Online Therapy in Michigan

Find licensed online therapists in Michigan who fit your needs

If you are looking for online therapy with a provider licensed in Michigan, this page is built to help you compare your options in one place. Online care can make it easier to look beyond whoever is closest to you and focus more on fit, style, availability, and cost. You can narrow the directory by specialty, therapy modality, language, age group, insurance, and whether you want a therapist, medication management, or both. Whether you are starting care for the first time or looking for someone who feels like a better match, this page can help you sort through Michigan telehealth options more efficiently.

Browse Online Therapists in Michigan

Search Results: Showing 1-12 of 38 items

Dr. Alan Jacobson

Psy.D.

My approach to therapy is integrative, practical, and grounded in both clinical science and real-world application. I work collaboratively with clients to understand not just what is happening, but why—and how to create meaningful, lasting change. I dr...
Jordan Yarrington

LMSW-C

Strengths-based, and empowerment focused.
Dana Martinez

PsyD

Therapy is collaborative and an opportunity for healing, growth, and developing new insights. Together we can try to understand how your past impacts your current relationships and behaviors. We can work through life transitions, traumas, relationships, f...
Olga Kat. Karasina

Psy.D.

My therapeutic style is supportive, collaborative, and direct. I believe therapy works best when there is open, honest communication and when both therapist and client actively engage in the process. I provide thoughtful feedback and often incorporate in-...
Natalie Yenglin

LPC

I provide a relaxed, open, and person-centered approach to meet you where you are. I welcome clients from all cultures and backgrounds and affirm LGBTQIA+ identities. My goal is to understand your story and help you enhance your life, working together tow...
Miranda Denison

PhD

Therapy with me is collaborative, thoughtful, and grounded. I bring warmth and directness to help folks slow down, untangle and understand patterns, and make meaningful changes. While my sessions are structured enough to feel productive, I also incorporat...
Carly Tocco

PhD

I make sure to be relatable in the room while addressing symptoms second, and the person first. We are more than our list of symptoms. I cherry pick skills from multiple different modalities and use my clincal judgement to decide when the patient needs to...
Dr. Bethany Friedman

PSYD, CEDS

Do thoughts about food, your body, or your worth consume you, leaving you exhausted and uncertain about what comes next? Are you just trying to stay afloat while everyone else seems to have it figured out? Are your emotions so intense that it feels like y...
Julia Vahlsing

PsyD

By virtue of a diverse training background, Dr. Vahlsing utilizes a variety of treatment orientations in her approach to therapy designed to meet the specific needs of individuals or families seeking care, although she is grounded in a cognitive-behaviora...
Murphy Hall, LCSW, LMSW

LCSW, LMSW

I integrate a range of evidence-based modalities, including: Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Prolonged Exposure, Cognitive Processing Therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, Exposure Response Prev...
Amy Kreins

PhD

I deliver cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and other evidence-based treatments to adult, seniors, and teens with a wide range of emotional, behavioral, and adjustment problems, such as anxiety, stress, depression, and relationship problems. I try to bui...
Ashley Claiborne

PsyD

Imagine having the strategies to create healthy boundaries, a sustainable work-life balance and having control over your life. You show up in the world with authentic confidence in your ability to make decisions. You release all the unnecessary stressful ...

Why Choose Online Therapy in Michigan?

Online therapy can be especially practical in Michigan because the state is spread across two peninsulas, with large metro areas, smaller communities, and long drives between many parts of the state. That matters when you want to choose a provider based on fit instead of just office location. If you live in northern Michigan or the Upper Peninsula, virtual care can widen your options. It can also make appointments easier to keep during seasons when lake-effect snow or other winter travel issues make driving harder. Even Mackinac Bridge travel can sometimes be affected by weather-related conditions, which makes online sessions useful as a backup or a primary format. Online care also makes it simpler to compare evening availability, session fees, insurance options, and whether a provider offers therapy, medication management, or support for a specific concern. As you browse, pay attention to the provider’s approach, schedule, payment options, and how easy it feels to imagine talking with them regularly. You can use the official resources below to verify licenses or find extra support.

Online Therapy in Michigan FAQs

How do I use this page to find the right fit for online therapy in Michigan?

Start by thinking about what you want help with most right now, then use the filters to narrow your options. You might filter by specialty, therapy style, language, age group, insurance, or whether you want therapy, medication management, or both. After that, compare a few profiles side by side. Look for someone who works with your concerns, offers appointments at times you can actually attend, and explains their approach in a way that feels clear and comfortable. A good fit is not just about credentials. It is also about whether you feel understood, whether the logistics work for you, and whether you can picture showing up consistently.

What should I ask before booking with a therapist?

Helpful questions include: What concerns do you most often help with? Do you work with people in my situation? What does online therapy with you usually look like? What are your fees, insurance options, and cancellation policy? How soon can I get an appointment? What happens if I am traveling outside Michigan when a session is scheduled? If I may need medication, testing, or other services, can you help with referrals? A short consultation can tell you a lot about whether the fit feels right.

Does my online therapist have to live in Michigan, and what happens if I travel out of state?

No. Your therapist does not have to live in Michigan. What usually matters more is where you are physically located during the session. Michigan telemedicine guidance says the professional must be licensed, registered, or otherwise authorized in the state where the patient is located, and federal telehealth guidance also tells providers to verify patient location before the visit. So if you travel outside Michigan, even for vacation, work, or school, your therapist may not be able to keep seeing you unless they are also allowed to practice in that state. If you regularly split time between states, start with our find a therapist licensed in multiple states page and ask about travel before you book.

What types of mental health services are available online through telehealth in Michigan?

Depending on the provider, you may be able to find individual therapy, child or teen therapy, couples counseling, family therapy, group therapy, medication management, and testing and evaluations. The easiest way to narrow your options is to filter by service type, age group, specialty, and insurance, then read profiles closely to see how each provider works online.

Can I find medication management providers here, and how is medication management different from online therapy?

Yes. If you want help with psychiatric medication, use the medication management filter. Medication management is different from therapy: it focuses more on assessment, prescribing when appropriate, monitoring side effects, and adjusting medication, while therapy focuses more on emotions, coping skills, behavior patterns, and relationships. Some people want one provider for therapy and a different provider for medication. Others want a practice that can coordinate both. If you need controlled substances prescribed, check with the provider before booking about whether they can do that through telehealth, because there may be additional federal restrictions and clinical requirements for those prescriptions.

Where can I start if I need lower cost or public mental health support in Michigan?

A strong place to start is your local Community Mental Health Services Program. Michigan describes these programs as the entry point into the public mental health system, including crisis response and mental health services connected to Medicaid, MIChild, and the Adult Benefit Waiver. If you are not sure where to begin, you can also call or text the Michigan Crisis and Access Line at 988, use Michigan 211 to find nearby services, or look at National Alliance on Mental Illness Michigan for education and support. The official links are in the resources below.

How do I verify a therapist or prescriber’s Michigan license?

Use the Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs public license search to check whether a license is active and in good standing. If you want profession-specific information, the official board pages in the resources below can help for social work, counseling, marriage and family therapy, psychology, medicine, and nursing. For psychiatrists, physician assistants, and psychiatric nurse practitioners, the statewide license search is usually the fastest place to start. The official links are in the resources below.

Does insurance cover online therapy in Michigan, and how does payment usually work?

Often, yes, but it depends on your plan. In Michigan, telemedicine services are generally subject to the terms of your health plan, which means coverage, copays, deductibles, and network rules can vary from one plan to another. Michigan Medicaid and the Healthy Michigan Plan cover telemedicine in many situations, but the exact service still has to fit program rules. Before you book, ask whether the provider takes your plan, what your expected out-of-pocket cost may be, and whether the practice can help you confirm benefits ahead of time.

What technology or privacy setup do I need for virtual sessions?

For most online therapy appointments, it is best to meet from a secure location with privacy and a reliable internet connection. A computer or laptop is usually ideal, though a phone or tablet may also work depending on the provider and platform. Most sessions happen by video, but depending on the provider and service, phone calls, texting, secure messaging, or email may also be part of telehealth or follow-up communication. Many providers also have their own policies about where sessions can take place, so it is best to check ahead of time if privacy or location may be an issue. Michigan telemedicine rules also emphasize that patients should be in a safe and private environment for the visit.

Are there scheduling, regional, travel, or weather issues in Michigan that can make online therapy especially practical?

Yes. Michigan’s geography can make online care especially useful. The state spans two peninsulas, and people in northern Michigan or the Upper Peninsula may have fewer nearby in-person options or longer drives to appointments. Winter can add another layer: lake-effect snow is common around the Great Lakes, and Mackinac Bridge travel can sometimes be affected by weather or falling ice. Even in larger metro areas, virtual sessions can simply be easier to fit around commuting, school pickup, or work shifts. If you want fewer missed appointments and more flexibility, online therapy can be a very practical choice in Michigan.

When is online therapy not the right choice?

Online therapy may not be the best fit if you are in immediate crisis, need emergency support, require a higher level of care, or do not have a private space or secure internet connection for sessions. In those situations, in-person services or local crisis resources may be more appropriate. If you are in immediate danger or need urgent help, contact local emergency services or call the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline right away.

Michigan Mental Health Resources

If you or someone you know needs mental health support, these Michigan resources may help.
Michigan Crisis and Access Line (MiCAL)

Statewide crisis and access line. Call or text 988 for immediate support and help finding care in Michigan.

Community Mental Health Services Programs

Public entry point for crisis care, Medicaid-related behavioral health access, and local county or regional mental health services.

Michigan Peer Warmline

Statewide non-crisis peer support for people living with ongoing mental health or substance use challenges.

National Alliance on Mental Illness Michigan

Education, support, advocacy, and local affiliate connections for individuals and families affected by mental illness.

Michigan 211

Connects you with local help for counseling, housing, food, transportation, bills, and other support needs.

Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs License Search

Official public lookup to verify therapists, psychologists, physicians, nurses, and physician assistants.

Michigan Board of Social Work

Licensing and board information for social workers in Michigan.

Michigan Board of Counseling

Licensing and board information for professional counselors in Michigan.

Michigan Board of Marriage and Family Therapy

Licensing and board information for marriage and family therapists in Michigan

Michigan Board of Psychology

Licensing and board information for psychologists in Michigan.

Michigan Board of Medicine

Licensing and board information for physicians, including many psychiatrists.

Michigan Board of Nursing

Licensing and board information for nurses, including psychiatric nurse practitioners.

Michigan Metro Areas Served for Online Therapy

Detroit
Grand Rapids
Ann Arbor
Lansing
Flint
Kalamazoo
Traverse City
Saginaw
Bay City
Midland
Muskegon
Dearborn
Warren
Sterling Heights
Marquette

Need a therapist who can see you across state lines?

With online therapy, the state you are in during your appointment can affect which providers are able to see you. Providers must be licensed in the state where you are located at the time of the session. That means a therapist who can see you in one state may not be able to keep working with you if you move, travel, go away to college, or split time between homes. Therapy Expanded makes that search easier by helping you find online providers who are licensed in the states where you may need care.

Search for a therapist licensed in multiple states