Let me be honest with you.
If you’ve landed on this page, you’ve probably already spent hours Googling some variation of “ADHD therapist near me” or “autism-friendly doctor Wisconsin” and gotten back a wall of Psychology Today profiles that all say the same thing. Maybe you called a few. Maybe one said they “work with ADHD” but what they really meant was they’d heard of it.
I get it. Wisconsin’s strong education culture means teachers are often the first to notice, finding a provider who truly understands how your brain works shouldn’t require a part-time research job.
That’s exactly why we built this directory.
What’s Actually Different About This Directory
We’re not just listing every therapist in Wisconsin who checked a box. Our directory currently includes 3,305 providers across Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, Kenosha, Appleton and beyond — and every single one has been evaluated against a 10-point neuro-affirming scoring system.
What does that mean in practice? It means we look at whether a provider actually takes a strengths-based approach, whether they offer telehealth (critical in a state like Wisconsin), whether they understand that ADHD and autism aren’t things to be fixed.
Here’s the thing most directories won’t tell you: not all providers who say they specialize in neurodivergence actually practice in a neuro-affirming way. Some still use compliance-based methods. Some still think autism is something to mask better. We flag those.
The Wisconsin Landscape
Wisconsin — the Badger State — has its own unique healthcare terrain. Wisconsin’s strong education culture means teachers are often the first to notice.
Right now, 2,203 providers in our Wisconsin directory offer telehealth, which means roughly 67% of your options don’t require you to drive anywhere. That matters when you’re dealing with executive function challenges, sensory overwhelm in waiting rooms, or just life being life.
The providers in our directory span several key specialties: ADHD (including combined type, inattentive, and late-diagnosed adults), Autism (including level 1, late-diagnosed, and self-identified), Dyslexia, and Sensory Processing differences. Many work with multiple neurotypes because, honestly, they overlap more than the DSM wants to admit.
What to Look for in a Wisconsin Provider
I’ve talked to hundreds of neurodivergent adults about their provider experiences, and a few themes come up every single time.
The first is whether the provider leads with curiosity or correction. If a therapist’s first instinct is to give you a behavior plan, that tells you something. A neuro-affirming provider wants to understand how your brain works and build from there.
The second is accommodation without judgment. Can you text instead of call to book? Is the intake form available digitally? Will they dim the lights? These aren’t luxury extras — they’re accessibility basics.
The third is lived experience or genuine education. Some of the best providers in Wisconsin are neurodivergent themselves. Others have invested deeply in understanding neurodivergence beyond a weekend workshop. Both are valid. What matters is depth.
Insurance and Cost Reality
Let’s talk money, because nobody else does honestly enough. In Wisconsin, many neurodivergent-affirming providers accept major insurance including Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, United Healthcare, and Cigna. Some accept Medicaid/CHIP.
But here’s the reality: some of the most specialized providers are private pay. If that’s a barrier, look for providers in our directory marked with sliding scale options. Several Wisconsin providers offer reduced rates specifically because they believe neurodivergent care shouldn’t be a luxury.
Late-Diagnosed Adults: You Belong Here Too
If you’re an adult in Wisconsin who just realized at 35 (or 45, or 55) that you might be neurodivergent — you are not too late. You are not making it up. And you deserve a provider who doesn’t make you justify why you didn’t figure this out sooner.
Our directory includes providers who specifically work with late-diagnosed adults, because the experience of growing up neurodivergent without knowing it creates its own particular set of needs. The grief, the relief, the “oh, that’s why” moments — a good provider knows how to hold all of that.
How to Use Our Wisconsin Directory
Start with the search. Filter by your city, your neurotype, and whether you need telehealth. Look at the Neuro-Affirming Score — providers scoring 5 or above have demonstrated multiple indicators of truly affirming practice.
Then do your own gut check. Read their website. Notice how they talk about neurodivergence. Do they use identity-first language if that’s what you prefer? Do they mention strengths alongside challenges? Do they have an accessible booking process?
You know your brain. Trust it to recognize a good fit.
Beyond the Directory
We’re building something bigger here. This directory is one piece of a larger mission to make
neurodivergent-affirming healthcare the standard, not the exception, in Wisconsin and across the country.
If you’re a provider in Wisconsin who practices affirming care, we want you in this directory. If you’re a neurodivergent person who found a great provider through us, tell someone. The neurodivergent community in Wisconsin grows stronger every time someone shares a resource that actually works.
Your brain isn’t broken. It never was. Let’s find you someone who knows that.