Online Therapy in Missouri
Looking for online therapy in Missouri? This page is here to help you find therapists and prescribers who are licensed to provide telehealth care in Missouri. Whether you live in St. Louis, Kansas City, Springfield, Columbia, or a smaller community, online care can make it easier to compare options across the state and focus on fit instead of choosing the closest provider. You can narrow your search using filters for specialty, therapy modality, language, age group, insurance, and whether you want a therapist or medication management provider. It is a practical way to find care that matches your needs, schedule, and budget.
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Why Choose Online Therapy in Missouri?
Online therapy can be a very practical option in Missouri because the best therapist for you may not be at the closest office. That matters in a state where some people live near major population centers and others may have fewer local options, longer drives, or tighter appointment availability. Online care can give you a wider pool of therapists to compare, which can make it easier to find someone who works with your concerns, offers the kind of therapy you want, and has session times that fit around work, school, or family responsibilities. It can also help when travel is the hard part. Missouri’s emergency management agency says ice storms, tornadoes, severe storms, and flooding are common, and severe winter weather can make driving difficult. As you compare providers, pay attention to fit, availability, insurance, self-pay rates, and session logistics. You can use the resources below to verify licenses or find extra support if needed.
Online Therapy in Missouri FAQs
How do I use this page to find the right fit for online therapy in Missouri?
Start with the kind of help you want, then narrow your options with filters. You can search by specialty, therapy modality, language, age group, insurance, and whether you want therapy or medication management. It often helps to begin with a broader statewide search instead of only your town, because online care lets you compare Missouri-licensed providers across different parts of the state. After that, read profiles closely for experience, style, fees, and scheduling so you can choose someone who feels like a good match for you.
What should I ask before booking with a therapist?
Ask whether they work with your concerns, what ages they see, what a first session is like, whether they offer video or phone appointments, what openings they usually have, whether they take your insurance, what self-pay costs look like, and how cancellations work. If you think you may need medication, ask whether they prescribe or coordinate with a medication provider. If you travel often or spend time near a state line, ask what happens if you are outside Missouri on appointment day.
Does my online therapist have to live in Missouri, and what happens if I travel out of state?
Your therapist does not necessarily have to live in Missouri, but to treat you while you are physically in Missouri, they generally need to be licensed here. In practice, what matters most is where you are during the appointment. If you travel out of state, tell your provider before the session. They may need to pause care for that visit or only continue if they are also licensed where you are. If you split time between states, it can help to look for providers with multi-state licensure. You can browse that option here: Find a therapist licensed in multiple states.
What types of mental health services are available online through telehealth in Missouri?
Depending on the provider and your needs, you may find individual therapy, child or teen therapy, couples counseling, family therapy, group therapy, medication management, and testing and evaluations. Availability can vary by clinician, age group, and whether the service is a good fit for telehealth, so filters can save you time when you know what kind of care you want.
Can I find medication management providers here, and how is medication management different from online therapy?
Yes. If you are looking for a prescriber, use the medication management filter. Medication management is focused on psychiatric evaluation, prescriptions, dose changes, side effects, and follow-up visits. Online therapy is focused on talk therapy, coping skills, patterns, goals, and emotional support. Some clinicians offer both, but many people work with a therapist and a separate prescriber. If you need controlled substances prescribed, check with the provider before booking about whether they can do that through telehealth in your situation, because there may be additional restrictions depending on the medication and visit type.
Where can I start if I need lower cost or public mental health support in Missouri?
A strong place to start is Missouri’s community mental health center system and the state treatment locator. Those resources can help you find county or regional public behavioral health services, and Missouri says each listed community mental health center has a 24-hour crisis hotline and mobile response capability. For support groups, family education, and community support, National Alliance on Mental Illness Missouri can also be helpful. If you need urgent emotional support, Missouri 988 is available 24/7. The official links are in the resources below.
How do I verify a therapist or prescriber’s Missouri license?
Start with the Missouri Division of Professional Registration Licensee Search, which the state describes as primary source verification. For profession-specific resources, use the Missouri board pages for social workers, professional counselors, marital and family therapists, psychologists, the Board of Registration for the Healing Arts for psychiatrists and physician assistants, and the Missouri State Board of Nursing or Nursys for psychiatric nurse practitioners. The official links are in the resources below.
Does insurance cover online therapy in Missouri, and how does payment usually work?
Often, yes. Missouri law says many state-regulated health plans cannot deny a covered service just because it is provided through telehealth, and the cost-sharing generally should not be higher than if that same covered service were provided in person. Missouri Medicaid also reimburses telehealth when program rules are met. Your actual cost still depends on your plan, whether the provider is in network, and what service is being billed. Before your first appointment, ask about copay, deductible, self-pay rate, sliding scale spots, and whether the provider can offer a superbill if you need one.
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. Missouri law allows telehealth to use audiovisual and audio-only technologies, and federal telehealth guidance recommends secure communications that protect your privacy. Most sessions happen by video, but depending on the provider and service, phone calls or secure messaging 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 if privacy or location may be an issue. If weather or internet outages are common where you live, ask whether the provider has a backup phone plan.
Are there scheduling, regional, travel, or weather issues in Missouri that can make online therapy especially practical?
Yes. Missouri’s Office of Rural Health and Primary Care says rural and underserved communities can face access challenges, and the state also notes that sustaining health care systems in rural communities can be difficult. That can make online therapy especially useful if the right provider is not close by, or if getting to an office would mean extra time off work, child care planning, or a long drive. Online care can also help when Missouri weather gets in the way. The state emergency management agency says ice storms, tornadoes, severe storms, and flooding are common, and severe winter weather can create dangerous driving conditions.
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 National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 9-8-8 right away. Missouri residents can also call or text Missouri 988 for free, confidential support any time.
Missouri Mental Health Resources
Missouri 988
State crisis line for free, confidential 24/7 call, text, or chat support.
Missouri Department of Mental Health Crisis Services
Explains crisis response options, including mobile crisis response and stabilization services.
Community Mental Health Centers
County and regional public mental health providers across Missouri.
Locate Treatment Services
State treatment locator for behavioral health services and local programs.
National Alliance on Mental Illness Missouri (NAMI Missouri)
Free support, education, support groups, and family resources statewide.
Missouri Division of Professional Registration Licensee Search
Primary source verification tool for many Missouri licenses.
Committee for Social Workers
Board page for Missouri social worker licensure and board information.
Committee for Professional Counselors
Board page for Missouri professional counselor licensure and board information.
State Committee of Marital & Family Therapists
Board page for Missouri marriage and family therapist licensure and board information.
Committee of Psychologists
Board page for Missouri psychologist licensure and board information.
Missouri Board of Registration for the Healing Arts
Board page for physicians, including psychiatrists, plus links for physician assistants.
Missouri State Board of Nursing
Board page and verification access for nursing licenses and advanced practice nursing recognition.
Missouri Metro Areas Served for Online Therapy
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.











