Virginia registered 200 behavioral health providers in the latest CMS NPI update, representing 2% of the national weekly total. This modest concentration reflects Virginia's position as a mid-sized state market within the broader ABA and behavioral health landscape. The state added 1 provider this week and 107 year-to-date, signaling steady but not explosive growth in the registered workforce.

The credential mix reveals structural gaps in ABA-specific capacity. Virginia has 20 BCBAs and 39 RBTs, but only 1 dual BCBA-RBT credential holder—a pattern that suggests limited career progression from RBT to supervisor level. The broader provider population includes 20 LPCs and 12 LCSWs, indicating that mental health counselors and social workers dominate the registered base rather than board-certified behavior analysts. This credential distribution may constrain direct ABA supervision capacity relative to the scale of the RBT workforce.

Demographically, 83% of Virginia's 153 individual providers are female, with 13% male and 4% nonbinary. The workforce spans 153 individuals and 47 organizations, with Fairfax, Virginia Beach, Richmond, Norfolk, and Fredericksburg emerging as regional hubs. Notably, no single organization dominates the registry; Family Focus, LLC appears twice, but no multi-location chains typical of the national PE-backed consolidation wave register prominently in this snapshot.

Virginia's reliance on non-BCBA behavioral health credentials and sparse dual certification suggests that independent ABA service capacity may be constrained relative to demand.