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Home » One year on from an autism diagnosis: what families say — and what to do next
The first year after an autism diagnosis is unlike any other. It brings relief, grief, clarity, and sometimes more questions than it answers. It is a year of learning — about your child, about the support they are entitled to, and about yourself as a parent navigating a system that is not always easy.
This article is for families who received a diagnosis in the past year — whether from the NHS or privately. It covers what families typically experience in that first year, what you may still need to do, and how to build on what you have learned.
The experience of the first year after an autism diagnosis varies enormously. But certain themes come up again and again:
For most families, the diagnosis brings enormous relief. Years of wondering, of being told there is nothing wrong, of watching your child struggle without explanation — and then finally having a word for it, a framework, a community of people who understand. Many parents describe this as the most significant single moment in their parenting journey.
Alongside the relief, many parents experience a period of grief. Not grief for their child — but grief for the years before the diagnosis, for the support that was not in place, for the version of events in which this was identified earlier. This grief is normal and valid. It does not make you a bad parent. It makes you a human one.
The diagnosis is followed almost immediately by a list of things to do: tell the school, apply for DLA, request an EHCP, contact CAMHS. For parents who are already exhausted from years of fighting for recognition, this can feel crushing. If this is where you are: do one thing at a time. The list will get done.
Many parents describe the year after diagnosis as a year of becoming an accidental expert in SEND law, benefits, and the local authority EHCP process. It should not be this way — but it is, for now. Connect with other parents who have been through it. The parent carer forums, the online communities, the Facebook groups — these are where the knowledge lives.
If it has been a year since the diagnosis and any of the following have not yet been completed, now is the time:
If you have not applied for DLA for your child, do so now. Call 0800 121 4600 to request the form. DLA is not backdated further than the date of your initial call — every month you delay is money you cannot recover. For autistic children, DLA can be worth £1,500–£9,500 per year depending on need.
If your child does not have an EHCP and you believe their needs are not fully met by current school provision, submit a request to your local authority now. A year of school evidence since the diagnosis makes your case considerably stronger than it was on diagnosis day.
If your child’s EHCP was issued around the time of the diagnosis, it will be due for its first annual review. Use it. In the first year after a diagnosis, schools and local authorities often do not put the right provision in place immediately — the annual review is your opportunity to push for what is needed.
If co-occurring conditions were identified or suspected at assessment — ADHD, anxiety, sensory processing difficulties — and referrals have not yet happened, follow up with your GP now.
One year in, most parents have built significant knowledge that they did not have at diagnosis. You know your child better. You understand the system better. You have found your community.
The families who navigate the years after diagnosis most successfully tend to share a few characteristics:
If your child received a private diagnosis a year ago and you have not yet applied for DLA — please do it today. Call 0800 121 4600. You cannot backdate further than the date of your first contact. This is the single most common piece of advice that experienced parents give to newly diagnosing families.
Can I apply for DLA more than a year after diagnosis?
Yes — there is no time limit on applying for DLA after a diagnosis. However, DLA is only backdated to the date you first contact the DWP to request a form. Applying now means payments start from now — you cannot recover the year you did not apply.
My child’s needs have changed significantly since the EHCP was written — what can I do?
Request an early review. Contact your EHCP coordinator in writing, explain how your child’s needs have changed, and ask for an urgent review. Include any updated evidence — a recent school report, a letter from a professional, your own written account of what has changed.
I am exhausted and struggling myself. Where can I get support?
Carer’s Trust (carers.org) provides information on support for carers including young carers. Your GP can refer you to local support services. The National Autistic Society (autism.org.uk) has resources for parents and carers. Many parent carer forums also run peer support groups. You do not have to navigate this alone.
Should I tell my child about their diagnosis?
Most autism specialists and autistic adults advocate for honest, age-appropriate disclosure. Children who understand their diagnosis tend to develop better self-understanding, self-advocacy skills, and mental health outcomes. The National Autistic Society has resources on how to talk to your child about their diagnosis at different ages.
Written by AI Mum editorial team
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