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GA · Insurance mandates

Georgia autism
insurance coverage.

What Georgia mandates for autism therapy coverage as of May 2026, ages covered, what counts as "medically necessary," and the appeals process when claims are denied.

Georgia at a glance

Applicable statute: Georgia Code § 33-24-59.10 (Ava's Law) (2015)

Age cap: Through age 20

Annual dollar cap: $35,000/year

ABA specifically required: Yes — specifically required by mandate

State Insurance Commissioner: Georgia Office of Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner · 1-800-656-2298 · website

State-specific notes

Georgia's Ava's Law mandates autism coverage for fully-insured plans. Annual cap of $35,000 has not been adjusted significantly since enactment. ERISA self-funded plans exempt. Georgia Medicaid covers autism services for eligible children through EPSDT. Coverage is real but the dollar cap can be reached quickly for intensive ABA services.

State-specific appeals notes

Georgia external review process is administered through the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance. Request after internal appeal denial. Time-sensitive — file within 60 days of final internal denial.

Important caveats: data current as of May 2026 and verified to the best of our research capacity, but annual statutory changes, plan-specific variations, and ERISA self-funded plan exemptions may affect your specific coverage. Always verify with your plan and your state insurance commissioner before relying on these figures for an appeal.

If you've been denied in Georgia

  1. Request the denial in writing from your insurer. Federal law (ERISA + ACA) requires this for all denials. Without the written denial you cannot file an appeal.
  2. File the internal appeal first with your insurer. Most plans require this before external review. Time limits typically 30-180 days from denial — check your denial letter.
  3. External independent review after internal appeal denial. Most states have a state-administered or insurer-contracted independent review organization (IRO) process that is free and binding.
  4. State insurance commissioner complaint — file with the Georgia Department of Insurance (contact above). The commissioner can investigate insurer practices and order corrective action.
  5. EEOC / DOJ complaint if your coverage denial relates to employment-based discrimination.
  6. Private right of action for ERISA violations or breach of contract is available with an attorney if all administrative paths have failed.

Use the Autism Acceptance World Insurance Appeal Generator to draft a letter with ICD codes + medical-necessity language + relevant evidence base citations. Tailored to your specific service and denial reason.

Open the appeal tool →

Federal frameworks that apply in every state

  • Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 (MHPAEA) — behavioral health benefits must be provided at parity with medical/surgical benefits. Autism is a behavioral health condition. Coverage limits applied to autism services more restrictively than to medical/surgical services may violate parity.
  • Affordable Care Act (ACA) — essential health benefits include behavioral health services. Most plans regulated under ACA must cover autism treatment to some degree.
  • ERISA — for employer-sponsored plans, ERISA provides procedural protections and right to appeal. Self-funded ERISA plans are exempt from state insurance mandates but still bound by federal parity laws.
  • EPSDT (Medicaid) — Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic, and Treatment requires Medicaid to cover medically necessary services for children up to age 21, including autism services. This is often the strongest coverage path for Medicaid-eligible children.

Resources for autism families in Georgia

Curated and verified for Georgia — annual refresh. If a link is stale, tell us.

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