Smell Sensitivity (Olfactory) in Autism: A Practical Guide
Cleaning products, perfumes, certain foods, and even people can be overwhelming through smell alone. Unscented products at home are often essential.
What This Looks Like Day-to-Day
Sensory experiences for autistic kids are not just preferences. They are fundamentally different processing. What's mildly annoying to a neurotypical brain can be physically painful, frightening, or overwhelming to an autistic one.
Common Triggers
- Specific public spaces (stores, schools, gymnasiums, restaurants)
- Specific household items (vacuums, blenders, hair dryers)
- Specific transitions (changing clothes, getting wet, hair washing)
- Crowd situations (parties, family gatherings, holidays)
- Unfamiliar environments (vacations, doctor's offices)
Accommodations That Help
- Reduce the input where possible (turn down, dim, eliminate)
- Provide protection (headphones, sunglasses, soft clothing)
- Give warning before unavoidable input
- Build recovery time after sensory-heavy events
- Honor the limits - don't push through "for their own good"
What NOT to Do
- Force exposure to "desensitize" them
- Dismiss their experience as exaggeration
- Compare to neurotypical children's reactions
- Apologize for their needs to other people
- Pretend it's just a phase
Tool for this: Calm Down Corner
Our Calm Down Corner Workbook was designed by an autism mom for her own son first. Autistic kids regulate through their bodies first. A defined small space with sensory tools gives the nervous system somewhere safe to land during meltdowns.
Get Workbook Or on EtsyThe Bottom Line
Smell Sensitivity (Olfactory) doesn't get easier by ignoring it. It gets manageable by accommodating it. The earlier you build the accommodations into your family life, the less drama everyone deals with.