Provider Profile: ACES
Snapshot
Most recent review: January 2026
Provider Name: ACES (Autism Comprehensive Educational Services)
Footprint: Multi-state
Scale: Large, multi-site provider
Care Model: Center-based and in-home ABA services
Growth Posture: Organic
Operating Context
ACES is a long-established, multi-state ABA provider operating a clinically standardized, center-based and in-home care model.
In January 2026, ACES announced the acquisition of Phoenix-based Ally Pediatric Therapy, expanding its Arizona footprint and reinforcing an ABA-only operating strategy. The transaction includes full brand integration, retention of Ally’s clinical and operational leadership, and the transition of speech, occupational, feeding, and other physical health services to external care coordination—consistent with ACES’ model across existing markets.
Post-acquisition disclosures confirm an intentional focus on ABA as the core service line, with multidisciplinary services coordinated externally rather than delivered in-house.
Operational Signals
Staffing & Supervision
Public messaging emphasizes professional development, credentialing, and training pathways, suggesting a focus on workforce stability and clinical consistency.
Intake & Access
Service descriptions indicate delivery across both center-based and in-home settings, implying intake workflows designed to support varied family needs across markets.
Scheduling & Delivery
A mixed delivery model suggests coordination across clinics and home-based services, with operational attention to supervision coverage and service continuity.
Revenue / Payor Context
Multi-state operations imply engagement with a range of payor environments and regulatory frameworks.
Technology Signals
Practice Management: Not publicly specified
Operations / Care Delivery: Not publicly specified
Why This Provider Appears in Coverage
ACES is referenced in analysis examining how established, multi-state providers structure clinical training, multidisciplinary care, and operational consistency at scale.
Disclosure
This Provider Card is based on publicly observable information available at the time of writing. Public materials may lag real-time operational changes, particularly during periods of growth, restructuring, or system transition.