Every tool in this catalog earned its place — selected by a pediatric OT, not an algorithm.
The 2026 OT-Curated Sensory Therapy Catalog is the annual Sensory Therapy Place lineup selected by Earl Mamaril, MS, OTR/L, and our clinical team. Every product is chosen through the lens of pediatric occupational therapy practice — supporting children with sensory processing differences, autism, ADHD, primitive reflex retention, anxiety, and emotional regulation. This is not a dropshipper catalog. Every item passes a clinical selection standard before earning a place in our 2026 lineup.
Most sensory product stores stock whatever's trending on TikTok. We don't. Every tool in this catalog is selected against the same questions Earl asks when recommending equipment to a family: Does it match a real clinical need? Is the input it delivers safe and well-graded? Will it survive a sensory-seeking household? Would I recommend it to a parent I just met in clinic?
That selection process — hundreds of products considered, dozens chosen — is what makes the Sensory Therapy Place catalog different from a generic toy store or sensory marketplace. It's also why every product page includes clinical context, sensory systems supported, and an OT note from Earl.
Vestibular, proprioceptive & gross motor tools — swings, balance boards, climbing gyms.
Shop Move & Explore →Deep pressure & calming tools — weighted blankets, compression swings, sensory tunnels.
Shop Calm & Regulate →Attention & cognitive tools — fidgets, putty, focus aids for ADHD and learning.
Shop Focus & Engage →Tactile input and fine motor tools for hand strength and sensory processing.
Shop Tactile & Fine Motor →OT-curated means every product in the Sensory Therapy Place catalog is selected by a licensed pediatric occupational therapist — Earl Mamaril, MS, OTR/L — against clinical criteria including sensory input quality, safety, durability, and developmental appropriateness. Products are not chosen by trend, margin, or supplier availability. If a product wouldn't earn a recommendation in a clinical conversation, it doesn't enter the catalog.
Earl evaluates every potential product against four questions: does it match a real clinical need, is the sensory input it delivers safe and well-graded, will it survive a sensory-seeking household, and would he recommend it to a parent. Products that pass all four enter the catalog. Most products considered do not pass — which is why the catalog stays focused rather than sprawling.
Yes — the entire 2026 OT-Curated Sensory Therapy Catalog is designed to support children with autism, ADHD, sensory processing differences, primitive reflex retention, anxiety, and emotional dysregulation. Different tools support different sensory needs, so matching the right tool to your child's profile is key. Book a parent coaching call for a personalized recommendation.
Yes — Sensory Therapy Place offers parent coaching calls with Earl Mamaril, MS, OTR/L, where he reviews your child's sensory profile and recommends specific tools from the catalog. Telehealth coaching is available nationwide with no waitlist. Email service@sensorytherapyplace.com or book directly through our patient portal.
Sensory Therapy Place ships across the United States. For international shipping inquiries, please email service@sensorytherapyplace.com with your country and product interest — we evaluate international orders on a case-by-case basis depending on product size and shipping economics.
Book a parent coaching call with Earl Mamaril, MS, OTR/L. He'll walk you through the catalog and pick the right tools for your child's sensory profile.
Schedule an OT ConsultationOT-curated therapeutic tools, activities, and equipment.
Based on Winnie Dunn’s framework, identifying how your child processes sensory input is the first step in providing the right tools for emotional regulation and progress.
Needs more sensory input to register it. They might constantly touch things, chew on objects, or seem to never sit still. They use movement to stay regulated.
Under-registers input but doesn't actively seek it. They might seem checked out, miss cues, or have high pain tolerance. They need rich sensory environments to wake up the system.
Registers input very quickly and actively limits exposure. They might cover their ears, refuse certain clothing textures, or avoid crowded places to prevent overwhelm.
Highly sensitive to input but doesn't always know how to avoid it. They notice everything, get distracted easily, and can become dysregulated in busy environments.
Your sensory & nervous system guide
Hi! I'm BrainMax — your sensory & nervous system guide. Which sensory system are we supporting today? 🧠