Our Rates & Insurance

Services & Fees
Our standard length of session for psychotherapy with individuals and relationships is 50 minutes.
- If your clinician is a fully licensed master’s level clinician (LPC, LCSW): $175
- If your clinician is a provisionally licensed master’s level clinician (PLPC, LMSW): $150
- If your clinician is a master's level intern: $75
Other options are provided when therapeutically appropriate.
These are billed at the same rate per minute as our 50 minute sessions.
Group, workshop, and event rates vary and are published with each occurrence.

Out-of-Network Insurance & Sliding Scale
At Well Psychotherapy, our mission is to provide high-quality, individualized care that addresses the whole person. To maintain this standard, we do not contract with insurance providers who often restrict the quality and scope of mental health services. By stepping outside that system, we have the freedom to get to the root of trauma and stress in ways traditional "talk therapy" alone may not by:
- Tailoring the Timeline: We work together for as long—or as briefly—as your journey requires, including stops and starts without worrying about justification for .
- Integrating Holistic Methods: We utilize powerful, mind-body interventions that insurance often declines to cover, including somatic therapies, hypnotherapy, and arts-based creative therapies.
- Ensuring Absolute Privacy: Your records and diagnoses remain strictly between us, without being shared with a national database.
Because we are a private-pay fee-for-service group practice, your full fees are due at the time of service. Though we do not participate in-network with any insurance providers, but we provide Superbills upon request to assist you in filing claims to utilize your out-of-network benefits.
Need financial assistance?
Sliding scale options are available! Please put in a general inquiry for our services.
Good Faith Estimate
Under Section 2799B-6 of the Public Health Service Act, health care providers and health care facilities are required to inform individuals who are not enrolled in a plan or coverage or a Federal health care program, or not seeking to file a claim with their plan or coverage both orally and in writing of their ability, upon request or at the time of scheduling health care items and services, to receive a “Good Faith Estimate” of expected charges. You have the right to receive a “Good Faith Estimate” explaining how much your medical care will cost.
Under the law, health care providers need to give patients who don’t have insurance or who are not using insurance an estimate of the bill for medical items and services.
- You have the right to receive a Good Faith Estimate for the total expected cost of any non-emergency items or services. This includes related costs like medical tests, prescription drugs, equipment, and hospital fees.
- Make sure your health care provider gives you a Good Faith Estimate in writing at least 1 business day before your medical service or item. You can also ask your health care provider, and any other provider you choose, for a Good Faith Estimate before you schedule an item or service.
- If you receive a bill that is at least $400 more than your Good Faith Estimate, you can dispute the bill.
- Make sure to save a copy or picture of your Good Faith Estimate. For questions or more information about your right to a Good Faith Estimate, visit www.cms.gov/nosurprises
