Online Therapy in Nevada
If you’re looking for online therapy in Nevada, this page can help you compare therapists who are licensed in Nevada and offer telehealth. Online care can make it easier to look beyond the closest office and focus on who feels like the right fit for you, whether you’re in Las Vegas, Reno, Carson City, or a smaller Nevada community. You can browse profiles, compare approaches, and narrow your search with filters for specialty, therapy modality, language, age group, insurance, and whether you want a therapist or a medication management provider.
Browse Online Therapists in Nevada
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PhD
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CPC, LPC, LMHC
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DNP, MSN, APRN, FNP-C
PsyD
Why Choose Online Therapy in Nevada?
Online therapy can be a practical option in Nevada because the state includes large metro areas as well as many rural and frontier communities. If you live outside the Las Vegas Valley or Reno-Sparks, local options may involve more travel, and even in bigger cities, traffic and scheduling can make weekly care harder to keep. Our telehealth directory lets you compare providers across the state so you can focus on fit, experience, availability, language, and cost instead of choosing only from whoever is closest. That can be especially helpful if you want a provider who understands trauma, relationship concerns, parenting stress, anxiety, depression, or care for children and teens. It can also make it easier to keep appointments when winter travel around the Reno-Tahoe area is a factor. On the payment side, Nevada Medicaid covers many telehealth services, and many commercial plans in Nevada cover online care too, though your actual cost still depends on your plan, network, deductible, and copay. You can use the resources below to verify licenses or look for extra support if needed.
Online Therapy in Nevada FAQs
How do I use this page to find the right fit for online therapy in Nevada?
Start with the filters that matter most: the issues you want help with, your language preference, whether you want talk therapy or medication management, and whether you want to use insurance or self-pay. Then read a few profiles closely. Pay attention to each provider’s specialties, therapy style, session format, availability, and fee information. It can help to shortlist two or three providers instead of contacting only one. Because this page includes therapists licensed across Nevada, you can focus on fit, timing, and cost instead of limiting yourself to whoever would be closest in person.
What should I ask before booking with a therapist?
Ask the questions that will affect whether care feels workable and comfortable for you. Good starting points are: whether they are licensed in Nevada, whether they work with the concerns you want help with, what telehealth sessions are like, what times they offer, whether they take your insurance, what self-pay costs look like, and how cancellations are handled. You can also ask how they approach treatment, whether they offer a consultation call, and what they recommend if you have trouble with internet during a session.
Does my online therapist have to live in Nevada, and what happens if I travel out of state?
Not necessarily. The bigger issue is whether the provider is allowed to treat clients who are physically in Nevada during the session. Nevada’s board for marriage and family therapists and clinical professional counselors says providers who see Nevada clients by telehealth must be licensed in Nevada, and Nevada also has pathways such as the Psychology Interjurisdictional Compact (PSYPACT) for eligible psychologists and a Counseling Compact privilege-to-practice pathway for eligible counselors. If you travel out of state, tell your provider before the appointment. In practice, permission to continue telehealth can depend on where you are physically located that day. If you split time between states or travel often, start with our find a therapist licensed in multiple states page.
What types of mental health services are available online through telehealth in Nevada?
You can use this directory to look for individual therapy, child or teen therapy, couples counseling, family therapy, group therapy, medication management, and testing and evaluations. Availability can vary by provider, age group, and whether the service is a good fit for telehealth. Some evaluations may be fully online, while others may be hybrid or include in-person pieces.
Can I find medication management providers here, and how is medication management different from online therapy?
Yes. If you want help with prescriptions, refills, side effects, or reviewing whether medication is helping, use the medication management filter. Medication management is different from therapy: it usually focuses on evaluation, prescribing, follow-up, and symptom tracking, while therapy focuses more on emotions, coping skills, patterns, relationships, and day-to-day change. Some people use one or the other, and some use both together. If you need a controlled substance prescription, ask the provider before booking whether they can handle that through telehealth, because additional prescribing rules may apply.
Where can I start if I need lower cost or public mental health support in Nevada?
A good first step is Nevada 211 for local referrals. You can also check Nevada Medicaid if you want lower-cost coverage options, and Nevada’s public behavioral health system for state-run clinics, crisis services, and community programs. The National Alliance on Mental Illness Nevada (NAMI Nevada) can also be helpful for support groups, education, and navigating what kind of help to look for next. If you need urgent crisis help, use Nevada’s crisis resources right away. The official links are in the resources below.
How do I verify a therapist or prescriber’s Nevada license?
Not necessarily. The bigger issue is whether the provider is allowed to treat clients who are physically in Nevada during the session. If you travel out of state, tell your provider before the appointment. In practice, permission to continue telehealth can depend on where you are physically located that day. If you split time between states or travel often, start with our find a therapist licensed in multiple states page.
Does insurance cover online therapy in Nevada, and how does payment usually work?
Often, yes. Nevada Medicaid covers many telehealth services, including behavioral health, and many commercial plans in Nevada cover online visits as well. What you actually pay can still vary a lot based on network status, copays, deductibles, coinsurance, and whether therapy visits and medication visits are billed differently. Before you book, it helps to ask whether the provider is in network, what a typical session costs, whether they offer self-pay or sliding-scale spots, and whether they can provide a superbill if they are out of network.
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.
Are there scheduling, regional, travel, or weather issues in Nevada that can make online therapy especially practical?
Yes. Nevada is spread out, and state rural clinics serve communities across many counties, so in some parts of the state in-person care can still mean a long drive. Online therapy can make it easier to keep care consistent if you live outside the biggest metro areas, commute between communities, or want more options than your immediate area offers. It can also be especially practical in the Reno-Tahoe region when winter weather affects travel. Even in larger metro areas, telehealth can make therapy easier to fit around work, caregiving, or school schedules.
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.
Nevada Mental Health Resources
Nevada’s Crisis Response System
Official Nevada overview of 988, mobile crisis teams, crisis stabilization, and other immediate behavioral health supports.
Nevada 211
Free statewide referral directory for mental health, housing, food, transportation, and other local services.
Nevada Medicaid
Member portal for Medicaid applications, provider search, health plans, and other public coverage information.
National Alliance on Mental Illness Nevada
State chapter offering free education, support groups, advocacy, and mental health navigation.
Nevada Clinical Behavioral Services
State-run adult mental health services, including outpatient care, medication management, mobile crisis, and rural clinics.
Nevada Board of Examiners for Social Workers
Verify Nevada social workers and review consumer information from the licensing board.
Nevada Board of Examiners for Marriage and Family Therapists and Clinical Professional Counselors
Use the Primary Source License Verification link to verify marriage and family therapists and clinical professional counselors.
Nevada Board of Psychological Examiners License Lookup
Primary source lookup for Nevada psychologists.
Nevada State Board of Nursing License and Certificate Lookup
Verify nursing and advanced practice licenses, including psychiatric nurse practitioners.
Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners
Use the board site to look up psychiatrists and physician assistants licensed through Nevada’s allopathic medical board.
Nevada State Board of Osteopathic Medicine
Use the board site to look up osteopathic psychiatrists and physician assistants licensed through Nevada’s osteopathic board.
Nevada 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.











