Autism with Intellectual Disability
Can a Child Have Both Autism and Intellectual Disability?
Yes, a child can have both autism and an intellectual disability — they are distinct profiles that often co-occur. This is not two problems stacked together but one child whose support plan needs to address both communication and learning. With the right early support, children make steady progress across both.
Many parents hear two terms in one appointment — autism and intellectual disability — and wonder whether a child can really have both. The honest, hopeful answer is yes, and it changes nothing about your child's worth or potential.
In short
Yes — a child can have both autism and an intellectual disability, and this is more common than many families realise. They are two distinct profiles of development that can occur together: autism describes differences in social communication and in restricted, repetitive interests, while intellectual disability describes broader challenges in learning, reasoning and everyday adaptive skills. When both are present, it does not mean two problems stacked on top of each other — it means one child whose support plan simply needs to address both areas together. With the right early support, children grow, learn and gain independence across both.How the two relate
Autism and intellectual disability are recognised as separate conditions in international frameworks, but they frequently co-occur — a meaningful proportion of autistic children also have an intellectual disability, and the two influence how a child communicates, plays and copes day to day. This is why a thoughtful assessment looks at the whole child rather than chasing a single label:- Communication and social connection — how your child shares attention, uses words or gestures, and relates to others.
- Thinking and learning — how your child reasons, solves problems and remembers.
- Everyday living (adaptive) skills — dressing, eating, safety awareness, and managing daily routines.
- Sensory and emotional regulation — how your child responds to sound, texture, change and big feelings.
When both profiles are understood clearly, therapy can be pitched at exactly the right level — neither over-reaching nor under-supporting — so progress is steady and your child stays motivated.
What this means for support
A combined profile is not a ceiling. It is a map. Speech therapy, occupational therapy and structured early-learning approaches can run alongside one another, each tuned to where your child stands today. Goals are broken into small, achievable steps, and the plan grows as your child grows.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are established only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an online form, an app or this page. A structured, clinician-administered assessment looks at both communication and learning together, so your child's starting point is captured accurately and the plan fits the whole child. Across [our network](/) of 70+ centres, families find that clarity early is what turns worry into a workable path forward.Trusted sources
World Health Organization ICD-11, which describes autism spectrum disorder and disorders of intellectual development as distinct but co-occurring conditions; WHO ICF framework on functioning and support; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on developmental assessment.Next step — If you're seeing differences in both how your child communicates and how they learn, [book a Pinnacle developmental assessment](/) so both can be understood together.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch how your child both communicates (words, gestures, sharing attention) and learns and copes with everyday tasks (dressing, safety, routines). Persistent differences across both areas, seen in more than one setting, are worth discussing with a clinician.
Try this at home
Pitch tasks at small, achievable steps and celebrate each one. Pairing a clear word or gesture with a daily routine — like 'shoes on' — supports both communication and learning at the same time.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is it common for autism and intellectual disability to occur together?
Yes. A meaningful proportion of autistic children also have an intellectual disability. They are recognised as distinct conditions but frequently co-occur, which is why a good assessment looks at both communication and learning.
Does having both mean my child won't make progress?
Not at all. A combined profile is a map for support, not a ceiling. With therapy tuned to where your child stands today — broken into small, achievable steps — children grow, learn and gain independence across both areas.
How is this assessed?
Through a structured, clinician-administered assessment at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre that looks at communication, thinking and learning, and everyday living skills together. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only under qualified clinician care.