Find Online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) Therapists

Browse mental health providers offering Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Online

This page helps you find licensed mental health providers who offer online therapy using Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). If you want a practical, goal-focused approach, telehealth can make it easier to compare therapists beyond the nearest zip code and find someone who fits your needs. Online therapy also depends on where a provider is licensed and where you are physically located during each session. Start by selecting the state or states where you’ll be during appointments. Then narrow your results with filters like service type, age group, language, insurance, and therapy approach to find care that works for you.

What to Know About Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) Therapy

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is a structured, present-focused therapy that helps you notice patterns in your thoughts, emotions, and behaviors and work on changes that feel realistic in daily life. In online CBT sessions, you might talk through a recent situation, identify unhelpful thinking patterns, practice coping tools, or set small goals to try between appointments. People often look for CBT when they want support with anxiety, stress, depression, panic, worry, low motivation, sleep problems, or habits that keep them stuck. If you want a therapy style that is active, organized, and focused on building skills you can use outside sessions, CBT may be worth exploring.

What to Look For in an Online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) Therapist

Not every therapist who mentions Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) uses it the same way. Some keep sessions very structured and skill-based, while others blend CBT into a broader therapy style. As you compare profiles, look for signs of fit in how the therapist describes their approach, pacing, and communication style. You may want someone who is direct and goal-oriented, or someone who uses CBT more flexibly and collaboratively. Before booking, ask practical questions about what sessions usually look like, whether they suggest between-session exercises, how they track progress, and how they adapt CBT for your specific concerns.

Start Here: Select the Location Where You’ll Attend Sessions

Provider availability depends on where you are located during your sessions. If you may attend sessions from more than one state, it is important to make sure your provider is authorized to work with you wherever you are physically located during the appointment. If you travel often or split time between different states, see our guide to finding a therapist licensed in multiple states for more information.

Start by selecting the state(s) you will be in during your sessions
States Licensed In

Search Results: Showing 1-12 of 370 items

Lisa Marie Persaud

LPC- 24703

My approach is intuitive, integrative, collaborative, heart-centered, culturally-sensitive, practical, and trauma-informed, and is guided by process philosophy, transpersonal science, psychedelic science, and ecopsychological perspectives. I view each cli...
Sarah Czaja

MHC-LP

As a therapist, my goal is to create a warm, supportive space where you feel safe to explore your thoughts, emotions, and experiences. When we begin working together, I take time to understand what brings you to therapy, what matters most to you, and how ...
Andrea Kremer

LMHC

My approach to therapy is warm, compassionate, and nonjudgmental. I strive to create a safe and welcoming space, in which you can feel heard and understood. Together, we'll explore the thoughts, feelings, and habits that might be making you feel anxious ...
Candice Smith

LPC

Person-centered, CBT related interventions, supportive and strengths based.
Page McIntyre

LMHC, LCAT

My approach is warm, creative, engaging, and integrative. My work is rooted in psychodynamic, relational, and trauma-informed perspectives. I offer a holistic and evidence-based approach to treatment and tend to use Cognitive Behavioral, ACT, EMDR, parts ...
katheryn brauckmann

LCSW

I view your life as a narrative shaped by everything you’ve carried—trauma, grief, and joy alike. While what you’ve been through matters deeply, it is not your identity. I offer a compassionate, down-to-earth approach to help you navigate your most diffic...
Megan Hunt

LMHC

My approach to therapy is collaborative, practical, and tailored to each client’s needs. I believe therapy works best when clients feel safe, understood, and actively involved in the process. I incorporate evidence-based techniques such as Cognitive Behav...
Angela Dube

LMFT

Therapy with me always starts with getting to know one another in a compassionate, non-judgmental way so we can build a trusting relationship in order to grow and heal. I use person-centered and family systems approaches combined with mindfulness and C...
Catherine Sikelianos-Carter

LCAT, ATR-BC, LCMHC

My client-led approach includes the creative arts. Providing a creative space to process grief and trauma unlocks pathways to healing and skill building that traditional talk therapy can miss. With a strong therapeutic alliance, a safe environment to feel...
Jehan Knight

LMHC-QS, LOC,NCC

My counseling style can be described as warm, empathetic, and interactive as I believe in showing each client kindness, respect and compassion. It is also my belief that the key to creating and maintaining a collaborative therapeutic relationship is to pr...
Erica Brown

LMHC, LPC

My work is depth-oriented, relational, and grounded in understanding how your current patterns developed. I don’t just focus on symptom relief, I help you make sense of why you think, feel, and relate the way you do. Therapy with me is both validating and...
Ali Pickover

PhD

Many people come to me after therapy that focused heavily on thoughts, context, or understanding the past, but did not lead to real change. My work focuses more directly on emotion and physical experience. Often, the first explanation we give for what ...

Frequently Asked Questions about Online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

How do I use this page to find an online therapist who offers Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)?

Start by choosing the state or states where you expect to be during sessions, since telehealth availability depends on licensure and your physical location at the time of care. Then use filters to narrow by service type, age group, language, insurance, and therapy approach. Read profiles closely to see how each therapist describes using CBT, what concerns they work with, and whether their style feels like a match.

What should I ask before booking?

Ask how the therapist uses Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) in online sessions, what concerns they commonly help with, and how structured their approach tends to be. It can also help to ask how often they meet with clients, whether they suggest exercises between sessions, how they handle scheduling and cancellations, and whether they take your insurance or offer self-pay options. Small questions often make choosing easier.

Does my therapist have to be licensed in my state, and what happens if I travel out of state?

In general, your therapist needs to be allowed to provide care in the state where you are physically located during the session, not just where you live. That matters if you travel, split time between states, or move. A therapist may be able to see clients in more than one state, but it depends on their license and the states involved. You can learn more on our find a therapist licensed in multiple states page.

What does online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) therapy usually look like?

Online CBT often feels practical and focused. You and your therapist may talk through a current problem, notice patterns in thoughts and reactions, and choose a skill or strategy to practice in daily life. Some therapists use worksheets, tracking tools, or brief exercises between sessions, while others keep it more conversational. The exact format varies, so it helps to ask how they usually run CBT online.

How can I tell whether a therapist is really a good fit for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) therapy?

Look beyond whether a profile simply lists CBT. A good fit usually means the therapist’s style matches what you want from care. Some people want clear structure, feedback, and concrete tools. Others want CBT blended with a warmer, less rigid approach. Compare profiles for tone, areas of focus, and session style, then ask questions before booking to see whether their version of CBT fits your goals.

Does insurance cover online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) therapy, and how does payment usually work?

Coverage often depends more on the therapist, your plan, and the telehealth benefit than on CBT alone. Some therapists are in-network, while others provide self-pay rates and a superbill you may be able to submit for reimbursement. Before booking, check whether the therapist accepts your insurance, what your out-of-pocket cost may be, and whether online mental health visits are covered under your plan.

When is online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) therapy not the right choice?

Online CBT may not be the best fit during an immediate crisis, when emergency support is needed, when a higher level of care is required, or when you do not have a private space or reliable internet connection. It may also feel frustrating if you do not want a goal-focused approach right now. If you are in immediate danger or need urgent help, contact local emergency services or call or text 988 right away.

How structured or homework-based is online CBT?

It depends on the therapist. Some offer a very structured form of CBT with clear goals, practice exercises, and check-ins between sessions. Others use CBT tools more loosely and keep sessions more discussion-based. If you have strong preferences, ask directly. Knowing whether a therapist expects regular between-session practice can help you choose someone whose pace and style feel realistic for you.

Can online CBT help if I tend to overthink or get stuck in negative thought patterns?

Many people look for CBT for exactly that reason. CBT is often used to help people notice repeated thinking patterns, step back from them, and respond in a more balanced way. That does not mean every therapist will approach overthinking the same way. Read profiles for language about worry, rumination, anxiety, self-criticism, or coping tools, and ask how they work with those concerns online.