The SDSU Speech-Language Clinic in College Area has served San Diego since 1941, providing diagnostic and intervention services for children and adults with speech, language, and hearing impairments through San Diego State University's School of Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences. The clinic operates from the ground floor of the SDSU Speech, Language, and Hearing Sciences Building at the northeast corner of Lindo Paseo and Campanile Drive on the 92115 campus. Graduate student clinicians deliver all treatment under direct supervision by SDSU faculty who hold national certification from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association and California state licensure. Pediatric clients with oral motor or myofunctional dysfunction often cycle between the speech clinic and dental providers for tongue-tie evaluations, with referral coordination running through pediatric practices including BRSH+FLSS Pediatric Dentistry & Orthodontics in San Carlos. The service menu spans four tracks: adult neurogenic disorders covering post-stroke aphasia and traumatic brain injury communication deficits, adult speech and language services for voice and fluency, pediatric speech and language therapy for articulation and developmental delay, and the Accent and Communication Training program for non-native English speakers. One-to-one and group treatment configurations serve more than 1,000 clients per year across fall, spring, and summer academic sessions, with each session running approximately three months. The clinic runs on a donation-based model rather than a fixed fee schedule, removing a significant cost barrier for families navigating speech therapy in a city where private SLP sessions can exceed $200 per hour. Behavioral health providers across the College Area corridor coordinate with the clinic on patients with co-occurring cognitive and communication challenges, a referral pathway that runs through Alter Behavioral Health - San Diego for comprehensive care plans. SDSU's research faculty publish on topics ranging from bilingual language acquisition to auditory processing disorders, feeding clinical findings back into the treatment protocols used on the clinic floor. Parking permits are issued to clients prior to their first visit, with accessible spaces available in the lot behind the building and across the street in Lot S near the SDSU Transit Center.