Find Online Therapists for Anxiety

Compare licensed therapists and medication providers who treat anxiety.

Looking for help with anxiety? This page helps you find licensed mental health providers who offer online care for anxiety. Searching for an online therapist can widen your options and make it easier to find the right fit instead of limiting yourself to the closest zip code, because telehealth is based on where a provider is licensed and where you are physically located during sessions, not simply where the provider lives. Start by selecting the state or states where you plan to be during appointments. From there, you can narrow your results using filters like service type, therapy modality, language, age group, and insurance.

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. Before booking, you can verify a provider’s license through the appropriate state licensing board. 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 489 items

Paul Culbertson

LPC

I am a Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor with experience helping individuals understand the deeper roots of their challenges. My work focuses on exploring connections that often trace back to early family experiences, helping clients identify patte...
Barry Meltzer

LMHC, NCC

You’re doing the best you can with what you have—and that’s a powerful starting point. Everyone deserves access to competent, compassionate, and nonjudgmental mental health care. You're here because you're ready to grow, and I’m here to support that journ...
Donna L Murray

LPC-S, LPCC-S, LCMHC

Sessions with me feel supportive, real, and collaborative. I show up as down-to-earth and engaged, creating a space where you can be honest without fear of judgment—but also gently challenged when you feel stuck. My approach is trauma-informed and centere...
Mary Troedson

LMFT

My style is warm, collaborative, and grounded in real conversation. I’ll meet you where you are, and together we’ll explore what’s keeping you stuck and how to move forward. I integrate tools from Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), attachment-based thera...
Jessica Goulart

PMHNP

ACT, CBT, integrative
Ivy Kwong

LMFT

I have a warm, compassionate, interactive, holistic, trauma-informed, social justice-minded, and collaborative approach to therapy and coaching and have been supporting my cherished clients for over 20 years, virtually and in-person.
LaKisha Holmes

LPC Associate

My therapeutic approach is warm, collaborative, and client-centered. I draw from Person-Centered Therapy and Solution-Focused Therapy, which means I meet clients where they are, focus on their strengths, and work alongside them to identify practical steps...
Ilana Blatt-Eisengart

Ph.D.

I specialize in providing evidence-based psychotherapy, meaning that the approaches I use have been tested and backed by science. I often use a cognitive-behavioral approach (CBT) to build skills to manage difficult thoughts and behaviors. I also frequent...
Laurie Mohlman

LCSW

My approach is practical, collaborative, and grounded in helping you make sense of what you are experiencing. I specialize in working with betrayal trauma, codependency, and high conflict relationship dynamics, often involving addiction. Many clients come...
Mary Kate Beckmen

LCSW, CCTP

I became a therapist because I know what it’s like to feel overwhelmed, stuck, and unsure of what comes next. I also know how much it matters to find someone you can actually be real with. Therapy with me is warm, honest, and collaborative. I’m not here...
Angela Luna

LMFT

Sessions with me don't look like traditional therapy. We might make art, track what's happening in your body, or use Brainspotting or EMDR to process what talking hasn't been able to touch. Sometimes we laugh. That's allowed here. I bring 15 years of c...
Michelle Rosenbalm

LPC

My focus is on helping individuals navigate life transitions with a renewed sense of hope. Using strength-based, integrative modalities, I support clients facing challenges such as grief and loss, career changes, anxiety, depression, trauma, low self-este...

Frequently Asked Questions About Online Therapy for Anxiety

How do I use this page to find an online provider that specializes in anxiety?

Start with the place you will physically be during sessions. Then use the filters to narrow by service type, therapy modality, language, age group, insurance, and any preferences that matter to you. As you compare profiles, look for providers who clearly mention anxiety and note whether they speak to the kind of support you want, such as help with constant worry, panic attacks, social anxiety, or specific fears. Reaching out to a few providers can help you compare fit, availability, and next steps before booking.

What should I ask before booking?

Before you book, ask whether the provider regularly treats anxiety and what kinds of anxiety concerns they most often help with. It can also help to ask what online sessions are like, what approach they use, how they measure progress, what support looks like between sessions, whether they offer medication management or therapy only, what they charge, whether they take your insurance, and what state or states they can see you in.

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

Yes. Some providers here may offer medication management, which focuses on evaluating symptoms, talking through medication options, monitoring side effects, and adjusting treatment over time. Online therapy focuses more on patterns, emotions, coping skills, and behavior change. Some people use one or the other, while others use both. If you may need a controlled medication, ask the provider before booking whether they can prescribe it through telehealth, since there can be additional restrictions for controlled medications in virtual care.

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

Usually, the important question is not where your therapist lives. It is where you are physically located during the session. Providers generally need to be licensed or otherwise allowed to see clients where the client is at the time of the appointment, so even short trips can affect whether a session can happen. If you travel often, bring that up early and consider providers with multistate authorization. You can also review our Find a Therapist Licensed in Multiple States page.

Does insurance cover online therapy for anxiety, and how does payment usually work?

Many plans do cover online mental health care, but coverage and out-of-pocket costs vary by plan and provider. Ask whether the provider is in network, what you may owe in copays, coinsurance, or deductible costs, and whether they can give you a superbill for possible out-of-network reimbursement. If you are paying privately, ask about the full session fee, any intake fee, medication follow-up fees, and the cancellation 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. Headphones, a quiet room, and password-protected Wi-Fi can help you protect your privacy.

What if my child or teen has anxiety?

Some providers on this page work with children and teens, while others only see adults. Use the services and  age-group filters to narrow your results, then check each profile for experience with youth anxiety and family involvement. For more support, see our child or teen therapy page.

When is online therapy for anxiety not the right choice?

Online therapy can be a good option for many anxiety concerns, but it may not be the best fit when someone needs immediate crisis help, in-person assessment, or a higher level of care. If there is an urgent safety concern, call or text 988 or contact local emergency services.

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.