Telehealth for Therapists: The Complete Guide to Virtual Practice (2026)

Overview
Telehealth for Therapists: The Complete Guide to Virtual Practice (2026)
Telehealth therapy is the delivery of mental health services via HIPAA-compliant video conferencing or audio-only platforms, allowing therapists to treat clients remotely. As of 2026, telehealth accounts for approximately 40% of all outpatient mental health visits in the United States, according to the American Psychological Association -- far higher than telehealth utilization in any other medical specialty.
Key takeaways
- Telehealth for Therapists: The Complete Guide to Virtual Practice (2026) Telehealth therapy is the delivery of mental health services via HIPAA-compliant video conferencing or audio-only platforms, allowing therapists to treat clients remotely.
- As of 2026, telehealth accounts for approximately 40% of all outpatient mental health visits in the United States, according to the American Psychological Association -- far higher than telehealth utilization in any other medical specialty.
- Telehealth has transformed from a pandemic necessity into a permanent fixture of behavioral health care.
- According to McKinsey research, telehealth utilization has stabilized at 38x pre-pandemic levels for mental health services—far higher than any other medical specialty.
- For therapists, telehealth offers flexibility, expanded reach, and reduced no-shows.
Details
Telehealth has transformed from a pandemic necessity into a permanent fixture of behavioral health care. According to McKinsey research, telehealth utilization has stabilized at 38x pre-pandemic levels for mental health services—far higher than any other medical specialty.
For therapists, telehealth offers flexibility, expanded reach, and reduced no-shows. But doing it well requires attention to technology, compliance, billing, and clinical adaptation.
This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to deliver effective, compliant, profitable telehealth therapy.
Why Telehealth for Mental Health Works
Telehealth therapy produces clinical outcomes equivalent to in-person therapy for depression, anxiety, PTSD, and most other common mental health conditions, according to multiple meta-analyses including a Cochrane systematic review. Practices that offer telehealth also report 25-35% fewer no-shows and expanded geographic reach for client acquisition.
Evidence Base
Research consistently supports telehealth effectiveness for mental health:
- American Psychological Association review found telehealth psychotherapy outcomes equivalent to in-person for depression, anxiety, PTSD, and other conditions
- Cochrane systematic review concluded videoconference therapy produces similar outcomes to face-to-face
- Therapeutic alliance ratings are comparable between modalities
- Some populations (social anxiety, agoraphobia) may prefer telehealth initially
Advantages for Practices
Clinical benefits:
- See clients who can't travel (disability, rural location, transportation barriers)
- Maintain continuity during travel, illness, or inclement weather
- Natural environment observations (seeing client's home)
- Some clients disclose more easily via video
- Easier family involvement when family members in different locations
Operational benefits:
- Reduced no-shows (25-35% reduction in most studies)
- Lower overhead (reduced office space needs)
- Geographic expansion (within licensure limits)
- Schedule flexibility
- Disaster/emergency continuity
Limitations to Acknowledge
Not ideal for:
- Clients without reliable technology/internet
- Severe mental illness requiring close monitoring
- Active safety concerns requiring immediate intervention
- Young children (usually)
- Clients who strongly prefer in-person
- Some assessment procedures requiring in-person observation
Clinical adaptations needed:
- Modified interventions (exposure therapy, EMDR adaptations)
- Adjusted body language reading
- Different rapport-building techniques
- Technology troubleshooting disruptions
Choosing a Telehealth Platform
A HIPAA-compliant telehealth platform must provide end-to-end encryption, a signed Business Associate Agreement (BAA), access controls, and audit trails. Platforms that are not HIPAA-compliant for therapy include consumer versions of Zoom, FaceTime, Skype, Google Meet, WhatsApp, and Facebook Messenger. Using a non-compliant platform for therapy constitutes a HIPAA violation regardless of whether a breach actually occurs.
HIPAA Requirements
Any platform used for therapy must be HIPAA-compliant. This means:
Technical safeguards:
- End-to-end encryption
- Secure data transmission
- Access controls
- Audit trails
Administrative requirements:
- Business Associate Agreement (BAA) with vendor
- Documented policies and procedures
- Staff training on platform use
Platforms that are NOT HIPAA-compliant (do not use for therapy):
- Regular Zoom (non-healthcare version)
- FaceTime
- Skype (consumer version)
- Google Meet (non-Workspace)
- Facebook Messenger
Recommended Platforms
| Platform | BAA Available | Integrated EHR | Approximate Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zoom for Healthcare | Yes | Via integrations | $200+/month |
| Doxy.me | Yes | No | Free-$50/month |
| SimplePractice | Yes | Yes | $29-99/month |
| TherapyNotes | Yes | Yes | $49+/month |
| Jane App | Yes | Yes | $79+/month |
| Healthie | Yes | Yes | $49+/month |
| VSee | Yes | Via integrations | $49+/month |
Platform Selection Criteria
Must-have features:
- HIPAA-compliant with signed BAA
- Reliable video/audio quality
- Screen sharing (for worksheets, assessments)
- Virtual waiting room
- Mobile and desktop compatibility
- Recording capability (if you need it)
- Chat function during session
Nice-to-have features:
- EHR integration
- Automated appointment reminders
- Client self-scheduling
- Multiple participant support (couples, family)
- Whiteboard or annotation tools
- Custom branding
EHR-Integrated vs. Standalone
EHR-integrated telehealth (SimplePractice, TherapyNotes, etc.):
- Pros: Single system, automatic documentation, seamless scheduling
- Cons: May have fewer video features, dependent on EHR quality
Standalone telehealth (Doxy.me, Zoom Healthcare):
- Pros: Better video features, more flexibility
- Cons: Requires integration or manual coordination with EHR
HIPAA Compliance for Telehealth
Required Documentation
Policies and procedures:
- Telehealth-specific privacy practices
- Emergency protocols for remote sessions
- Technology failure procedures
- Documentation standards for telehealth
Client documentation:
- Telehealth informed consent (separate from general consent)
- Verification of client identity and location each session
- Emergency contact and local resources
Vendor documentation:
- Signed BAA with telehealth platform
- BAA with any other vendors handling PHI
Telehealth Informed Consent
Must include:
- Description of telehealth and how it differs from in-person
- Potential risks (technology failure, privacy limitations)
- Benefits of telehealth
- Client's right to refuse telehealth
- Emergency procedures
- Confidentiality limitations (who might overhear)
- Recording policy (if applicable)
- Technology requirements
Sample consent language:
Telehealth Informed Consent
I understand that telehealth involves the use of video conferencing to provide therapy services. I understand that:
- Telehealth is not the same as in-person therapy and has unique risks, including technology failures and potential privacy limitations
- I am responsible for ensuring I am in a private location where I cannot be overheard
- I must provide accurate information about my physical location at each session for emergency purposes
- In case of emergency, my therapist may contact emergency services in my location
- Sessions will not be recorded without my explicit written consent
- I may discontinue telehealth at any time and request in-person services
By signing below, I consent to receive therapy services via telehealth.
Privacy Best Practices
For therapists:
- Use private, soundproof space
- Position camera to avoid revealing others
- Use headphones
- Secure physical documents during sessions
- Lock screen when stepping away
- Disable notifications during sessions
Educate clients on:
- Finding private space for sessions
- Using headphones
- Avoiding public Wi-Fi
- Not recording sessions without consent
- Managing household interruptions
For complete HIPAA guidance, see our HIPAA compliance checklist.
Billing Telehealth Services
Telehealth therapy sessions are billed using the same CPT codes as in-person sessions (90834, 90837, etc.) with the addition of modifier 95 for video sessions or modifier 93 for audio-only sessions. Most commercial insurers and Medicare now reimburse telehealth mental health services at parity with in-person rates, though audio-only coverage varies significantly by payer.
CPT Codes for Telehealth Therapy
The same CPT codes apply for telehealth as for in-person services:
| Code | Description | Use For |
|---|---|---|
| 90791 | Diagnostic evaluation | Initial assessment |
| 90832 | Psychotherapy, 16-37 min | Brief sessions |
| 90834 | Psychotherapy, 38-52 min | Standard sessions |
| 90837 | Psychotherapy, 53+ min | Extended sessions |
| 90846 | Family therapy without patient | Parent consultation |
| 90847 | Family therapy with patient | Couples/family sessions |
| 90853 | Group therapy | Group sessions |
For complete CPT code guidance, see our mental health CPT codes guide.
Telehealth Modifiers
Modifier 95 - Synchronous telehealth service
- Most commonly used
- Indicates real-time audio-video
Modifier 93 - Audio-only service (telephone)
- For telephone sessions when permitted
- Coverage varies significantly by payer
- Check payer policies carefully
Modifier GT - Via interactive audio and video telecommunications
- Some payers still require this
- Being phased out in favor of 95
Place of Service Codes
POS 02 - Telehealth provided to patient at distant site
- Use when patient is at a healthcare facility
POS 10 - Telehealth provided to patient's home
- Most common for outpatient therapy
- Patient is at their residence
Billing example:
CPT: 90834-95 POS: 10 Diagnosis: F41.1 Provider: [NPI] Service date: [Date]
Payer-Specific Telehealth Policies
Medicare:
- Telehealth coverage expanded permanently after COVID-19
- Audio-only allowed for mental health with established patients
- POS 10 (home) permitted
- Geographic restrictions lifted for mental health
- CMS Telehealth Policy
Medicaid:
- Varies by state
- Most states have expanded telehealth
- Check state Medicaid policies
- Some require prior authorization for telehealth
Commercial payers:
- Generally cover telehealth at in-person rates
- Policies vary—verify for each payer
- Some require modifier 95; some require GT
- Audio-only coverage varies significantly
Self-pay:
- No restrictions
- Same rates as in-person or adjusted as you choose
For state-specific information, see our California telehealth laws guide.
Interstate Telehealth and Licensure
Key rule: You must be licensed in the state where the CLIENT is physically located during the session.
PSYPACT (for psychologists): Interstate compact allowing practice across member states with single license
Counselor Compact: Similar compact for licensed counselors (implementation in progress)
Social work: No interstate compact currently; state-by-state licensure required
Verify each session:
- Where is the client located right now?
- Are you licensed in that state?
- Does that state allow telehealth from out-of-state providers?
Technical Setup for Success
Equipment Recommendations
Essential:
- Computer with webcam (built-in or external)
- Reliable internet (minimum 10 Mbps up/down; 25+ recommended)
- Headset with microphone (reduces echo, improves audio)
- Adequate lighting (natural or ring light)
Professional setup:
- External HD webcam (Logitech C920 or better)
- Professional microphone (Blue Yeti, Audio-Technica)
- Ring light or softbox lighting
- Neutral, professional background
- Ethernet connection (more reliable than Wi-Fi)
- Backup internet option (mobile hotspot)
Budget setup:
- Laptop with built-in camera
- Wired earbuds with microphone
- Natural lighting from window
- Simple, uncluttered background
- Stable internet connection
Optimizing Video Quality
Lighting:
- Face the light source (window, lamp, ring light)
- Avoid backlighting (don't sit with window behind you)
- Soft, diffused light is most flattering
Camera position:
- Eye level (raise laptop if needed)
- Stable surface (tripod or stack of books)
- Frame from chest up
- Leave some headroom
Background:
- Neutral, uncluttered
- Professional but not sterile
- No personal information visible
- Virtual backgrounds as backup (test quality first)
Internet and Connectivity
Test your connection:
- Use speedtest.net to verify bandwidth
- Test during your typical session times
- Check both upload and download speeds
Optimize connection:
- Use ethernet cable when possible
- Position router for strong signal if using Wi-Fi
- Close bandwidth-heavy applications during sessions
- Have family members limit streaming during your sessions
Backup plan:
- Mobile hotspot capability
- Alternative device ready (tablet, phone)
- Client's phone number for audio backup
- Procedure for reconnecting after disconnect
Clinical Adaptations for Telehealth
Effective telehealth therapy requires specific adaptations to clinical technique, including more explicit verbal acknowledgments, adjusted eye contact (looking at the camera rather than the screen), and structured session openings that verify client location and privacy. Research from the APA (2024) indicates that therapeutic alliance ratings are comparable between telehealth and in-person modalities when clinicians make these intentional adjustments.
Building Rapport Virtually
Compensate for physical distance:
- Slightly more animated facial expressions
- More verbal acknowledgments ("I hear you," "mm-hmm")
- Explicit emotional reflections (since subtle cues may be missed)
- Occasional direct eye contact (look at camera, not screen)
Create connection:
- Warm welcome at session start
- Acknowledge the screen barrier ("I wish I could be there with you")
- Use client's name more frequently
- Allow slightly more processing time
Session Structure Adaptations
Opening:
- Verify client's location and privacy
- Confirm emergency contact information
- Brief technology check ("Can you see and hear me clearly?")
- Acknowledge any distractions in either environment
During session:
- Check in about technology ("Is the connection still clear?")
- Be more explicit about transitions between topics
- Use screen share for visual materials
- Take more frequent pauses for processing
Closing:
- Clear summary of session
- Explicit homework instructions
- Confirm next appointment
- Verify client is safe before disconnecting
Managing Technical Issues
When video freezes:
"It looks like your video froze for a moment. Can you still hear me? Let me know if you need to reconnect."
When audio cuts out:
"I'm sorry, I missed that. There was some audio interference. Could you repeat?"
When connection drops:
- Have pre-established reconnection procedure
- Client attempts to rejoin within 2 minutes
- If not reconnected, therapist calls client's phone
- Document interruption and how resolved
When technology fails completely:
- Complete session by phone if clinically appropriate
- Reschedule if phone not appropriate
- Document the incident
- Consider alternative platform for future
Interventions Requiring Adaptation
EMDR:
- Modified protocols available for telehealth
- May use client's own finger movements
- Butterfly hug for bilateral stimulation
- Screen-based visual tracking
Exposure therapy:
- Virtual reality options
- In-vivo exposures in client's environment
- Imaginal exposures work well via telehealth
- May need hybrid approach for some exposures
Play therapy with children:
- Parent involvement in facilitating
- Digital games and activities
- Art activities with supplies sent in advance
- May not be appropriate for young children
Group therapy:
- Gallery view so members see each other
- More structured turn-taking
- Use chat for non-verbal participation
- Breakout rooms for dyad exercises
For group telehealth specifics, see our group therapy guide.
Client Preparation and Engagement
Pre-Session Preparation
Send clients before first telehealth session:
- Technology requirements and testing instructions
- Tips for creating private, comfortable space
- Link to video platform with instructions
- Emergency procedure review
- What to do if connection drops
Sample pre-session email:
Subject: Preparing for Your Telehealth Session
Your telehealth appointment is scheduled for [date/time]. Here's how to prepare:
Technology:
- Use a computer, tablet, or smartphone with camera and microphone
- Test your camera and microphone before the session
- Ensure strong internet connection
- Click this link to join: [Link]
Space:
- Find a private room where you won't be interrupted
- Consider using headphones for added privacy
- Have tissues and water available
If technical issues occur:
- Try refreshing or rejoining the link
- If you can't reconnect within 2 minutes, I'll call you at [phone number]
Need help? Reply to this email or call [number].
I look forward to seeing you!
Engaging Clients During Sessions
Visual engagement:
- Use screen sharing for worksheets, diagrams
- Collaborative online whiteboards
- Shared documents for homework review
- Body-based interventions visible on camera
Interactive tools:
- Digital worksheets
- Online assessment measures
- Mood tracking apps
- Therapeutic card decks (digital or physical)
Maintain attention:
- Vary activities within session
- Use more interactive questioning
- Break content into smaller segments
- Check in about engagement directly
Managing Client No-Shows
Telehealth actually reduces no-shows for most practices, but they still occur.
Prevention:
- Send reminder with session link (24 hours, 2 hours before)
- Reduce barriers (client joins from anywhere)
- Confirm technology works in advance
- Address ambivalence about telehealth directly
When client doesn't appear:
- Wait 5-10 minutes
- Attempt to reach by phone
- Send message through secure platform
- Document no-show and outreach
- Follow standard no-show policy
For comprehensive no-show strategies, see our guide on reducing no-shows.
Hybrid Practice Models
A hybrid practice model offers clients the choice between in-person and telehealth therapy, with the same clinician providing both modalities based on client preference and clinical need. As of 2026, approximately 60% of behavioral health practices offer hybrid care, according to the American Psychological Association. Tools like Ease Health handle hybrid scheduling seamlessly, automatically generating correct billing modifiers for telehealth versus in-person sessions.
Offering Both Modalities
Many practices offer clients choice between telehealth and in-person:
Benefits:
- Client preference drives engagement
- Flexibility for scheduling
- Continuity when circumstances change
- Expands accessibility
Operational considerations:
- Different scheduling systems or integrated platform
- Office space needs when both offered
- Technology setup in office for clinician telehealth days
- Clear policies about switching modalities
When to Transition Modalities
Move from in-person to telehealth when:
- Client relocates (within your licensure)
- Transportation barriers emerge
- Health issues prevent travel
- Weather or emergencies
- Client preference after stable period
Move from telehealth to in-person when:
- Clinical intensification needed
- Safety concerns requiring closer monitoring
- Therapeutic impasse potentially related to modality
- Assessment requiring in-person observation
- Client request
Document rationale for modality decisions and transitions.
Documentation for Telehealth
Session Documentation Requirements
In addition to standard clinical documentation, telehealth notes should include:
- Modality (video, phone)
- Platform used
- Client's location (city/state at minimum)
- Verification of private setting
- Any technology issues and resolution
- Confirmation client was alone (or who else was present)
Sample telehealth documentation addition:
Telehealth documentation: Session conducted via HIPAA-compliant video platform (Doxy.me). Client located in [City, State] in private residence. Client confirmed they were in a private room and alone. No technology interruptions. Client's identity verified.
Consent Documentation
Maintain documentation of:
- Signed telehealth informed consent
- Consent reviewed/updated annually
- Any verbal consents (with date, circumstances)
- Client's stated preferences about telehealth
Frequently Asked Questions
Is telehealth as effective as in-person therapy?
Research consistently shows equivalent outcomes for most conditions and populations. Some clients actually prefer telehealth and engage more effectively. The key is ensuring good technology, adapting clinical techniques as needed, and providing client choice when possible.
What if my client travels to a state where I'm not licensed?
You cannot provide therapy to a client located in a state where you're not licensed. Options:
- Pause services while they travel
- Provide them with referrals in that state
- Obtain licensure in frequently visited states
- Use PSYPACT if you're a psychologist and both states participate
How do I handle emergencies during telehealth sessions?
Every telehealth practice needs emergency protocols:
- Verify client location at each session
- Maintain current emergency contact
- Know local emergency resources for client's location
- Have client's phone number to call if connection drops during crisis
- Document your emergency protocol and review with clients
Can I bill telehealth at the same rate as in-person?
Most payers now reimburse telehealth mental health services at parity with in-person. Verify with each payer. For self-pay clients, you set your own rates—many therapists charge identical rates for telehealth.
Do I need to document that a session was telehealth?
Yes. Document the modality, platform used, and client's location. This is required for billing (correct modifier and POS code) and for clinical/legal records.
What if I prefer in-person but clients want telehealth?
Client preference matters for engagement. Consider offering both options. If you strongly prefer in-person, you can set that as your practice policy, but recognize you may lose clients who prioritize telehealth convenience.
How do I handle couples therapy via telehealth when partners are in different locations?
Each partner can join from their own device/location. Benefits include safety if there are power dynamics or abuse concerns. Challenges include technology complexity and losing ability to observe interaction. Verify where each partner is located for licensure compliance.
Ease Health's integrated EHR includes HIPAA-compliant telehealth, automated appointment reminders with session links, and seamless telehealth billing with correct modifiers. Schedule a demo to see how we make telehealth simple.
Related Glossary Terms
- Telehealth — Modalities, regulations, and billing for virtual care
- HIPAA — Privacy and security requirements for telehealth platforms
- EHR — How EHR systems integrate telehealth into clinical workflows
- Informed Consent — Telehealth-specific consent requirements
Related Guides
- Best EHR for Telehealth — Compare EHR systems with integrated HIPAA-compliant video
- Ease Health vs SimplePractice — Compare telehealth features side-by-side
Next steps
- Review the key takeaways and adapt them to your practice workflow.
- Use the details section as a checklist when you implement or troubleshoot.
- Share this with your billing or admin team to align on process and terminology.


