Sensory-Friendly Activities in Staten Island, New York

Compare listings, contacts, source links, and last-checked dates for this location and category.

At a glance

Checked listings

4

Places to ask

0

Latest source check

May 15, 2026

What to compare

Practical details

Ages, schedule, cost, and registration.

Freshness

Use source links and last-checked dates.

Fit

Confirm current support directly.

Related searches near Staten Island

These wording variations keep the same area and point to relevant category pages when available.

Why the list may look smaller than expected

We show checked public information first. Some real options may be missing until their program details can be reviewed from a public source.

More about our listing standard

Google or map/contact matches can help confirm contact details, but they do not prove a program offers adaptive support by themselves.

How we check listings

Showing 4 listings

Share this shortlist with a parent, teacher, therapist, coach, or provider who may know the family.

Source checked

Community Resources Staten Island Recreation

Community Resources Staten Island

Staten Island, New York - Richmond County

Community Resources Staten Island offers adult recreation for people age 18 and older who live at home, with weekday afternoon programming, Wednesday social night, Saturday weekend recreation, cooking classes, movie nights, chorus, music sessions, outings, and creative workshops.

Last checked

May 15, 2026

Program details

1 found

Area

New York City

Sensory-Friendly Activities
Source checked

Eden II Family Support Services Recreation

Eden II Programs

Staten Island, New York - Richmond County

Eden II Family Support Services lists Staten Island recreation options for people with autism, including adult recreation, after school recreation, holiday recreation, respite services, socialization programs, overnight trips, and summer day camp.

Last checked

May 15, 2026

Program details

1 found

Area

New York City

Sensory-Friendly ActivitiesSpecial Needs Summer Camps
Source checked

Staten Island Children's Museum Accessibility Resources

Staten Island Children's Museum

Staten Island, New York - Richmond County

Staten Island Children's Museum publishes accessibility resources for children and families, including wheelchair access details, admissions-desk guidance, and an Accessibility Guide for Kids and Families that previews exhibits, sounds, and quiet areas.

Last checked

May 15, 2026

Program details

1 found

Area

New York City

Sensory-Friendly Activities
Source checked

Staten Island JCC Marvin's Camp

Joan & Alan Bernikow JCC of Staten Island

Staten Island, New York - Richmond County

Staten Island JCC Marvin's Camp provides summer camp divisions for children and teens ages 6 to 21 with special needs, including swimming, sports, music, arts and crafts, trips, posted 2026 calendars, interviews for new campers, and direct camp contacts.

Last checked

May 15, 2026

Program details

1 found

Area

New York City

Special Needs Summer CampsAdaptive SportsSensory-Friendly Activities

Related resources

Common questions

What does this Sensory-Friendly Activities in Staten Island, New York page include?

This page includes checked public listings with source links and last-checked dates, plus some places to ask when public information suggests a lead that still needs direct confirmation.

Why might a provider be missing?

A provider may be missing if we have not found enough public program detail yet, if the source is unclear, or if the information still needs review before families rely on it.

Are listings ranked or reviewed for quality?

No. Listings are informational. Inclusive Programs Guide does not rank providers, evaluate quality, guarantee safety, or determine fit.

What makes an activity sensory-friendly?

Public pages may mention quieter sound, lower lights, smaller crowds, sensory kits, social stories, trained staff, or advance planning information. Families should still confirm details directly.

Does autism-friendly mean the activity is a fit?

No. Treat autism-friendly wording as a starting point. Families should confirm sensory setup, communication support, supervision, crowd level, staff preparation, and fit directly.

Inclusive Programs Guide is an informational directory based on publicly available information and provider-submitted updates. We do not endorse, rank, medically evaluate, assess quality, guarantee safety, confirm credentials, or determine suitability of any provider, program, accommodation, or activity. Program details may change. Families should contact providers directly to confirm current availability, eligibility, support level, staff training, safety policies, cost, schedule, and fit before enrolling.