Grand Junction, CO — Neurodivergent-Led Nonprofit — Est. 2026
One in five people are neurodivergent. They are your patients, your customers, your students — and most of the places they go have no idea how to serve them. We do. Because we are them.
A patient flags a medication reaction. It gets used anyway. They're told to "hold still" while their body shakes. Then handed their belongings like nothing happened.
A child's documented plan says no word-flooding during meltdown. Staff do it anyway — because they've never been shown what shutdown actually looks like.
A customer needs a moment alone to regulate. Staff interpret it as a problem and escalate — making everything worse for everyone.
Surprise fees. Sensory overload. Forced small talk. Being left alone with no communication. Small things that aren't small at all.
"These aren't edge cases. These aren't difficult patients. These are Tuesdays. And the people experiencing them are done being treated like the problem."
The Autism Audit is a nonprofit organization governed by and for neurodivergent adults — owned and operated by neurodivergent adults. We are autistic, ADHD, hypermobile, sensory-different, late-diagnosed, and lifelong. We've sat in the waiting rooms. We've been the patient who couldn't speak. We know exactly where it goes wrong.
We go into businesses, medical offices, and schools and show them — not through a pamphlet, not through a webinar — but through real humans, real experiences, and honest assessment. Then we help them do better. And when they do the work, we certify it.
We're not here to shame anyone. Most of the time, people just don't know. But not knowing is no longer an excuse when the need is this urgent and the community is this ready.
Because kids deserve adults who understand them. We offer assessments, staff training, and consultation to schools and childcare providers at no cost or reduced cost — because access to this shouldn't depend on a district's budget.
Businesses that profit from serving the public pay for the audit, training, and certification. We assess their environment and processes, train their staff with lived-experience-led sessions, and certify the ones who do the work.
Community members flag businesses not to punish — but to refer them for growth. Our portal collects real neurodivergent experiences and routes them into our audit pipeline. The community tells us where the gaps are. We go fill them.
This isn't a complaint form. It's a referral. You're not here to get anyone in trouble — you're here to make your community better for the next neurodivergent person who walks through that door. Your experience is the curriculum.
The Autism Audit isn't a company with a founder at the top. It's a nonprofit organization governed by and for neurodivergent adults — meaning every member who joins has an equal stake, an equal vote, and an equal share of what we build together. No one person carries it. No one person profits off everyone else's labor.
We're currently forming our founding member group. If you're neurodivergent, you have lived experience to contribute, and this feels like something you needed to exist — you might be exactly who we're looking for.
Every Audtist has an equal voice in how this organization runs. Decisions are made collectively, not from the top down.
Major decisions are made together. One member, one vote. No one person overrides the group.
You don't need a degree. You need to have sat in the chair. That's the credential that matters here.
Schools get our services free. The businesses that profit from the public pay for it.
Our modules aren't handouts or slideshows. They're case-study-led, built entirely from real neurodivergent experiences, and designed to make staff feel the gap — not just understand it intellectually.
A patient prepared extensively for her dental appointment — warm socks, headphones, no mascara because she's learned she might cry. She flagged a medication sensitivity. It was used anyway. What staff saw and what was actually happening were two completely different things.
This module covers the full before/during/after of a real experience, the perception gap, and six concrete things any practice can do differently starting tomorrow.
View Module 01 →Target's 10/4 rule requires employees to greet every customer within 10 feet and make eye contact within 4 feet. The most upvoted response on Reddit names autism directly. This case study examines who the policy actually hurts — on both sides of the counter.
View Case Study →Coming soon — built from real experiences of neurodivergent children and their families navigating educational settings.
In DevelopmentWe're a small nonprofit in early formation. If this feels like something you've been waiting for — as a neurodivergent adult, a parent, or someone who's just done being failed by the systems around them — reach out.
Read Our Story → [email protected]We're based in Grand Junction, CO — but this work travels.