Specialty Services Listings
The listings assembled here catalog specialty education service providers operating across the United States, organized to support families, educators, and administrators in locating specific resources by type, geographic region, and service scope. Each entry represents a distinct provider or program category drawn from publicly accessible sources. Understanding how these listings are structured — and what they can and cannot confirm — is essential before using them for placement or procurement decisions. For broader context on the directory's purpose, see the Specialty Services Directory Purpose and Scope page.
Geographic distribution
Specialty education services are distributed unevenly across the United States, with provider density heavily concentrated in metropolitan statistical areas. States with the largest K–12 enrollment populations — California, Texas, Florida, and New York — also host the highest absolute counts of listed providers across categories including tutoring and academic support services, STEM specialty education programs, and college admissions consulting services.
Rural regions face a structurally different landscape. Providers in counties classified as rural by the U.S. Census Bureau's rural-urban continuum codes tend to operate through one of three delivery models:
- In-person single-location services — a single physical site serving a multi-county radius, common in vocational and career training contexts.
- Hybrid itinerant models — practitioners who travel to schools or homes on a scheduled rotation, typical for speech-language education support and occupational therapy education context providers.
- Fully remote platforms — providers delivering all services via synchronous or asynchronous digital formats, which has expanded geographic reach for online specialty education platforms since broadband access improvements in rural counties tracked by the FCC's Broadband Data Collection program.
Listings are searchable by state and, where data supports it, by county or metropolitan area. Providers operating nationally — including large test-preparation firms and federally chartered homeschool curriculum vendors — are tagged with a national scope indicator rather than a single state assignment.
How to read an entry
Each listing entry follows a standardized structure. A complete entry contains six fields; partial entries, marked with an incomplete-data flag, contain a minimum of three.
Full entry structure:
- Provider name — legal operating name or DBA as registered with the relevant state authority.
- Service category — drawn from the taxonomy described on Types of Specialty Education Providers; a provider may carry up to 3 category tags.
- Geographic scope — state(s) of operation, or "National" for providers with no geographic restriction.
- Credential or accreditation status — whether the provider holds a named accreditation (e.g., CARF, AdvancED/Cognia, NACCAS) or a state-issued license. This field is not a verification; see the Verification Status section below.
- Delivery format — in-person, hybrid, or fully remote.
- Population served — age range, grade band, or qualifying condition (e.g., IEP-eligible students, adults pursuing continuing education credits).
A provider listed under special education and IEP services will display differently from one listed under gifted and talented education programs: IEP-service providers typically carry a credential status field referencing state special education licensure, while gifted program providers may reference district-partnership status or independent accreditation instead.
Entries do not include pricing. For cost benchmarking, the Specialty Education Service Costs resource addresses fee ranges by category.
What listings include and exclude
Included:
- Providers offering structured, repeatable educational services to identifiable student or learner populations.
- Programs affiliated with accredited institutions where the specialty service is delivered as a distinct offering (e.g., a university-housed adult continuing education unit listed separately from the degree programs of the parent institution).
- Nonprofit and for-profit providers meeting minimum documentation standards — an operating address, a verifiable service description, and at least one publicly available credential or registration record.
Excluded:
- Individual freelance tutors without an organizational affiliation or business registration.
- Programs that have lost accreditation or whose state license has lapsed and not been reinstated, even if still operating.
- Services delivered exclusively outside the United States, regardless of whether they accept U.S.-enrolled students.
- Providers whose primary purpose is product sales (curriculum materials, software licenses) rather than direct instructional services. Vendors of education technology tools are discussed on Education Technology Integration Services but are not listed as service providers here.
This boundary mirrors a distinction maintained in federal program reporting: IDEA Part B funded service providers, for example, are tracked as direct-service entities under 34 C.F.R. Part 300, a regulatory framework that excludes materials vendors from the same accountability requirements applied to service providers (IDEA regulations, 34 C.F.R. Part 300, U.S. Department of Education).
Verification status
Listings carry one of four verification status labels, each reflecting a specific evidentiary standard:
- Confirmed active — the provider's registration, license, or accreditation was confirmed against a named public registry within the past 12 months.
- Unverified — self-reported — the provider submitted its own information; no independent registry check has been completed.
- Pending review — a check has been initiated but not yet resolved, typically because the relevant state registry requires manual inquiry.
- Lapsed — historical record — the provider is no longer confirmed active but is retained for reference, clearly flagged, because historical records have legitimate research uses.
Confirmed-active status does not constitute an endorsement. Accreditation standards vary widely by body — CARF accreditation for behavioral health services and Cognia accreditation for academic schools involve distinct criteria, reviewed on the Accreditation Standards Specialty Education page. Families and procurement officers are advised to cross-reference credential claims against the issuing body's public registry before making placement decisions. State licensing requirements, which differ across the 50 states for categories such as educational therapy services and behavioral support education services, are documented on the Licensing Requirements Specialty Educators page.