Yes — Medicaid covers mental health treatment
Medicaid is required by federal law to cover mental health and substance use disorder services. The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) applies to Medicaid managed care plans, requiring coverage comparable to physical health services. All 50 states provide Medicaid mental health benefits, though the specific services and reimbursement rates vary by state.
What Medicaid typically covers
- Individual outpatient therapy with licensed therapists and counselors
- Psychiatric evaluation and medication management
- Community mental health center services
- Crisis stabilization services
- Inpatient psychiatric hospitalization
- Substance use disorder treatment including MAT
- Telehealth mental health services — now covered in most states
- Case management services
Most Medicaid beneficiaries pay little to nothing out of pocket for mental health services. Copays, when required, are typically $1–4 per visit. Cost should not be a barrier to accessing mental health care if you have Medicaid.
Finding a Medicaid-accepting therapist
The biggest challenge with Medicaid is not coverage — it's finding providers who accept it. Medicaid reimbursement rates are lower than commercial insurance, leading many private practice therapists not to accept it. Your best options for finding Medicaid-accepting providers:
- Community mental health centers — Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) are required to serve Medicaid patients and are often the most accessible option
- BehavioralHealthGuide.org — filter by "Medicaid accepted" to find verified providers who take your insurance
- Your state's Medicaid provider directory — search your state Medicaid website for in-network behavioral health providers
- Telehealth platforms — several major telehealth platforms now accept Medicaid in most states
Medicaid expansion states
States that expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act cover adults up to 138% of the federal poverty level — significantly broadening eligibility. If you're in an expansion state and have limited income, you may qualify for Medicaid even without children or a disability. Check your state's Medicaid eligibility requirements at healthcare.gov.
Children's mental health under Medicaid
Children covered by Medicaid or CHIP (Children's Health Insurance Program) have strong mental health benefits under the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment (EPSDT) benefit, which covers medically necessary services. If your child needs mental health services, EPSDT coverage is typically broader than standard adult Medicaid benefits.