BCBA vs. RBT: Understanding the Difference in Your Child’s ABA Team
When families begin ABA therapy, two roles come up almost immediately: BCBA RBT Parents often see both working with their child — but they are not interchangeable, and their responsibilities are very different.
January 21, 2026

Frank Herrera
President

BCBA (Board Certified Behavior Analyst)
- Clinical leader of the case
- Designs and updates the treatment plan
- Selects and prioritizes goals
- Reviews data and measures progress
- Makes all clinical decisions
- Supervises and trains RBTs
- Communicates treatment direction with families
RBT (Registered Behavior Technician)
- Day‑to‑day therapist
- Implements the treatment plan as written
- Teaches skills and runs sessions
- Collects data during therapy
- Shares observations with the BCBA
- Works under ongoing supervision
Key Differences at a Glance
- Clinical decisions: BCBA ✔ | RBT ✘
- Creates treatment plan: BCBA ✔ | RBT ✘
- Implements therapy: BCBA (sometimes) | RBT ✔
- Works independently: BCBA ✔ | RBT ✘
Bottom line:
BCBA = clinical brain
RBT = therapeutic hands
ESPAÑOL
Lo Que los Padres Deben Saber Sobre el Equipo ABA
BCBA (Analista de Conducta Certificado)
- Líder clínico del caso
- Diseña y actualiza el plan de tratamiento
- Selecciona y prioriza las metas
- Revisa datos y mide el progreso
- Toma todas las decisiones clínicas
- Supervisa y entrena a los RBT
- Comunica la dirección del tratamiento a la familia
RBT (Técnico Registrado en Conducta)
- Terapeuta del día a día
- Implementa el plan de tratamiento
- Enseña habilidades y realiza sesiones
- Registra datos durante la terapia
- Comparte observaciones con el BCBA
- Trabaja bajo supervisión continua
Diferencias Clave
- Decisiones clínicas: BCBA ✔ | RBT ✘
- Crea el plan de tratamiento: BCBA ✔ | RBT ✘
- Implementa la terapia: BCBA (a veces) | RBT ✔
- Trabaja de forma independiente: BCBA ✔ | RBT ✘
Mensaje final:
BCBA = liderazgo clínico
RBT = implementación diaria
This guide is provided by Kid Care Connect to help families understand roles, ask informed questions, and advocate confidently for their child.
