12 Things I Actually Look At When Choosing a Speech App for My Child

12 Things I Actually Look At When Choosing a Speech App for My Child

The single thing that matters most here: whether the child will actually open it again tomorrow. Engagement without dread. Everything else is secondary.

Speech apps for kids range from genuine clinical tools to glorified flashcard decks with cartoon mascots. After spending time with the real options, here is my honest breakdown of what to weigh before you spend a dime.

For outside context, see this asha.org.

1. Who Built It and Why

Credentials matter. Articulation Station, from Little Bee Speech, was designed by practicing SLPs and targets over 1,200 words across 22 sounds. That backstory is verifiable. Otsimo was built specifically for autism, Down syndrome, and non-verbal learners. Compare that to generic “educational” apps with no clinical input at all. Always check the About page.

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2. Drill-Based vs. Conversation-Based Practice

Most apps are drill tools. Flashcard. Tap the picture. Repeat the sound. That works for some kids. For others, especially kids with anxiety or sensory sensitivities, the flashcard format triggers shutdown. Conversation-based practice, where a child talks naturally and gets gentle feedback mid-sentence, is a genuinely different experience. Know which your child needs before you pick.

3. Feedback Style: Punitive or Modeling

This one is underrated. Some apps flash a red X when a child mispronounces. Others quietly model the correct form and move on. Research in speech-language pathology consistently supports modeling over correction-as-punishment, particularly for kids with apraxia or anxiety around speech. If an app marks every wrong answer with a buzzer sound, that is worth testing with your child before subscribing.

4. Whether It Can Target Specific Sounds

Generic “speech practice” is vague. Your child’s SLP likely has a specific target list: maybe /r/ in medial position, or /sh/ blends. Apps like Speech Blubs (around $14.49 per month or $59.99 per year) and Articulation Station Pro (roughly $59.99 one-time) let you filter by exact phoneme. That specificity matters enormously if you are running home practice alongside formal therapy.

5. Age and Reading Level Fit

An app that requires reading menus or typing answers immediately excludes pre-readers and many kids with language delays. Voice-first design, where the child just speaks and the app responds, removes that barrier entirely. Worth asking: can a five-year-old use this alone, or does a parent need to sit there managing the interface?

6. Session Length and Pacing Controls

Ten minutes of focused practice beats forty minutes of wandering. Kids with ADHD or attention differences rarely sustain a fixed thirty-minute session. Apps that let parents dial session length to five or ten minutes, or that pause between activities, are built for real children, not ideal ones.

7. Neurodivergent-Specific Design

Otsimo includes AI feedback loops and over 200 exercises designed explicitly for autism and apraxia. Speech Blubs lists ADHD, autism, and apraxia on its homepage. These are not afterthoughts in their design. If your child has sensory sensitivities, look specifically for apps with adjustable energy modes, mood-aware pacing, or sensory presets, not just apps that say “inclusive” in the marketing copy.

*A quick honest aside: no app on this list is a medical device or a substitute for a licensed speech-language pathologist. These are practice tools, full stop.*

8. What Parents Actually See

Progress dashboards vary wildly. Some apps show only session count. Better ones show which sounds were practiced, accuracy trends over time, and exportable reports. If you are coordinating with an SLP, the ability to share a PDF of session history saves real time at appointments. That kind of parent-facing reporting is a feature worth hunting for specifically. One app I came across, Little Words, generates SLP-style PDF reports that parents can bring directly to therapy sessions, which is genuinely useful for families doing both home practice and formal therapy.

9. Cost Structure and Longevity

Speech Blubs offers a lifetime option at $99.99. Articulation Station Pro is a one-time $59.99 purchase. Otsimo runs as low as $4.49 per month on annual billing. Tactus Therapy apps range from $9.99 to $99.99 each depending on the clinical area. Subscription fatigue is real. If you know you will use an app for two-plus years, do the math on lifetime vs. monthly before committing.

10. Safety and Data Practices

COPPA compliance is the legal floor in the U.S. for apps used by children under 13. No ads, no behavioral tracking, no data sold to third parties. These are not bonuses. They are baseline requirements. Read the privacy policy. If it is vague about data sharing, that is your answer.

11. Free Trial Quality

A free trial that locks core features behind a paywall after thirty seconds tells you something. A real trial lets the child use the app long enough to know whether it clicks. Test the trial with your actual child before subscribing. Their reaction in the first session predicts everything.

12. Whether It Supplements or Replaces Therapy

Services like Expressable offer teletherapy with licensed SLPs, and ASHA publishes free guidance for families at no cost. Apps are practice between sessions, not replacements for clinical care. The best app choice is the one that fits alongside your child’s current therapy plan, not the one that promises to handle everything alone.

AppBest ForPrice RangeFormat
Speech BlubsApraxia, autism, ADHD$14.49/mo, $99.99 lifetimeVideo-modeled drills
Articulation Station ProPhoneme-specific articulation$59.99 one-timeSLP-built drill cards
OtsimoAutism, non-verbal, Down syndromeFrom $4.49/moAI-feedback exercises
Tactus TherapyClinical, broader ages$9.99-$99.99 per appEvidence-based modules
ExpressableFull teletherapy replacementSubscription, variesLicensed SLP sessions

The honest bottom line: pick based on your child’s specific diagnosis, their tolerance for structured drills, your SLP’s target sounds, and how long the free trial lasts. Start there.

Common Questions

Is Speech Blubs worth the price compared to Articulation Station Pro for a child already in therapy?

Speech Blubs fits families who want video modeling and a broader feature set, with the $99.99 lifetime option paying off after about seven months versus monthly billing. Articulation Station Pro at $59.99 one-time is often the better pick if your child’s SLP has given you a specific phoneme target list and you want a no-frills, drill-focused tool.

Can a non-verbal child use Otsimo independently, or does it require constant parent involvement?

Otsimo was designed with non-verbal and minimally verbal learners in mind, and its AI feedback loops reduce the need for a parent to narrate every step. That said, first sessions almost always go better with a caregiver present. Once a child learns the interface, independent use is realistic for many kids.

How do I know if an app’s free trial is long enough to make a real decision?

A meaningful trial should let your child complete at least three to four separate sessions, not just one demo. If the app locks phoneme filters or progress tracking during the trial period, you cannot actually evaluate the features that matter most. Walk away from trials that hide core functionality behind immediate upgrade prompts.

My child’s SLP gave us specific /r/ targets. Which app handles that level of detail?

Articulation Station Pro is the clearest match here. It lets you filter by individual phoneme and word position, so you can set up medial /r/ practice specifically rather than running through a generic sound deck. Speech Blubs also allows some phoneme filtering, but Articulation Station’s granularity is closer to what an SLP would design for targeted home practice.

At what point should an app be replaced with something like Expressable teletherapy instead?

If your child has plateaued on app-based practice for two or more months, or if the underlying diagnosis involves something like childhood apraxia of speech that requires hands-on cueing, an app alone is not enough. Expressable and similar teletherapy platforms connect families with licensed SLPs who can adjust treatment in real time, which no app currently replicates.

Sources

  • American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA), asha.org, consumer-facing family guidance
  • Speech Blubs pricing and feature list, speechblubs.com (public product pages, 2024-2025)
  • Little Bee Speech / Articulation Station, littlebeespeech.com (publicly available product information)
  • Otsimo plan details and feature descriptions, otsimo.com (public product pages)
  • Tactus Therapy app catalog, tactustherapy.com (public product pages)
  • Expressable teletherapy platform, expressable.com (public service descriptions)