"Mental health platform" now spans everything from licensed therapy and psychiatric care to subscription apps with looser oversight. The differences matter for clinical effectiveness, for cost, and for what happens to your data. This page covers what to look at before signing up.
The short version
- Verify clinicians are licensed where you physically are. State medical and licensing boards have free public verification.
- Match the modality to your needs: CBT for anxiety, EMDR or PE for PTSD, DBT skills for emotion regulation, and so on.
- Frequency matters. Weekly therapy for 8–20 weeks is what evidence-based protocols typically use.
- Switching therapists should be easy if the fit is off. Resistance to switching is a flag.
- Prescriber availability and continuity are different from therapist availability and continuity.
- HIPAA covers covered entities; many "wellness" mental health apps are not HIPAA-covered. Read privacy policies.
Verify clinicians
State licensing boards for psychology, social work, counseling, and marriage and family therapy publish license lookup tools that let you verify a specific clinician's name, license status, and any disciplinary history. The American Board of Medical Specialties' certificationmatters.org verifies physician board certification, including for psychiatry. Use these. A platform that does not list specific named clinicians, or whose clinician list does not match the people you actually see, is a flag.
Match modality to need
Therapy is not a single thing. Different conditions have different first-line evidence-based approaches:
- Generalized anxiety, panic disorder, social anxiety: CBT.
- OCD: Exposure and response prevention (ERP), a specific form of CBT.
- PTSD: Prolonged exposure (PE), cognitive processing therapy (CPT), EMDR.
- Depression: CBT, behavioral activation, interpersonal therapy.
- Insomnia: CBT for insomnia (CBT-I).
- Borderline personality disorder, emotion regulation difficulties: DBT (a longer, structured program with specific components).
- Chronic pain: CBT for chronic pain, ACT.
A therapist's stated approach should match the evidence base for your concern. "Eclectic" is sometimes a euphemism for not having structured training in any particular protocol. Ask. See mental health telehealth.
Therapist matching transparency
How does the platform match you with a therapist? Some platforms let you read clinician bios and choose; others assign and resist switches; others use algorithmic matching with limited transparency. The most useful arrangements:
- Visible therapist bios with credentials, training, and approach.
- Easy switching, ideally without explanation required.
- The same therapist for the duration of treatment, not rotating clinicians.
- Specific search by modality, gender preference, language, and specialty (LGBTQ+ affirming, eating disorders, perinatal mental health, etc.).
Frequency, length, and dose
Evidence-based therapy protocols are typically delivered weekly for 8 to 20 sessions. Some go longer, especially for PTSD, OCD, or BPD. Sporadic monthly sessions are not the same intervention.
Be wary of platforms that emphasize "messaging therapy" — asynchronous text exchanges with a therapist — as a replacement for sessions. Texting can be a useful supplement but does not have the evidence base of structured live therapy. The FTC has investigated some "messaging therapy" platforms over advertising claims.
Prescribers
If you may need medication, the platform should either offer prescribers internally or have a clear referral path. Prescribers (psychiatrists, psychiatric NPs) are typically separate from therapists; the two roles often work in parallel. Continuity with a prescriber matters more than continuity with most other clinicians, because medication changes need stable follow-up. See ADHD remote treatment for the specific case of stimulant prescribing.
Crisis policies
Every platform should have a clear policy for what happens when a patient discloses suicidal ideation, intent to harm others, or other emergencies. Reasonable policies include: explicit assessment during sessions, safety planning, after-hours resources (988 in the US), and integration with local crisis resources when needed. A platform that refuses to engage with high-acuity patients but does not say so up front, or one that has no plan for how to handle a session that turns urgent, is not equipped for serious mental health work.
For non-routine crisis support, telehealth alone is rarely sufficient. The 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, mobile crisis teams, and emergency departments are the appropriate settings. See when telehealth is not enough.
Insurance, cash pay, and EAP
Three common payment models:
- In-network with insurance: Covered like other clinical visits, with copays and deductibles.
- Cash-pay: Set fee per session, with optional out-of-network reimbursement.
- Employer assistance program (EAP): A defined number of free sessions through your employer, often through a contracted vendor. Useful for short-term issues; usually not enough for ongoing therapy.
Pricing should be transparent before you book. See insurance and telehealth.
Privacy: read the actual policy
This is the area where mental health platforms have varied most widely. HIPAA covers covered entities and their business associates. Many consumer apps that involve mental health content (mood trackers, meditation apps, journaling apps, "AI therapy" chatbots) operate outside HIPAA. Several mental health apps have been the subject of FTC enforcement for sharing user data with advertisers without adequate disclosure.
Things to look for in the privacy policy:
- Does the platform identify itself as a HIPAA-covered entity for clinical services?
- Does it use third-party advertising trackers (pixels, SDKs) on pages where you submit health information?
- Does it sell or share any data with advertisers, marketing partners, or "affiliates"?
- What happens to your data if you cancel?
- How are session recordings handled, if recordings are made at all?
- Is end-to-end encryption used for messaging?
For a "wellness" app that supplements (not replaces) clinical care, lower standards may be acceptable. For clinical therapy or psychiatric care, the platform should be unambiguously HIPAA-covered. See accessing your medical records for the legal access rights and what is covered.
What to ask before signing up
- Are clinicians licensed in my state? Can I verify them on the state board?
- What modalities and specialties are available? Does someone treat my specific concern?
- How does matching work, and how do I switch if the fit is off?
- Will I see the same clinician each session?
- How often are sessions, how long, and what is the typical course?
- Do you have prescribers? How are therapy and medication coordinated?
- What is your crisis policy?
- Is the platform HIPAA-covered? Are any third-party trackers in use?
- Do you take my insurance? What does it cost otherwise?
Red flags
- No specific clinician names; "your therapist" with no bio.
- Refusal to switch therapists or to explain how.
- "Therapy" by chatbot or AI marketed as a replacement for licensed therapy.
- Pressure to upgrade subscriptions or add unrelated services.
- Privacy policy that allows advertising data sharing.
- No crisis policy, or a vague one.
- Promises of "instant" therapy with no clinical structure.
See red flags in any remote care service.
When this is not enough
For severe presentations — active suicidality, acute psychosis, severe eating disorders, severe substance use — a routine telehealth platform is not the right setting. Higher levels of care (intensive outpatient, partial hospitalization, inpatient) are appropriate. For acute crisis, 988 (US) or 911. See mental health telehealth.
Related reading
Not medical advice. This site provides general educational information about navigating remote healthcare. It does not diagnose, treat, or recommend treatment for any condition. For personal medical questions, talk to a licensed clinician. If you are in a mental health crisis, call or text 988 (US Suicide and Crisis Lifeline) or call 911.