Medically reviewed by Dr. Sarah Chen, Psy.D · Last reviewed: May 2026 · Editorial standards
AffordableBudgetFree TherapyEAPInsurance

Free options

  • Crisis services (988, Crisis Text Line) — free, available 24/7
  • Community mental health centers and FQHCs — sliding scale to $0 for low-income patients
  • Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs) — free sessions through your employer's benefit program
  • University training clinics — free or very low cost therapy from supervised graduate students
  • Peer support groups (NAMI, SMART Recovery, AA) — free, community-based

Low-cost options ($30–80/session)

  • Sliding scale private therapists — ask any therapist if they have sliding scale slots
  • Open Path Collective — network of therapists offering $30–80 sessions
  • Graduate training clinics — $0–50/session
  • Group therapy — same evidence base as individual, much lower cost

Mid-range options ($80–150/session with insurance)

  • In-network therapy with insurance — copay typically $20–60 after deductible
  • Health Savings Account (HSA) or Flexible Spending Account (FSA) — use pre-tax dollars for therapy
  • Telehealth providers — often lower rates than in-person and same insurance coverage

Maximizing insurance coverage

Call your insurance company and ask: "What are my behavioral health benefits? What is my in-network copay? Do I need a referral?" Get a list of in-network therapists. Many people discover their therapy would be covered at a much lower cost than they assumed.