Find Online Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Therapists

Compare licensed online Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) therapists by state, insurance, age group, language, and therapy type to find care that fits your needs.

This page helps you find licensed mental health providers who offer online care using Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT). Telehealth can make it easier to compare therapists beyond the nearest zip code, so you can look for someone whose approach, availability, and experience feel like a better fit. Online therapy depends on where the provider is licensed and where you are physically located during sessions. Start by selecting the state or states where you will be during appointments. From there, you can narrow your results by service type, age group, language, insurance, therapy type, and other filters.

What to Know About Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Therapy

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is a structured therapy approach that helps people build skills for handling intense emotions, improving relationships, managing stress, and making choices that line up with their goals. In online DBT therapy, sessions may include talking through current challenges, learning practical skills, tracking patterns, and practicing new ways to respond when emotions feel overwhelming. Some people look for DBT when they are dealing with mood swings, impulsive behavior, self-criticism, relationship conflict, trauma-related stress, or difficulty coping day to day. DBT may be worth exploring if you want therapy that is active, skills-based, and focused on helping you respond differently in hard moments.

What to Look For in an Online Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Therapist

When comparing online DBT therapists, look for someone whose style feels clear, respectful, and steady. DBT can be structured, so it may help to ask how sessions are paced, whether skills practice or worksheets are included, and how the therapist supports clients between sessions. Not every therapist who references DBT offers it the same way. Some provide comprehensive DBT programs, while others use DBT-informed skills within individual therapy. Review therapist profiles for experience with your concerns, age group, and goals. Before booking, ask practical questions about session format, expectations, insurance, availability, and how they adapt DBT for telehealth.

Start Here: 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. 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 179 items

Elena Conte

LCSW

It's my hope that sitting with me feels like grounded, comforting conversation. Some days, we might roll up our sleeves and use EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) to take the sting out of painful memories so they no longer flood your pre...
Reesa Morala | Intensive Couples Therapy

LMFT

Intensive Couples Therapy gives you real-time practice on the issues that matter most, so you can make progress and feel the difference right away. I'm not here to be your forever therapist—I'm here to help you create change that lasts long after our inte...
Anna Cimburek

MSW, LSWAIC, LMSW

My approach is relational and somatic, grounded in the belief that healing happens through connection—with yourself, with your body, and with another steady presence. I also draw from DBT to help you build practical skills for navigating intense emotions,...
Amy Castongia

LCMHC, LPC

My approach is warm, steady, and practical. Many clients come in exhausted by anxiety, overthinking, low mood, or guilt around food and body image. Sessions feel supportive and structured: we check in, slow the moment down, name what is happening in your ...
Tami Ward

LMHC

I am a relational therapist where I feel the relationship is the therapy. I work with people who feel deeply --people who are insightful, caring and often very aware of their patters but still feel stuck in them. Many of my clients struggle with emotion...
Kelly Pohlig M.S., LPC, NCC

LPC

I work collaboratively with you to create positive changes in your life, resolve challenges, and move toward goals that feel meaningful and authentic. I believe it is important to understand who you are as a whole person, not just a diagnosis or label. My...
Anabel Reynolds

LCSW

I blend trauma-informed care with narrative insight integrating tools from EFT and DBT. Therapy with me isn’t about labeling the glass as half full or half empty, it’s about recognizing that it’s refillable, and exploring what systems, relationships, or i...
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...
Vivian Hwang Daniel

LCSW

I utilize a trauma-informed and culturally responsive approach as we work together on healing from the exhaustion from being constantly on alert and taking care of everything and everyone. You can learn how to break generational patterns of overwhelm, g...
Olivia

LPC

Our work together may focus on building practical coping strategies, strengthening and improving relationships, processing difficult or overwhelming experiences, and gaining clarity around what matters most to you. We’ll move at a pace that feels comforta...
Charity Chaffee

LMHC

I operate from a framework of harm reduction and motivational interviewing. I'm trained in four different trauma models and am currently undergoing training in equine therapy. I'm also trained in DBT.
Alexandria Quinones

LADC

If you are feeling overwhelmed, ashamed, or unsure how to break old patterns and it’s affecting your relationships or overall well-being, you’re not alone. You may feel stuck in cycles you want to change, weighed down by cravings or past choices, and unsu...

Frequently Asked Questions About Online Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Therapy

How do I use this page to find an online therapist who offers Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)?

Start by choosing the state where you will be physically located during sessions. This helps you find licensed providers who may be able to offer online therapy where you are. Then use filters such as insurance, age group, language, service type, and therapy type to narrow your options. Review therapist profiles to see how they describe their work with DBT, emotional regulation, relationships, coping skills, or related concerns.

What should I ask before booking?

Ask how the therapist uses Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) in online sessions, whether they offer a comprehensive DBT program or incorporate DBT skills into therapy, and what a typical session looks like. You can also ask about pacing, skills practice, homework, crisis planning, insurance, fees, and availability. Ask if they are familiar with the issues you are wanting to address to understand whether their approach matches what you are looking for.

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

In most cases, your therapist needs to be licensed or otherwise permitted to provide care in the state where you are physically located during the session. If you travel, move, attend college in another state, or split time between states, ask the therapist what is possible before scheduling. You can also learn more here: https://therapyexpanded.com/find-a-therapist-licensed-in-multiple-states

Can Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) be done virtually through telehealth therapy?

Yes, many therapists offer Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) through telehealth. Online DBT sessions may include skills teaching, discussion, worksheets, practice exercises, and planning for difficult moments between appointments. A good fit often depends on your privacy, internet connection, comfort with video sessions, and the level of support you need. Ask the therapist how they structure online DBT and what tools they use.

Who is Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) best for?

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) may be a good fit for people who want help managing intense emotions, reducing impulsive reactions, improving relationships, building distress tolerance, or creating more stability in daily life. It can be especially helpful for people who want practical skills, not just open-ended conversation. The right fit depends on your goals, symptoms, safety needs, and how much structure you want in therapy.

Do Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) therapists need special certification or training?

Some therapists complete formal DBT training or participate in comprehensive DBT programs, while others use DBT-informed skills as part of their broader therapy approach. Ask how the therapist learned DBT, how often they use it, and whether they offer individual therapy, skills groups, or other DBT-informed care.

Does insurance cover online Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) therapy, and how does payment usually work?

Insurance coverage depends on your plan, the therapist’s network status, your state, and how the service is billed. Some online DBT therapists accept insurance directly, some provide superbills for possible out-of-network reimbursement, and others are private pay. Before your first session, ask about fees, insurance, cancellation policies, payment methods, and whether DBT skills groups or related services are billed separately.

When is online Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) therapy not the right choice?

Online therapy may not be the best fit during an immediate crisis, when emergency support is needed, when a higher level of care is required, or when you do not have a private space or reliable internet connection. If you are in immediate danger or need urgent help, contact local emergency services or call or text 988 right away. A therapist can also help you decide whether telehealth is appropriate for your situation.