Couples Counseling

Online Couples Therapy in Nevada

Work with an expert therapist to restore connection and strengthen your relationship. Every relationship requires nurturing in Nevada. Whether things just got complicated, or it’s been awhile, we can help restore communication & trust. Our couples therapists bring a fresh perspective so you can rediscover the love & commitment needed for a thriving relationship.

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Mental Health & Couples Therapy in Nevada

Understanding the landscape of mental health care access and the challenges
couples face across the state.

Mental Illness Prevalance

24.6 percent of adults in Nevada experience mental illness annually.

Wait Time

The average wait time for therapy in Nevada is 12–16 weeks.

Median Houshold Income

The median household income in Nevada is $75,561.

Percentage Who Need Therapy

18.5 percent of adults in Nevada who needed mental health care did not receive it.

Provider Shortage

79.40% of Nevada is designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas.

Mental Illness per 100k Residents

Nevada has 263.1 mental health providers per 100,000 residents.

These numbers point to a severe access gap for couples therapy in Nevada. Nevada has 3,267,467 residents living across 110,572 square miles, and 24.6 percent of adults in Nevada experience mental illness annually, totaling 804,797 residents. For many residents, the need for care does not translate into timely support: 18.5 percent of adults in Nevada who needed mental health care did not receive it. Capacity constraints are visible in the workforce itself, with Nevada reporting 263.1 mental health providers per 100,000 residents. Access limitations are also structural statewide, with 79.40% of Nevada's 17 counties designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas. Even when residents are ready to start, the average wait time for therapy in Nevada is 12-16 weeks, a delay that can be especially disruptive when relationship conflict is escalating and decisions about separation, co-parenting, or rebuilding trust are time-sensitive, particularly for couples coordinating MGM or Caesars gaming-hospitality shifts, Tesla Gigafactory rotations near Reno, or Amazon distribution-center hours. For couples, these statewide figures translate into practical, day-to-day barriers that compound quickly. A 12-16 week wait can mean months of living with the same arguments, the same shutdown patterns, or the same unresolved rupture, without structured support to slow escalation and rebuild communication. With only 263.1 providers per 100,000 residents serving 3,267,467 people, appointment availability becomes a bottleneck, and the 18.5 percent unmet need reflects more than personal hesitation; it reflects a system that cannot reliably absorb demand. The shortage designation across 79.40% of counties means many couples, especially in Mojave and Great Basin communities, face 45-mile average distances to an in-person provider, 90-mile round trips, and $15 in fuel per session ($780 annually) on top of the national average couples therapy rate of $175-$300 per session.

UNDERSTANDING THE CHALLENGE

Couples Therapy challenges in Nevada

The Problem

Nevada's 3,267,467 residents spread across 110,572 square miles face a severe mental health access crisis from the Las Vegas Strip to Reno's Tesla Gigafactory corridor. With 79.40% of Nevada's 17 counties designated provider shortage areas and 18.5% of residents who need mental health care unable to access it, the state's mental health system is fundamentally failing those in crisis. Only 263.1 mental health providers per 100,000 residents serve the entire state, and 12-16 week average wait times mean Las Vegas, Reno, Henderson, Carson City, and Sparks couples experiencing relationship emergencies must wait months for help. With 45-mile average distances to in-person providers ($15 in fuel per session, $780 annually) for residents in Mojave or Great Basin communities, Nevada's 804,797 residents experiencing mental illness (24.6% of the population) often cannot piece together timely two-partner couples therapy, especially in gaming-hospitality and distribution-center households where both partners work around-the-clock shifts.

The Impact

Nevada's population concentrates 804,797 residents experiencing mental illness into corridors like Las Vegas, Reno, Henderson, and Sparks, where gaming and hospitality employers like MGM and Caesars, the Tesla Gigafactory near Reno, and Amazon distribution centers set a 24-hour workweek pace. The 45-mile average distance to an in-person provider from Mojave and Great Basin communities consumes hours per session and $15 in fuel; adding weekly attendance for both partners means $780 annually in fuel before session fees, on top of a 12-16 week waitlist. For Nevada households weighing therapy against Las Vegas Strip cost-of-living and shift-work disruption, the national average Couples Therapy rate of $175-$300 per session plus these hidden costs makes consistent two-partner attendance financially punishing. The result: many Nevada couples skip therapy entirely or attend so inconsistently that work on communication breakdown, parenting disagreements, or post-affair trust rebuilding loses traction exactly when both partners need a steady weekly rhythm.

The Solution

For Nevada's 804,797 residents needing mental health care from the Las Vegas Strip to the Reno-Sparks Tesla corridor and the Great Basin, Grouport eliminates the 90-mile round trips, the $780 in annual fuel, and the 12-16 week waitlists that make traditional couples therapy impractical. Nevada couples connect with licensed providers via secure video from a Las Vegas suburb, a Henderson home, a Carson City house, or a Reno apartment, with no 45-mile drives through Mojave or eastern Sierra terrain, no parking-garage hunts on the Strip, and no time pulled out of gaming and hospitality shifts, Tesla Gigafactory rotations, or distribution-center schedules. Providers match within 24-48 hours rather than Nevada's 12-16 week average. At an average of $114 per session ($492 monthly), 50-60% below the national average of $175-$300 per session, Nevada couples save $780 yearly in fuel alone while accessing immediate care that 263.1 providers per 100,000 residents across 17 counties cannot deliver fast enough for two-partner availability.

79.40% of Nevada is designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas.

Online couples therapy reduces practical barriers that commonly derail in-person care in Nevada, because both partners can log in from a Las Vegas suburb, a Henderson home, or a Reno apartment without 45-mile drives, $15 fuel costs per session, or time pulled out of gaming and hospitality shifts at MGM and Caesars, Tesla Gigafactory rotations, or Amazon distribution-center work. It also helps couples start sooner by widening access beyond local availability in Mojave and Great Basin communities, which matters when the stated wait time is 12-16 weeks. For many Nevada couples, meeting online also supports more consistent attendance across weeks, which is often the difference between short-term insight and lasting relationship change, especially when one partner works an overnight Strip casino shift while the other holds daytime distribution-center or Reno tech-corridor hours.

Getting Couples Therapy in Nevada: Wait Times and Barriers

Nevada couples seeking therapy face a supply and timing problem that shows up from Las Vegas to Reno and the rural counties along the Great Basin. With 263.1 mental health providers per 100,000 residents and 79.40% of Nevada's 17 counties designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, availability is constrained even before a couple narrows the search by schedule, clinical fit, or preferred approach. The average 12-16 week wait time for therapy adds another layer of delay, which is especially disruptive in the gaming-hospitality corridor along the Las Vegas Strip and the Reno-Sparks Tesla-distribution economy where two-partner relationship stress is active and day-to-day communication is already strained by shift work. Even a single missed week can push the next opening past the original waitlist date for both spouses.

Geographic Barriers

Nevada's scale matters for couples access. The state spans 110,572 square miles and includes 17 counties, so the experience of finding therapy can vary widely between a Las Vegas suburb like Summerlin, a Reno-Sparks neighborhood near the Tesla Gigafactory, and a remote Great Basin community like Ely or Tonopah. Even in well-resourced Las Vegas and Reno corridors, demand concentrates quickly because 24.6 percent of adults experience mental illness annually, representing 804,797 residents in a single year. When that level of need is distributed across a 110,572-square-mile geography that includes the Mojave Desert and the eastern Sierra Nevada slope, couples often encounter limited appointment inventory, fewer choices for evening or weekend sessions that fit two work calendars, and longer lead times for a first joint visit. For couples outside major hubs, the shortage designation affecting 79.40% of counties translates into 45-mile average distances, 90-mile round trips, and $15 in fuel per session.

Extended Wait Times

A 12-16 week average wait time for therapy in Nevada is not a minor inconvenience for couples. Relationship conflict around communication breakdown, parenting disagreements, or post-affair trust rarely stays static for 3 to 4 months, and delays can allow misunderstandings to compound into entrenched patterns. Waitlists also create a second problem after the first appointment: continuity. When two partners' schedules at MGM or Caesars casino floors, Tesla Gigafactory rotations, or Amazon distribution centers near Reno are tight, rescheduling a missed session can push the next visit out again, interrupting momentum and making it harder to practice new communication skills consistently. In a state where 18.5 percent of adults who needed mental health treatment did not receive it, long waits and limited scheduling flexibility are part of the pathway from need to non-receipt for Nevada couples.

Systemic Challenges

The combination of provider scarcity and high unmet need in Nevada means access barriers are systemic, not incidental. With 18.5 percent of adults who needed mental health care unable to receive it, the underlying inefficiencies of the current system restrict both choice and continuity for couples from Las Vegas to Reno and rural Ely. These barriers extend beyond scheduling: couples often face logistical challenges securing appointments that accommodate two work calendars across gaming-hospitality employers, the Tesla Gigafactory, Amazon distribution centers, or mining operations, managing absences due to waitlist bottlenecks, and contending with the psychological impact of delayed or fragmented care. While Las Vegas and Reno offer greater provider density, the statewide statistics reflect a persistent difficulty in accessing couples-focused services, with 45-mile distances and $15 in fuel per session compounding the search burden. For Nevada couples navigating these challenges, availability is not only about the number of providers, but whether effective, affordable two-partner intervention is accessible when it is most needed.

Urban-Rural Divide

Nevada's shortage designation across 79.40% of its 17 counties helps explain why access can feel uneven from Las Vegas to rural ranching country. In more populated areas like Las Vegas, Henderson, and Reno, demand can outpace available appointment slots, contributing to the 12-16 week average wait time, especially when both partners are coordinating gaming-hospitality, Tesla Gigafactory, or distribution-center shifts. Outside those hubs, in Mojave, Carson City, Sparks suburbs, and Great Basin communities, the challenge often shifts toward fewer nearby options across 110,572 square miles, which can make regular attendance harder even when a couple is motivated. With 263.1 mental health providers per 100,000 residents serving 3,267,467 people, both settings can produce the same outcome: limited availability, fewer choices, 45-mile drives adding $15 in fuel per session, and delays that make it harder to start care at the moment a couple is ready.

For Nevada couples, therapy access is shaped by shortages, 12-16 week waits, and the time and cost burden of in-person logistics including 45-mile drives and $15 in fuel per session. Grouport reduces these barriers by offering online care that avoids the $780 in annual fuel and the 90-mile round trips, while supporting faster starts through matching in 24-48 hours, helping Las Vegas, Reno, Henderson, and rural Nevada couples begin work while motivation and urgency are still high and both partners are still willing to log in together despite gaming-hospitality, Tesla, or distribution-center shift demands.

Affordable Couples Therapy for Nevada Residents

Grouport provides Nevada couples with therapy at an average of $114 per session ($492 monthly), compared with national pricing of $175-$300 per session and $757-$1,299 per month. That difference matters because cost often determines whether two partners can attend weekly and stay consistent long enough to make progress on communication, trust rebuilding, or parenting disagreements. Timing also affects value: Nevada's 12-16 week average wait time can delay support during active conflict, while Grouport's matching in 24-48 hours is designed to reduce the gap between deciding to get help and actually starting, whether a couple lives on the Las Vegas Strip side, in a Henderson suburb, or in a Reno home near the Tesla Gigafactory.

Affordability and Income

At an average of $114 per session ($492 monthly), Grouport's Couples Therapy is positioned against the national average of $175-$300 per session. For Nevada households balancing Las Vegas Strip cost-of-living, Reno housing inflation near the Tesla Gigafactory, and shift-work irregularity, that pricing matters for two-partner families paying mortgages and childcare. Affordability is not only about the first appointment; it is about sustaining care when both partners' schedules at MGM, Caesars, Tesla, or Amazon distribution centers are tight and progress depends on repetition. In Nevada, the pressure is amplified by access constraints: 79.40% of counties are designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, and the state has 263.1 mental health providers per 100,000 residents, which still leaves demand higher than capacity in Mojave and Great Basin communities. With a 12-16 week average wait time and 45-mile drives adding $15 in fuel per session, couples can end up paying more when they finally find an opening.

Hidden Cost and Barriers

Beyond session fees, Nevada's scale creates real out-of-pocket costs for in-person care across 110,572 square miles. With an average distance of 45 miles to reach an in-person provider, couples often face a 90-mile round trip per session from Mojave or Great Basin communities to Las Vegas, Reno, or Henderson specialists. At a fuel price of $4 per gallon, that adds about $15 in gas expenses per visit. Over a year of weekly sessions, that becomes 4,680 miles of driving and $780 spent on fuel alone, before accounting for vehicle wear, time away from gaming-hospitality, Tesla Gigafactory, or distribution-center work, and coordinating two schedules. These costs can be especially disruptive for couples who already feel stretched, and they can make consistent attendance harder even after a couple finally secures an appointment in a system shaped by 79.40% shortage-area coverage.

Immediate Availability

Nevada's 12-16 week average wait time for therapy equals 84-112 days without professional support while relationship conflict may escalate. In a state where MGM and Caesars casino shifts, Tesla Gigafactory rotations, and Amazon distribution-center hours separate partners' calendars, waiting 3 to 4 months can turn a solvable communication problem into a more entrenched cycle, especially when one partner works overnight on the Las Vegas Strip while the other holds daytime hours in Henderson or Reno. Grouport reduces that delay with matching in 24-48 hours, allowing Nevada couples in Las Vegas, Reno, Henderson, Carson City, and Sparks to begin therapy while concerns are current and both partners are still engaged in the process.

How it Works

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Choose a Service

Choose the right service you are looking for and then simply sign up for a plan.

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Personalized match

We’ll get in touch with you to get brief context to make sure we match you with the therapist that best fits your needs & schedule. (Typically match in 24 hours - 72 hours)

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Start Therapy

Meet weekly with your therapist for 45-minute video sessions for consistent care with real results.

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What Couples Therapy Can Help with:

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  • Communication and fighting
  • Power dynamics
  • Financial conflict
  • Parenting or caretaker stress
  • Challenges with intimacy
  • Repairing after infidelity
  • Identifying unhealthy patterns
  • Restoring trust
  • Conflict resolution strategies
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Types of Couples Therapy in Nevada

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Relationship counseling

Every couple faces challenges that test their relationship. It can happen early on or after years in a relationship. No matter the circumstance, couples counseling offers unbiased support and structure in a comfortable setting. You’ll learn conflict-resolution strategies, identify recurring patterns, while building a healthier, stronger, loving relationship.

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Marriage counseling

Marriage is work, and it’s normal to need outside trusted guidance. Marriage counseling will allow you and your spouse to tackle these issues head on. Sessions will help you identify the root of your problems and come up with effective strategies to address them on a routine basis. Having this open communication and weekly time to just hone in on your marriage, will allow your relationship to thrive.

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Premarital counseling

The days leading up to a wedding can be stressful. Premarital counseling can help you prior to getting married, but also prepare you both for married life. Premarital counseling allows you to start your lives together on a solid footing. Having this dynamic going into a marriage, will allow for the open communication and relevant skills so that you continually invest in a successful marriage.

Mental Health Conditions We Treat in

Nevada

Beyond couples therapy, Grouport offers licensed therapists who specialize across the full spectrum of mental health needs and evidence-based approaches. Whatever you're looking for, we have a therapist for your needs.

Meaningful Results

Check out how our services have helped our members see life-changing results

Sarah

"It’s helped our family improve communication, control anger, and it’s helped my husband and I parent better. I’m forever grateful for bringing our family even closer together."

Isabel

"I joined Grouport to work on myself and to heal. I’m learning so much at every session! The change I see not only in myself but in my fellow group members is abundantly encouraging and profoundly fulfilling. Group therapy with Grouport is a powerful healing tool."

Danielle

"Grouport can help you with your issues. Their therapists are well trained to work with you on your issues. I felt my anxiety greatly improve after only a few sessions. I highly recommend it!"

Glenn

"Grouport's approach to DBT is a real strength. This approach provides tools and methods for working with difficult emotions and getting a handle on them. It has given me hope where other approaches have failed."

Benjamin

"Adam is helping me to approach my anxieties from a different perspective. So I’m working on developing this awareness and not be too fearful about it."

Briana

“I learn a lot of skills and hearing other people’s experiences help”

Charlotte

“Group therapy depends on the facilitator and the participants. This particular one is great for both.”

Melanie

“I love getting another perspective on an issue from another participant. It changes my whole thought process and really helps me see things clearly. I like Grouport because there is no pressure to discuss your problems. During my good weeks, I usually have a similar problem to someone else in the group that's in the back of my mind. They bring that problem to life when they talk about their own situations. We always come to a solution for these negative thoughts or emotions.”

Carrie

“It is helping my family.”

Julia

“Ability to discuss my issues openly in front of others and get feedback that I can use in the future” , “Wonderful opportunity and great pricing! Happy to have found Grouport :)”

Martha

“Liked working with Matthew the therapist. His insight and familiarity with the materials was really helpful. He was welcoming and happy to help.”

Megan

“I look forward to seeing the same group of people every week and helping each other out.”

Allison

“I’ve always found group therapy to be helpful. It’s good to hear likeminded people.”

Sheldon

“I was feeling very down at the end of 2020 and I was ready to do something drastic that I know I'd likely regret. The group definitely helped show me that there are people who feel the same way as I do.”

Nancy

“The therapy from Grouport is high quality and convenient. I am becoming much more self aware and am liking myself more. My relationships at work are better and I’m much happier.”

Barbara

“Human interactions. My ability to fit into a social context and be able to observe, function , and respond, to others in a more conscious way. To be aware of my feelings (reactions) to the dynamics in the group and feel comfortable expressing my feelings.”

Lindsey

“Practitioner is wonderful. Learning a lot from others in the group.”

Amanda

“It's a relatively smooth and streamlined way to access care.”

Kelly

“It's difficult for me to stay motivated to practice DBT and this group helps me. It helps me focus and practice DBT skills for an hour. I'm unable to do this on my own. And it's nice to be around a group of people for support.”

Trevor

“The group gives me something to work towards, and provides other outlooks you normally wouldn't consider.”

Patricia

“I really enjoy the group sessions and Debbie singer is an amazing therapist. I would describe it as incredibly helpful and you get a lot out of each session especially if you actively participate.”

Alexandra

“I received a lot of helpful insights from my group therapist.”

Emily

“I like the connection you can make with total strangers and the confidentiality it comes with.”

Daniel

“It works well, it’s pretty effortless. I’m able to express my struggles and concerns to a group, and get practical feedback.”

Stella

“Easy atmosphere to share your feelings and thoughts and obtain feedback.”

Stephanie

“Grouport is time flexible and affordable and if it didn’t exist, I don’t know where I would go. I had looked into other places before Grouport and there really wasn’t any option like it.”

Olivia

“My weekly group helps me get through the week. Best experience ever!”

Judy

“I’m enjoying the group and learning some new things. It’s a relaxed atmosphere and a place to share listen and learn. Group is great as is the therapist! Highly recommend!”

Ross

“It’s been a useful forum for the family to meet and discuss problems with communication. Previously, people in my family were hesitant to really be honest, and this forum allows for that.”

Maxwell

“Grouport has truly shown me that I am not the only one struggling”

Michael

“I highly recommend this to anyone who is struggling with anxiety or depression. The therapists are top notch and have made me feel really comfortable and my anxiety has improved tremendously in only a few sessions!”

Phoebe

“I’ve always found group therapy to be helpful. It’s good to hear likeminded people.”

Drew

“It's a helpful tool for managing anxiety every week.”

Brooke

“I enjoy Grouport.”

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Meet Our Therapists

Grouport therapists are caring, expert mental health professionals with years of experience helping people get the tools they need to see long-lasting change.

FIND YOUR MATCH
Grouport therapists are fully licensed clinical professionals (LCSW, LMFT, PhD, PsyD) with specialized training in evidence-based Couples Therapy in Nevada.

Affordable Care, Geared to Your Needs

Online couples therapy icon

Couples Therapy

$123/session
billed at $492/month

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Online individual therapy icon

Individual Therapy

$112/session
billed at $448/month

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Online group therapy icon

Group Therapy

$35/session
billed at $140/month

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Online family therapy icon

Family Therapy

$160/session
billed at $640/month

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Online teen therapy and adolescent counseling icon

Teen Therapy

$112/session
billed at $448/month

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Virtual intensive outpatient program IOP therapy icon

IOP Therapy

$337/week
billed at $1,348/month

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or Learn More

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FAQs for Couples Therapy in Nevada

What's the difference between a psychologist, counselor, social worker, and psychiatrist?
These are all different types of licensed mental health professionals. Psychiatrists are medical doctors who can prescribe medication but often don't provide regular therapy. Psychologists have doctoral degrees (PhD or PsyD) and can do therapy but typically can't prescribe medication. Licensed Professional Counselors (LPCs), Licensed Clinical Social Workers (LCSWs), Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists (LMFTs), and Licensed Mental Health Counselors (LMHCs) have master's degrees and provide therapy. All of these professionals can provide excellent therapy. The specific degree matters less than whether the therapist is a good fit for you and has experience with your particular concerns. Grouport works with licensed therapists across these different disciplines.
What if I need a specific type of therapy that costs more in Nevada?
Specialized therapy (EMDR, DBT programs, eating disorder treatment, intensive outpatient programs) often costs more than general therapy. The good thing though is Grouport charges the same rates for therapy irrespective of the type of specialization, meaning the cost is just by the type of therapy service if you’re doing group therapy, individual therapy, couples therapy, family therapy, IOP, a combination of things, or a self guided program. Sometimes intensive but expensive treatment upfront saves money long-term by resolving issues faster than years of regular therapy.
What about therapy for city commute stress in Nevada?

Hour-plus commutes each way are crushing, whether it's subway, train, bus, or driving in traffic. Therapy can't make your commute shorter but it helps you cope with the stress, decide if it's worth it, set boundaries around work hours so you're not also working on the commute, and sometimes gives you the push to move closer or find a new job. Chronic commute stress affects your physical and mental health, relationships, and everything. It's definitely worth addressing.

Can online therapy help with urban imposter syndrome in Nevada?

Cities, especially competitive ones, often lead to imposter syndrome. You're surrounded by high achievers, everyone seems more successful, you're waiting to be found out as not actually belonging here. Therapy helps you work through the perfectionism, anxiety, and self-doubt that come along with this. You explore where imposter syndrome comes from, reality-test whether your fears are accurate, and build confidence. Lots of successful city professionals deal with imposter syndrome and you're not alone in it.

What if we're different culturally or religiously in Nevada?
Intercultural and interfaith couples face unique challenges. Couples therapy helps with understanding and respecting each other's cultural and religious backgrounds. The therapist helps you strengthen your relationship despite differences rather than ignoring or minimizing them. Many intercultural couples find their differences to become sources of conflict and therapy helps you appreciate and navigate differences productively. You don't have to give up your identities to build a shared life, and couples therapy helps you navigate your different backgrounds.
What happens in the first couples therapy session in Nevada?
The first session helps the therapist get to know you and understand your relationship a bit better. They will hear from both of you, learn about your history, and ask you about your challenges from both perspectives. Your couples therapist will observe how you communicate and interact. They'll also introduce themselves, explain their approach, and discuss any expectations and goals. Together, you’ll create a plan and structure that you will work through over the subsequent sessions. Sessions build on each other, so it’s important to come with an open mind and approach things with patience and you will start to see how they lead to progress over time.
What if we disagree on whether we have a problem?
One partner recognizing problems the other minimizes or denies can be frustrating. Even if one partner doesn't see problems initially, couples therapy can help both partners understand each other better. The disagreement itself can be worth exploring. The therapist creates safety for open and honest exploration.
Can you help us decide whether to stay together or break up?
Couples therapy helps you make an informed decision about your relationship but doesn't tell you what to do. The therapist assists by identifying problems clearly and exploring whether issues are addressable. It will help you work through challenges constructively, and decide on the best path forward together with clearer information in a more level headed manner.
When should we consider couples therapy?
Couples therapy can be helpful when fights repeat constantly, or if you’ve lost trust, or feel disconnected. Maybe trust has been damaged or romance has declined, or you're navigating major life challenges together where you feel like you’re not seeing eye to eye. Many couples go to therapy even if they just want to strengthen and maintain an already-good relationship. Even good relationships require work and consistent investment. Even when things are good and you want them to be even better, many partners find couples therapy helpful and it’s not just for couples who are in crisis.
What information do you share with insurance companies in Nevada?
When you submit for insurance reimbursement, we provide a superbill that includes: your name, therapist's name and credentials, dates of services rendered, cost paid per session, and any other relevant information needed for reimbursement.
Do you accept insurance in Nevada?
We don't currently accept insurance directly. Grouport provides affordable care without pre-approvals or referrals. If you have out-of-network benefits, you may be able to submit for reimbursement depending on your plan. We can provide receipts upon request that you can submit for out of network reimbursement.
Can anyone see my therapy sessions in Nevada?
No, your online therapy sessions are completely private. The video connection is encrypted end-to-end, meaning only you and your therapist can see and hear the session. Grouport staff don't have access to view your sessions, and the content isn't recorded or monitored. For your privacy, we recommend attending sessions from a private location where you won't be overheard or interrupted. If you live with family or roommates, consider using headphones and choosing times when you have privacy. You're always in control of your camera and microphone and can turn them off if needed.

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