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Autism Holiday Travel Made Easier: 7 Stress-Free Tips Every Parent Should Know

The holiday season is full of magic, connection, and joy—but for many autistic children and their families, it can also bring overwhelm. Changes in routine, louder environments, unfamiliar people, travel days, and new expectations can all make this time of year more stressful. If you’re preparing your autistic child for holiday events this season, I want you to know you’re not alone—and there are simple, evidence-based ABA strategies that can make a huge difference.

Below, I’ll walk you through practical tools you can start using today to help your child feel safe, supported, and successful during holiday parties, gatherings, and travel.

1. Start with Priming: Preparing Your Child Before the Event

A. What Priming Is — Parent-Friendly Definition

Priming means showing or telling your child what to expect before something happens. It’s an ABA strategy that reduces anxiety and increases cooperation by making unfamiliar experiences predictable.

B. How to Prime for Holiday Parties and Family Gatherings

Try simple ABA priming examples such as:

C. Travel Priming Examples

Travel can be especially overwhelming. Helping your child preview the experience can ease so much stress:

D. Scripted Priming Routine (Example)

You can use this short, repeatable script the day before or morning of an event:

“Today we are going to grandma’s house. First we will drive in the car, then we will say hello, then you can play in the living room. If you need a break, you can show your break card. We will stay until after dinner, then come home.”

2. Use Social Stories to Build Predictability

A. Why Social Stories Help During Holidays

Social stories give your child:

B. What to Include in a Holiday Social Story

Short, simple pages work best. Include:

C. Example Social Story Lines

3. Pack Sensory and Regulation Tools for Travel and Events

A. Why Sensory Tools Matter During Holidays

Holiday environments often come with:

B. What to Pack (Checklist)

Try creating a simple sensory kit that includes:

C. How to Use Sensory Tools Proactively

Think before dysregulation happens:

4. Teach and Practice Break Cards (or Asking for a Pause)

A. Why Break Cards Work

Break cards offer a powerful, functional communication tool. They help your child express overwhelm before behavior escalates.

B. How to Teach Break Cards Before the Event

C. Where to Use Break Cards During the Holidays

Break cards are great for:

D. Examples of Break Scripts

5. Script Expectations Ahead of Time

A. Why Clear Expectations Reduce Stress

When your child knows exactly what will happen, their anxiety decreases—and cooperation increases.

B. What Expectations to Script

Short and visual is best. You can script:

C. Example Parent Scripts

D. Keep Expectations Short, Visual, and Positive

Use pictures, gestures, or 1–2 step reminders.

6. Build a Reinforcement Plan (Your Secret Weapon for Holiday Success)

A. Why Reinforcement Is Essential During Holidays

Higher demands mean your child needs more support to stay regulated and successful.

B. What Reinforcement Can Look Like

C. First-Then Strategy

Simple and effective:

“First we say hi to Aunt Lisa, then you can play with your toy.”

D. Reinforcement Plan Examples

7. During the Event: Quick Real-Time ABA Tips

8. What to Do If Things Don’t Go as Planned

No matter how prepared you are, things may still feel hard. That’s okay.

Your child isn’t giving you a hard time—they’re having a hard time.

Conclusion + Compassionate Call to Action

If you’re preparing your autistic child for holiday events this year, know that even small ABA strategies can make a meaningful difference. You’re doing incredibly hard, loving work—and your child is lucky to have you.

If you’d like personalized support preparing your child for holiday transitions, I would love to help. Together, we can make this season feel calmer, more connected, and more joyful for your entire family.

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