Online Therapy in New Hampshire

Find licensed online therapists in New Hampshire who fit your needs

Looking for online therapy in New Hampshire? This page helps you compare providers licensed to work with clients in New Hampshire and offer care online. Instead of limiting your search to the closest office, you can compare options across the state and focus on fit. Use the directory filters to narrow by specialty, therapy modality, language, age group, insurance, and whether you want therapy, medication management, or both. It’s a practical way to explore care statewide and find support that fits your needs, preferences, and schedule.

Browse Online Therapists in New Hampshire

Search Results: Showing 1-12 of 35 items

Nicole Morgan

Clinical Psychologist

EMDR, Integrative
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...
Dr. Lindsey Hovan

PsyD

Therapy can be a powerful space to better understand your past, feel more grounded in the present, and make intentional changes for your future. Together, we can explore experiences that have strengthened you as well as ones that may have left you feeling...
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 ...
Dr. Jaime Kaplan

PsyD

You deserve to find your happiness now and I look forward to going on this journey with you by creating an empowering environment to help you form positive changes in your life. I am interactive and supportive in my approach of therapy. We will work toge...
Shelby Dwyer

LMHC, LCMHC, LCPC, LPC

I look forward to getting to know all parts of you at the pace that works best for you and your system. I continue to learn ways to use an anti-oppressive, antiracist-trauma-focused, identity-affirming approach to life and therapy. I’m a naturally curio...
Melissa Lavin

PsyD

I am dedicated in creating a safe place for individuals and families to understand themselves better and explore these life challenges. I've been privileged to work with individuals from all walks of life & have developed a deep respect & apprecia...
Karen Tompkins

LISCW

Cognitive Behavioral, EMDR
Kate Deatrich

PsyD

I primarily use Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), which focuses on experiencing the present moment and our own emotions without judgment, and with empathy. We then use these skills to take our own personal values as a guide for when and how to take...
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...
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...
Dr. Erin Hopkins

PsyD

Clients often say they appreciate my combination of directness and warmth. We'll explore the narratives you have about yourself and your relationships and rewrite the ones that aren't serving you. I balance insight with action.

Why Choose Online Therapy in New Hampshire?

In New Hampshire, online therapy can make it much easier to choose care based on fit because you are not limited by driving distance. If you live in a smaller town, have limited local options, or want to compare providers beyond your immediate area, telehealth opens up more choices across the state. That can be especially helpful in a place with cold, snowy winters and a relatively rural, car-dependent population. Online care also gives you more flexibility if you are balancing work, school schedules, childcare, or long travel times. As you compare therapists, look at more than specialty alone. Check whether they are taking new clients, whether they offer appointments at times you can actually keep, what insurance they accept, what self-pay costs look like, and whether they offer the kind of support you want, such as therapy, medication management, or both. Use the resources below to verify licenses or find extra support if needed.

Online Therapy in New Hampshire FAQs

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

Start broad, then narrow your results with filters for specialty, therapy modality, language, age group, insurance, and whether you want therapy or medication management. Then compare profiles for fit, session times, fees, and availability. In New Hampshire, it can also help to think about practical needs like evening appointments, lower-cost care, or whether a provider may be able to keep seeing you if you travel.

What should I ask before booking with a therapist?

A few practical questions can save you time. Ask what concerns they most often help with, whether they work with people in your situation, how online sessions usually work, what their availability looks like, what they charge, whether they take your insurance, and what happens if you are traveling or your internet cuts out. It is also a good idea to ask how often they usually schedule sessions and how they handle communication between appointments.

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

No. Your therapist does not have to live in New Hampshire. What matters is whether they are allowed to see clients who are physically in New Hampshire during the session. Be sure to tell your therapist before any appointment you plan to attend from another state. Whether they can still meet with you depends on where you are physically located that day. If you split time between states or want more flexibility while traveling, you can browse our find a therapist licensed in multiple states page.

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

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. The exact telehealth format still depends on the provider and the type of service, so it helps to check the profile or ask before booking.

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

Yes. If you want a prescriber, use the medication management filter. Medication management is usually focused on evaluation, prescriptions, dose changes, side effects, and checking whether a medication is helping. Online therapy is different. Therapy focuses more on emotions, coping skills, relationships, patterns, and behavior change. Some providers offer both, but many people work with a therapist and a separate prescriber. If you need controlled substances prescribed, check with the provider first about whether they can do that through telehealth, because some medications can involve extra rules or follow-up requirements in New Hampshire.

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

A strong first stop is your local community mental health center. New Hampshire’s community mental health system includes 10 centers with more than 40 locations statewide, and the state says mental health services are available regardless of age or ability to pay. You can also use 211 New Hampshire for referrals, National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) New Hampshire for education and support, and The Doorway if substance use support is part of what you need. The official links are in the resources below.

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

Use the New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification license lookup first. If you want the board page too, clinical social workers, clinical mental health counselors, and marriage and family therapists are regulated through the Board of Mental Health Practice. Psychologists are regulated through the Board of Psychologists. Psychiatrists and physician assistants, listed as physician associates on the board site, are regulated through the Board of Medicine. Psychiatric nurse practitioners are regulated through the New Hampshire Board of Nursing as Advanced Practice Registered Nurses. The official links are in the resources below.

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

Often, yes. Your out-of-pocket cost depends on your plan, deductible, copay or coinsurance, whether the provider is in network, and whether the specific service is covered. Before you book, ask whether the provider takes your insurance, will bill it directly, or can give you a superbill for out-of-network reimbursement. If you are paying yourself, ask about the session fee, any intake fee, sliding-scale availability, and the missed-visit policy.

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 New Hampshire that can make online therapy especially practical?

Yes. New Hampshire has cold, snowy winters, and state sources describe it as relatively rural and car-dependent. That can make online therapy especially useful if you would otherwise lose time to long drives, bad roads, or reorganizing your day around work, school, or childcare. It can also help when the provider who feels like the best fit is not nearby.

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. In New Hampshire, you can also use the state crisis support options listed in the resources below.

New Hampshire Mental Health Resources

If you or someone you know needs mental health support, these New Hampshire resources may help.
New Hampshire Rapid Response Access Point

24/7 call, text, and chat support for mental health or substance use crises.

New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services Behavioral Health

State behavioral health information, crisis links, and service navigation for adults and families.

New Hampshire Children’s Behavioral Health

State information and programs for children, teens, and families seeking behavioral health support.

New Hampshire Community Behavioral Health Association Member Locations

Find your local community mental health center and regional service locations statewide.

211 New Hampshire

Free statewide help line and searchable directory for mental health, housing, food, and other support.

The Doorway

Statewide entry point for substance use treatment, recovery support, and prevention resources.

National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) New Hampshire

Education, support, advocacy, and a resource line for New Hampshire residents.

New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification License Lookup

Verify license status for New Hampshire therapists, psychologists, and prescribers.

Board of Mental Health Practice

Board page for clinical mental health counselors, clinical social workers, and marriage and family therapists.

Board of Psychologists

Board page for licensed psychologists and related public information.

Board of Medicine

Board page for physicians, including psychiatrists, and physician associates.

New Hampshire Board of Nursing

Board page for Advanced Practice Registered Nurses, including psychiatric nurse practitioners.

New Hampshire Metro Areas Served for Online Therapy

Manchester
Nashua
Concord
Portsmouth
Dover
Rochester
Salem
Derry
Londonderry
Keene
Laconia
Lebanon
Hanover
Seacoast New Hampshire
Upper Valley New Hampshire

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. Before booking, you can also verify a provider’s license through the appropriate state licensing board.

Search for a therapist licensed in multiple states

Need urgent support? Therapy Expanded is not a crisis service. If you are in immediate danger, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room. If you need urgent mental health, suicide, domestic violence, substance use, or LGBTQIA+ support, visit our crisis and mental health resources page.