What the research actually shows
The question of whether online therapy is as effective as in-person therapy has been extensively studied, particularly following the COVID-19 pandemic's forced experiment in large-scale telehealth. The consistent finding across dozens of randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses: for the conditions where most people seek therapy — depression, anxiety, PTSD, and substance use disorders — telehealth produces equivalent outcomes to in-person care.
Key research findings
- A 2022 meta-analysis of 173 studies found no significant difference in outcomes between telehealth and in-person therapy for depression and anxiety
- VA research on veterans with PTSD found EMDR delivered via telehealth produced equivalent outcomes to in-person EMDR
- Studies of CBT for anxiety disorders show equivalent results via video
- Therapeutic alliance — the quality of the relationship between therapist and client — forms equivalently in telehealth settings
Where in-person care may still be preferable
The evidence is clearest for outpatient individual therapy for depression, anxiety, and PTSD. Some conditions and situations may still warrant in-person care:
- Severe psychiatric disorders requiring close observation
- Eating disorders requiring regular medical monitoring
- Situations where the therapeutic presence and physical space are especially important
- When the patient lacks a private, comfortable space for video sessions
The research does not show telehealth is better than in-person — it shows the outcomes are equivalent. The choice should be based on your practical needs and preferences, not an assumption that in-person is categorically superior.
The benefits of telehealth beyond equivalence
For many people, telehealth is not just equivalent — it's actually preferable. It eliminates commute time, makes scheduling more flexible, reduces barriers for those with mobility challenges or agoraphobia, expands provider choice beyond local geography, and allows people in underserved areas to access specialists they couldn't otherwise reach.
How to make telehealth work well
Find a private space where you can speak freely — even a car or a parked vehicle works in a pinch. Use a reliable internet connection. Treat telehealth appointments with the same commitment as in-person — block the time, minimize interruptions, and show up ready to engage.