Find Speech Therapy in Fort Worth, TX: A Parent's Guide (2026)

Choosing a speech therapist in Fort Worth can feel overwhelming. You need to think about the setting, cost, scheduling, waitlists, and therapy approach.

Depending on your child's age and the severity of their needs, speech therapy is often available free through Early Childhood Intervention (ECI), a state program for children under 3. For older kids, public school districts must evaluate and treat speech and language needs at no cost. Alongside these options, families often use private clinics, university clinics, or virtual providers like Expressable for personalized, 1:1 care. This guide walks through each option in Fort Worth and its tradeoffs so you can choose with confidence.

Key takeaways

  • Start with three questions: Where do you want speech therapy delivered, how will you pay, and what credentials and therapy approach matter most to you?

  • Match the option to your child's age: Under age 3, MHMR of Tarrant County offers free ECI evaluations (888-754-0524). Age 3 and older, Fort Worth Independent School District (ISD) must evaluate and treat speech needs for free (Child Find: 817-814-7580).

  • Understand your full set of options: ECI, school-based therapy, private clinics, local universities, and virtual care.

  • Ask about waitlists: They're common in speech therapy. But the earlier treatment starts, the faster progress your child will likely make.

  • Know that most speech therapy is covered by Medicaid, CHIP, or commercial insurance: You can also pay for therapy yourself via private pay. Ask if the speech therapist accepts your payment method, but weigh other factors such as location and therapy approach when comparing.

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Your speech therapy options in Fort Worth

Fort Worth crossed 1 million residents in 2024, and about 269,000 of them are children under age 18. Some speech therapy options are free public programs; others are private or virtual. If you're new to speech therapy and want to understand how it works, start with our ultimate guide to speech therapy for children.

Early Childhood Intervention (ECI)

For children up to 36 months, many families start by contacting Early Childhood Intervention (ECI). This is the birth-to-3 program every state runs under federal law (the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA, Part C) to support babies and toddlers with developmental delays. In Tarrant County, ECI is run by My Health My Resources (MHMR) of Tarrant County, serving a 12-county region that includes Fort Worth.

  • Who it's for: Infants and toddlers with a developmental delay or disability.

  • Cost: Evaluation, service coordination, and interpreting are free. Ongoing speech therapy uses an income-based sliding fee and is never denied for inability to pay.

  • How to start: Call (888) 754-0524. Parents can refer their own child, no doctor needed. Office location: 3880 Hulen St #400, Fort Worth 76107.

Are there downsides to ECI? It's a fantastic program for many families, but a few tradeoffs are worth understanding:

  • It ends at the third birthday. ECI is birth-to-3 only. At 3, your child transitions to school-district services, sometimes with a gap in between. This can be hard after building a relationship with a speech therapist.

  • You have to qualify. ECI requires a measurable developmental delay (or a qualifying medical diagnosis). A child with a milder delay may not be eligible for speech therapy, even if they'd benefit from it.

  • Access isn't guaranteed. Some ECI programs have funding and staffing challenges, with waitlists in certain areas.

  • It's not always free. ECI bills your insurance, and out-of-pocket costs follow an income-based sliding scale. Depending on your plan and income, some families find it isn't much cheaper than a private clinic.

School district (Fort Worth ISD)

Once a child turns 3, federal law (IDEA) requires public schools to find, evaluate, and serve children with disabilities at no cost—first through early childhood special education, then school-age services. Demand among the youngest students is rising: Fort Worth Independent School District (ISD) expanded to 60 early childhood special education classrooms for the 2025–26 year. Most of the city is Fort Worth ISD, with parts in Crowley, Keller, Eagle Mountain–Saginaw, Northwest, Birdville, Castleberry, and White Settlement.

How school-based services work through Fort Worth ISD's Child Find (817-814-7580):

1. You or a teacher submit a written referral.

2. The district gets signed consent, then has 45 school days to evaluate your child's speech and language.

3. An ARD (Admission, Review, and Dismissal) meeting is held within 30 calendar days.

4. If eligible, your child gets an Individual Education Plan (IEP) that can include speech therapy.

Tip: You can look up any Texas district's special education compliance record through the Texas Education Agency's annual Results-Driven Accountability determinations. In 2023, a state review found Fort Worth ISD did not always have qualified staff evaluating students for special education. This is a fair thing to ask about during your child's evaluation.

Are there tradeoffs to school-based therapy?

  • Eligibility is tied to educational impact, not just a delay. A child qualifies only if their speech or language issue affects school performance. A concern that doesn't clearly hurt schoolwork may not get services, even if you'd like speech therapy for it.

  • Goals are educational, not comprehensive. School therapy targets the communication a child needs in the classroom, not necessarily every goal a family cares about (such as social communication, feeding, or a speech sound error that doesn't affect learning).

  • Speech therapy is often group-based, not 1:1. With so many kids needing therapy, services are often delivered in small groups. Your child may get less individual attention than in a private clinic.

  • Your child may not get as many sessions as they need. Because of speech therapist shortages, your child may get only 30 minutes of therapy a week, which isn't enough for some kids.

  • Scheduling is driven by the school. Therapy happens during the school day on the school's schedule. Children are sometimes pulled out of class for therapy sessions. Therapy usually pauses over the summer unless your child qualifies for extended-school-year services.

  • It can be a process you have to push. School speech therapy runs through referrals, evaluation timelines, and ARD/IEP meetings. Parents sometimes have to advocate to get an evaluation or the right services for their child.

  • You're usually not in the room. School therapy happens without you, which makes it harder to reinforce skills at home—and home practice is what tends to drive the fastest progress.

Online speech therapy

Virtual speech therapy connects your child with a licensed speech-language pathologist over video, from home (here's how online speech therapy works).

For most Fort Worth families, the practical barriers to speech therapy aren't whether a nearby clinic exists. It's the commute across a sprawling metro, the long waitlists, and finding a speech therapist who takes their insurance. Texas is short an estimated 2,000 speech therapists, and roughly half of school districts report shortages. This is a big reason local waitlists stretch for months.

Online speech therapy opens up a statewide pool of therapists, instead of only the clinics near you. There's often less of a waitlist, and there's no commute needed.

Most notably, research shows virtual therapy is as effective as in-person care for the large majority of speech, language, and communication needs. Because sessions happen in the child's own home, parents are part of the process rather than waiting in a lobby.

Research shows virtual speech therapy is as effective as in-person care for most  speech, language, and communication needs.

Expressable is a virtual speech therapy provider built around that last point. Its licensed speech therapists work directly with your child and you, the caregiver. That way, you can reinforce the right speech strategies during everyday routines, not just during the weekly session. Parents attend sessions, learn how to prompt language at home, and leave each visit with techniques to practice and personalized home activities. Because so much of a child's progress happens in the hours between appointments, this caregiver-led model tends to lead to faster progress. Plus, it's available across Texas regardless of which Fort Worth suburb you live in.

Is there a downside to online care?

  • Online therapy isn't the best fit for the most hands-on needs. A small subset of children—typically those with severe feeding and swallowing needs—may not be a good fit for virtual care. After the evaluation, your speech therapist will make a clinical recommendation about whether ongoing virtual care is appropriate.

  • It works best with a caregiver nearby. Caregiver attendance matters, especially for younger children. It's what makes home carryover work—but it does take some of your time.

  • You need the basics. For online speech therapy, you'll need a device like a computer or tablet, a decent internet connection, and a reasonably quiet spot in your home.

Private clinics

A number of private pediatric speech therapy clinics operate across Fort Worth, serving families through insurance or private pay. Availability, specialties, and wait times vary clinic to clinic. It's worth calling a few to compare how soon they can start and whether they treat your child's specific need.

Hospital and university clinics

You can also receive speech therapy through hospital outpatient programs and university teaching clinics. Children's hospitals are best for complex or medical needs, or children who need a multidisciplinary team of specialists. University clinics, where graduate clinicians treat under licensed faculty supervision, are often the most affordable route, but they tend to have the longest waitlists and run on the school calendar.

  • Cook Children's Rehabilitation offers pediatric speech plus feeding and swallowing therapy. Services begin with a physician referral. (682) 885-4063, 1719 8th Ave.

  • TCU Miller Speech & Hearing Clinic, a university teaching clinic, provides child speech, language, bilingual, voice, and stuttering services on a sliding scale (~$60/hour). (817) 257-7620. Note: There is a reported 1.5–2 year waitlist for speech therapy.

How to pay for speech therapy in Fort Worth

Texas has the highest rate of uninsured children in the country: about 13.6% in 2024, more than double the national rate of 6%. So sorting out coverage for speech therapy is often a Fort Worth family's first hurdle. In Tarrant County, roughly 17% of residents are uninsured—among the higher rates in the state. Here's how the main options work.

Medicaid (STAR and STAR Kids). Most Fort Worth children on Medicaid are in managed care. In the Tarrant Service Area (Tarrant, Denton, Hood, Johnson, Parker, and Wise counties), STAR plans are Aetna, Cook Children's Health Plan, and Wellpoint. STAR Kids (for children with disabilities) is offered by Aetna and Cook Children's Health Plan. Speech therapy is covered when medically necessary. (Note: Be sure to verify before you enroll, because which Medicaid plans operate in Tarrant County may change. Confirm your plan is still active locally and that your speech therapist is in-network.)

CHIP. Children who don't qualify for Medicaid may be eligible for CHIP, which also covers speech therapy. Several CHIP plans serve Tarrant County.

Commercial insurance. Most private plans cover medically necessary speech therapy, though coverage for "developmental" delays varies by policy (what insurance does and doesn't cover). Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas is the most common commercial insurer statewide. Always confirm your speech therapy benefit and any annual visit limits before starting.

Private pay. The cost of speech therapy varies by provider and setting. Considering virtual speech therapy? Expressable accepts 250+ insurance plans, including Medicaid in Texas. About a third of its patients are on Medicaid, and most families pay $0–$21 per visit after insurance.

Free and low-cost options. Beyond insurance, free or income-based speech therapy in Fort Worth includes:

  • Your school district (free, age 3 and up)

  • ECI (sliding scale, under age 3)

  • The TCU Miller Speech & Hearing Clinic

  • Head Start/Early Head Start, which is run locally by Child Care Associates (37 centers across Tarrant County). Head Start/Early Head Start screens young children and can catch speech delays early.

In-person vs. online speech therapy: Which is right?

Both in-person and online speech therapy have been proven to work. The best fit depends on your child's needs, your family's schedule, and how quickly you need to begin.

In-person speech therapy tends to be the better fit when:

  • The need is truly hands-on: Nearly all communication disorders can be treated just as effectively online. However, severe feeding and swallowing disorders likely require the therapist to be in the room.

  • You've found the right local provider: There is a local speech therapist who's experienced with your child's specific needs, able to show real outcomes, involves you as the caregiver, and fits your schedule.

  • You're prepared to wait: Clinics at hospitals or universities often have long waitlists, so check before counting on them.

Online speech therapy (teletherapy) tends to be the better fit when:

  • You want to start sooner: Providers like Expressable often have near-immediate availability. You can start in days, not months.

  • Travel or scheduling is a barrier: Care happens from home, with flexible scheduling (including evenings and weekends). You get a Texas-wide pool of speech therapists instead of only nearby clinics.

  • You want to be involved: In teletherapy, sessions happen at home with the caregiver present. Research shows this is one of the most effective ways for children to make progress in therapy.

Learn more about how online speech therapy works and why teletherapy is as effective as in-person care.

What to expect: Evaluation and first sessions

Most speech therapy starts with an evaluation. The speech therapist assesses your child's speech, language, and sometimes feeding, then recommends whether therapy is needed and how often. If speech therapy is recommended, your therapist will create a custom care plan.

Sessions are typically 30–45 minutes, once or twice a week. For young children, sessions look a lot like structured play, since play is how kids learn communication. Expect periodic progress reviews and goal updates as your child improves. Here's more on how long speech therapy usually takes.

What to look for when choosing a speech therapist

Beyond setting and cost, a lot goes into choosing the right therapist. It's worth being picky! You and your child may build a long relationship with this person, so you want someone experienced who fits your needs.

Here's a short checklist for finding a speech therapist:

  • Caregiver coaching: Does the therapist involve you in sessions? A child may spend only 30 to 60 minutes a week in therapy. Research shows that caregiver coaching, where the therapist trains you to use communication-building techniques during daily routines, drives the fastest progress. Ask whether the therapist will coach you and provide ways to practice at home between sessions.

  • Measurable outcomes: Will the speech therapist track your child's progress toward their goals and share results with you? Do they have outcomes data they can share from their other patients?

  • Credentials: Your therapist should be a licensed speech-language pathologist (SLP), licensed to practice in Texas, with a Certificate of Clinical Competence (CCC-SLP) from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA). You can verify a Texas license through the state licensing board.

  • Specialty match: Speech therapists treat a wide range of people, from toddlers with speech delay to older people recovering from a stroke. Make sure your therapist is experienced with your child's specific need (articulation, stuttering, apraxia, feeding, bilingual). In a city as bilingual as Fort Worth, it's worth asking about Spanish-language experience if that matters for your family.

  • Insurance and cost: Is your speech therapist in-network with your plan? Does your insurance have any limits on how many speech therapy visits it will cover?

  • Wait time: Ask the speech therapist how soon they can actually start. The length of time can vary a lot!

Expressable is built around the first two items. Caregiver coaching is its primary therapy model, and it publishes its outcomes. At Expressable, 96% of patients make measurable progress within five sessions, as tracked on standardized assessments.

Speech therapy that gets results

At Expressable, our research-based care model delivers meaningful outcomes for kids and adults. See our results from more than 13,000 clients.

See our outcomes

Spanish-language and bilingual speech therapy services

About a third of Fort Worth residents (roughly 34%) are Hispanic or Latino, and Spanish is the most common language other than English spoken at home. That means bilingual speech services are in real demand, though they can be harder to find.

ECI provides interpreting at no cost, and TCU's Miller Clinic offers bilingual speech-language services. When you call a speech therapy provider, ask whether bilingual therapy or on-demand interpretation is available.

Local resources and parent support in Fort Worth

Getting speech therapy is only part of it. Navigating evaluations, ARD meetings, insurance, and waitlists can be stressful. These Tarrant County and Texas organizations help families understand their rights, connect with other parents, and find support.

Advocacy and special education help

  • The Arc of Greater Tarrant County — Special education advocacy and training, parent support groups, and information and referral for families of children with intellectual and developmental disabilities. 5765 Westcreek Dr, Fort Worth 76133. (817) 877-1474, arcgtc.org

  • Disability Rights Texas — The state's federally funded legal advocate for people with disabilities; publishes a plain-language guide to Texas special-education rights. disabilityrightstx.org

  • SPEDTex (Special Education Information Center) — A statewide helpline for IEP and special education questions. (855) 773-3839, spedtex.org

Therapy programs and respite

  • Easterseals North Texas (Fort Worth) — Autism services, a child development center, outpatient therapy, and respite for families. 6900 Anderson Blvd #104, Fort Worth 76120. (972) 394-8900, easterseals.com/northtexas

  • MHMR of Tarrant County — Beyond ECI, offers intellectual  and developmental disability services and care navigation. mhmrtarrant.org

Parent-to-parent support and navigation

  • Texas Parent to Parent (TxP2P) — Matches parents of children with disabilities with experienced peer mentors, plus a special-needs resource library. (866) 896-6001, txp2p.org

  • Navigate Life Texas — A statewide, parent-written guide to raising a child with disabilities or special health needs; dial 2-1-1 (or 877-541-7905) for local referrals. navigatelifetexas.org

Financial help

  • Gill Children's Services — Last-resort funding for Tarrant County children whose medical, educational, or developmental needs aren't met by other resources. www.gillchildrens.org/

Please note that contact details, program offerings, and program availability may change.

Not sure your child needs speech therapy?

If you're still deciding whether to look into speech therapy, a good first step is to see how your child's speech and language compare to typical milestones. When in doubt, an evaluation is the surest way to know. Check out these guides as well:

Speech milestones by age

Learn more about speech therapy

Curious or concerned?

Our free screener is tailored by age and covers all areas of speech, language, and feeding. Find out if your child might need speech therapy.

Screener for children

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

Article sources

Last reviewed June 2026. Program contacts, Medicaid plan availability, and waitlists change over time; we re-verify periodically.

How Expressable Can Help

Concerned your child isn't reaching age-expected milestones? Looking for communication support from a professional? Expressable is a national online speech and occupational therapy practice serving children and adults. We treat all major areas of communication, feeding, and developmental skills, offer flexible hours including evenings and weekends, and accept most major health insurance plans. We’re proud to have earned more than 4,500 5-star reviews from our clients (4.83/5 average).

Our therapy model is centered on parent and caregiver involvement. Research proves that empowering caregivers to participate in their loved one’s therapy leads to better outcomes. That’s why we combine live, 1-on-1 speech and occupational therapy with personalized education and home practice activities for faster progress.

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