The short answer: yes, most insurance covers therapy
The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) requires most health insurance plans to cover mental health and substance use disorder services at the same level as physical health services. If your plan covers doctor visits and specialist care, it must cover therapy and psychiatric services comparably.
Despite this legal requirement, navigating insurance coverage for therapy can be confusing. Many people don't realize they're covered — or they find out only after paying out of pocket unnecessarily. This guide tells you exactly what to look for and what questions to ask.
What insurance typically covers
- Individual outpatient therapy — the most commonly covered service
- Psychiatric evaluation and medication management
- Group therapy
- Intensive outpatient programs (IOP)
- Partial hospitalization programs (PHP)
- Telehealth therapy — now covered by most major plans
- Crisis services
Most people pay a copay of $20–60 per therapy session when seeing an in-network provider — not the full $150–250 session rate. Always check your in-network benefits before assuming therapy is unaffordable.
How to check your specific coverage
Call the member services number on the back of your insurance card and ask these specific questions:
- What are my outpatient behavioral health benefits?
- What is my copay for in-network therapy?
- Do I have a deductible, and how much has been met?
- How many sessions are covered per year?
- Do I need a referral from my primary care doctor?
- Is telehealth covered at the same rate as in-person?
In-network vs out-of-network
In-network providers have contracted rates with your insurer — your copay is lower and the insurer pays more. Out-of-network providers may still be partially reimbursed under your plan's out-of-network benefits, but your out-of-pocket costs will be significantly higher.
When searching on BehavioralHealthGuide.org, you can filter by your specific insurance plan to find verified in-network providers near you. This is the most reliable way to find covered therapists — insurance company online directories are often outdated.
What if your claim is denied?
Insurance denials for mental health services are common but frequently overturned on appeal. You have the right to appeal any denial. Ask your insurer for the specific reason for denial in writing. Your therapist can help you document medical necessity. Many states have insurance commissioners who handle mental health parity complaints.
When insurance doesn't cover enough
If your coverage is inadequate, explore: Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs) through your employer for free sessions, sliding scale fees from private therapists, community mental health centers that serve patients regardless of ability to pay, and university training clinics offering therapy at very low cost.