AAC (Augmentative & Alternative Communication)
AAC — Augmentative and Alternative Communication — gives a voice to people who cannot rely on speech. SLPs with AAC expertise evaluate and program devices (like Tobii Dynavox, TouchChat, Proloquo2Go), train caregivers, and coach communication partners.
Speech-language pathologists in the FastSpeech directory.
Explicitly listed for AAC (Augmentative & Alternative Communication).
Most generalist SLPs treat this — listing grows as providers claim and detail their profiles.Featured AAC (Augmentative & Alternative Communication) specialists
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Tagged specialists are providers explicitly listed for AAC (Augmentative & Alternative Communication). All SLPs includes generalists — most treat common conditions like articulation, language, and stuttering even without an explicit tag.
When to seek help
If you or a family member is struggling with aac (augmentative & alternative communication), a speech-language pathologist can evaluate and recommend a treatment plan. A typical first appointment lasts 60–90 minutes; ongoing therapy is usually weekly or twice-weekly.
Most US health insurance — including Medicare and Medicaid — covers medically-necessary speech therapy. Use our map search to filter by your insurance and find providers near you.