I’m going to skip the part where I explain what neurodivergence is. You already know. You’re here because you need a provider in Puerto Rico who also knows — not textbook knows, but really knows.
So let’s get into it.
The Short Version
We’ve built a directory of hundreds of neurodivergent-affirming providers in Puerto Rico. They’ve been scored, filtered, and vetted. over 60% offer telehealth. We flagged anyone using compliance-based approaches. You can search by city, neurotype, insurance, and more.
That’s the what. Here’s the why and how.
Why Puerto Rico Needed This
Where bilingual, culturally-competent neurodivergent care isn’t a nice-to-have — it’s the baseline. Whether you’re in San Juan or a town most people have never heard of, the challenge is the same: finding someone who understands that your brain isn’t broken, it’s just wired differently.
Puerto Rico — the Island of Enchantment — has hundreds of providers in our directory right now. That sounds like a lot until you remember how many neurodivergent people live here. The demand outstrips supply, which means the providers who are doing this work well are often booked out months in advance.
Telehealth helps. With many providers offering remote sessions, you’re not limited to whoever happens to practice within driving distance. You can find the right fit, not just the closest one.
How Our Scoring Works
Every provider in our Puerto Rico directory has a Neuro-Affirming Score from 0 to 10. Here’s what goes into it:
Strengths-based approach: Do they build on what you’re good at, or just try to fix what you struggle with? That’s worth points.
Telehealth availability: Offering remote sessions tells us a provider understands that accessibility matters.
Sliding scale: Making care financially accessible shows commitment beyond profit.
Multiple neurotype expertise: A provider who understands ADHD and autism and sensory processing gets that these things travel together.
Accepting new clients: Pretty basic, but important to know.
And then there’s the penalty: any provider using ABA therapy or compliance-based behavioral methods gets points deducted. That’s not accidental. That’s a values decision.
What I’d Actually Do If I Were Searching in Puerto Rico
Here’s my honest advice, not the sanitized version:
Start with telehealth filters unless you specifically want in-person. It gives you more options and removes the barrier of sensory-nightmare waiting rooms.
Look at scores of 5 and above. Below that doesn’t mean a provider is bad — it might just mean they’re newer or we don’t have enough data yet. But 5+ means multiple confirmed indicators of affirming practice.
Check insurance early. Nothing’s worse than finding your perfect provider and then discovering they’re $200 a session out-of-pocket. Our directory shows who takes what, including Medicaid/CHIP and sliding scale options.
Read their website before you book. You can learn a lot from how a provider talks about neurodivergence on their own site. Words like “disorder,” “deficit,” and “behavior management” tell you one thing. Words like “strengths,” “accommodation,” and “neurodiversity” tell you another.
For the Late-Diagnosed Crowd
If you just figured out you’re neurodivergent at 30, 40, or beyond — welcome. You’re not too late, you’re not making it up, and you don’t need to prove anything to anyone.
Our Puerto Rico directory includes providers who specifically work with late-diagnosed adults. They get the unique grief and relief that comes with realizing your whole life makes sense through a different lens. They won’t ask you why you weren’t diagnosed as a kid. They’ll ask you what support you need now.
For Parents
Your kid doesn’t need to be fixed. They need to be understood. The providers in our directory who work with children and adolescents practice from that philosophy.
If someone has told you ABA is your only option in Puerto Rico, they’re wrong. Our directory specifically exists to show you the alternatives — providers who use strengths-based approaches, who respect your child’s sensory needs, who build skills without demanding compliance.
The Puerto Rico Neurodivergent Community
Here’s what’s exciting: Puerto Rico is building a real neurodivergent community. Support groups, advocacy organizations, and a growing network of affirming providers are creating infrastructure that didn’t exist five years ago. Places like UPR Medical Sciences are training the next generation of clinicians who understand neurodiversity.
This directory is part of that ecosystem. Use it, share it, and tell us how to make it better.
You deserve care that actually gets you. Let’s find it.