PERSONALIZED FAMILY THERAPY

Online Family Therapy in Colorado

Struggling with family conflicts, miscommunication, or emotional distance in Colorado? Online family therapy can help restore balance and connection. Our evidence-based approach provides a private, supportive space where families can work through challenges together and build healthier, lasting relationships. With the demands of daily life, family relationships can sometimes become strained. Whether you're dealing with persistent disagreements, major life transitions, or simply looking to strengthen your bond, our online family therapy sessions offer a structured way to navigate these challenges. By fostering open and honest communication, we help families reconnect and build trust. Online family therapy is designed to create a safe space where all voices are heard and respected. Our licensed therapists help guide discussions, mediate conflicts, and introduce strategies to promote understanding and collaboration within the family unit. Whether addressing long-standing issues or new challenges, we support families in their journey toward healing and growth.

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Mental Health & Family Therapy in Colorado

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

Mental Illness Prevalance

The mental illness prevalence rate in Colorado is 26.3 percent among adults.

Wait Time

The average wait time for therapy in Colorado is 8–12 weeks.

Median Houshold Income

The median household income in Colorado is $92,470.

Percentage Who Need Therapy

The share of adults in Colorado who needed mental health care but did not receive it is 27.3 percent.

Provider Shortage

The mental health professional shortage area share in Colorado is 76.51 percent.

Mental Illness per 100k Residents

Colorado has 477.5 mental health providers per 100,000 residents.

Colorado's mental health needs are substantial, and they show up differently along the Front Range than they do on the Western Slope or out on the Eastern Plains. The mental illness prevalence rate in Colorado is 26.3 percent among adults. The share of adults in Colorado who needed mental health care but did not receive it is 27.3 percent. Colorado has 477.5 mental health providers per 100,000 residents. The mental health professional shortage area share in Colorado is 76.51 percent. The average wait time for therapy in Colorado is 8–12 weeks. Colorado's median household income is $92,470.


These figures create a practical picture of why many Colorado families struggle to start therapy when conflict is active and time sensitive. A 26.3 percent adult prevalence rate means demand is not limited to a small subset of the population, and the 27.3 percent unmet need rate shows that a large portion of residents who recognize they need care still cannot obtain it. Even with 477.5 providers per 100,000 residents, access is constrained when 76.51 percent of the state is designated as a mental health professional shortage area, because availability is not evenly distributed between Denver's metro core, mountain towns like Durango and Steamboat Springs, and farming communities out near Sterling or Lamar.


Wait times of 8–12 weeks add a second layer of strain. Family therapy often requires coordinating multiple people, which narrows appointment options and increases the likelihood that openings are missed or delayed. When the earliest opening is 8–12 weeks out, a blended family in Aurora can spend that time cycling through repeated arguments about house rules, while a co-parenting pair splitting time between Colorado Springs and Fort Collins watches small misunderstandings calcify. Financial context matters as well. With a median household income of $92,470, many households still feel the squeeze of Front Range housing costs and need predictable session pricing to sustain weekly care, especially when therapy is needed for more than one person. In a system where shortage designations cover 76.51 percent of the state and unmet need is 27.3 percent, the challenge is not simply finding a provider's name; it is finding a workable start date and a sustainable plan for ongoing sessions.


UNDERSTANDING THE CHALLENGE

Family Therapy challenges in Colorado

The Problem

Colorado's 5,957,493 residents across 104,094 square miles face 8–12 week average waits for family therapy, among the longest in the Mountain West. While Colorado has 477.5 providers per 100,000 residents across 64 counties, overwhelming demand along the I-25 Front Range corridor from Pueblo to Fort Collins means clinicians accepting new clients in Denver, Boulder, and Colorado Springs maintain lengthy waiting lists. With 26.3% experiencing mental illness (1,566,821 Colorado residents) and 86% living in urban areas, families seeking Family Therapy spend weeks calling practices in Cherry Creek, Highlands Ranch, and Greeley before landing a first appointment that works for everyone on the calendar.

The Impact

Colorado's 8–12 week waits across 64 counties mean 1,566,821 residents experiencing mental illness cannot access timely care despite 477.5 providers per 100,000. A parent and adult child trying to repair a strained relationship in Lakewood, or a sibling group navigating the loss of a grandparent in Grand Junction, must wait two to three months before beginning Family Therapy, time during which symptoms can escalate and relationships can deteriorate further. Add 27-minute commutes through I-25 and I-70 traffic (47 hours annually) and $10–$35 parking per session in downtown Denver or Boulder ($520–$1,820 yearly), and many households give up entirely. Those who do wait often find additional problems have developed, requiring more intensive intervention for anxiety and depression than immediate access would have needed.

The Solution

For Colorado's 1,566,821 residents waiting 8–12+ weeks across 104,094 square miles—from Denver's tech corridor to the San Luis Valley—Grouport eliminates the waitlists, 47 hours of annual commute time on I-25, and $520–$1,820 in yearly parking costs. Licensed clinicians specializing in Family Therapy match within 24-48 hours, not the months Colorado's 477.5 providers per 100,000 require. Secure video sessions from home work for a stepfamily in Aurora as easily as for siblings spread between Durango and Pueblo, with no driving the Eisenhower Tunnel or fighting Mousetrap traffic to make a 5 p.m. slot. At $148 per session on average ($640/month), Grouport costs 40-50% below the national average while providing the immediate care Colorado families need.
The mental health professional shortage area share in Colorado is 76.51 percent.
Online Family Therapy reduces delays by removing the need to find an in-person office with current openings, which is a key issue when the wait time is 8–12 weeks. For Colorado residents, meeting by secure video also removes commute and parking burdens tied to the Front Range—whether that's driving from Castle Rock into Denver or from Loveland into Boulder—which helps families attend consistently even with work and caregiving schedules. The format also keeps sessions on track during Colorado's snowstorm season, when I-70 closures over Vail Pass or icy mornings along the Palmer Divide can otherwise force last-minute cancellations.

Getting Family Therapy in Colorado: Wait Times and Barriers

Colorado families seeking therapy often encounter capacity limits that are visible at the first step: scheduling. The average wait time for therapy in Colorado is 8–12 weeks, and 76.51 percent of the state is designated as a mental health professional shortage area. Even though Colorado has 477.5 mental health providers per 100,000 residents, demand concentrated along the Front Range from Fort Collins through Colorado Springs has stretched availability thin, leaving households searching across multiple options to find an appointment that fits a parent, a teen, and sometimes a stepparent or older sibling all at once.

Geographic Barriers

Colorado spans 104,094 square miles, and residents are spread across 64 counties that include dense metros, ski-economy towns in Summit and Eagle counties, agricultural communities on the Eastern Plains, and the Southern Ute and Ute Mountain Ute reservations in the southwest. That scale matters for Family Therapy because in-person care requires aligning travel, school schedules, and work hours for multiple people at once. A family in Alamosa or Cortez may face a 90-minute drive each way to reach the nearest specialist, while a co-parenting pair split between Boulder and Denver still has to coordinate around US-36 traffic. Across the shortage-area share of 76.51 percent, the practical distance to care can be as limiting as the clinical need itself.

Extended Wait Times

An 8–12 week wait translates into 56–84 days before a first appointment. For a Greeley family dealing with the strain of long oil and gas industry shifts in the DJ Basin, or for parents and adult children in Pueblo trying to rebuild trust after a difficult year, 56–84 days can be long enough for patterns to harden and for household routines to become more reactive. The wait also increases the chance that families stop searching, especially when the process involves repeated outreach and aligning calendars across multiple households after a divorce. When care is delayed by 56–84 days, the initial goal often shifts from early intervention to crisis stabilization, which makes the first sessions feel more urgent and harder to coordinate.

Systemic Challenges

The combination of provider scarcity and high unmet need in Colorado means access barriers are systemic, not incidental. With 27.3 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 families. These barriers extend beyond scheduling: households often face logistical challenges securing appointments that accommodate two parents and multiple kids, managing absences when a clinician on maternity leave at a Boulder practice empties a waitlist into a longer one, and contending with the psychological impact of delayed or fragmented care. While Denver and Colorado Springs offer greater provider density, the statewide statistics reflect a persistent difficulty in accessing family-focused services regardless of location. Availability is not only about the number of providers, but whether effective, affordable intervention is accessible when it is most needed.

Urban-Rural Divide

Colorado's 86 percent urban population concentrates demand along the I-25 corridor, while shortage designations still cover 76.51 percent of the state. That split creates two different access problems. In Denver, Boulder, Aurora, and Colorado Springs, residents may find many listings but still face 8–12 week waits because clinicians serving the aerospace workforce around Buckley and Peterson Space Force Bases, the tech employers in RiNo and Boulder, and the UCHealth system are at capacity. In the San Luis Valley, on the Western Slope around Montrose, and out on the Eastern Plains near Burlington, the challenge is fewer nearby options and longer drives that make it harder to keep weekly sessions consistent when a partner needs to leave work early and a teen has to be picked up from school.
For Colorado families, the numbers point to a predictable experience: high need, limited capacity, and delays that can stretch 56–84 days. Grouport reduces that gap by matching households with a clinician in 24–48 hours, supporting consistent participation without the added friction of I-25 traffic, downtown Denver parking, or coordinating drives in from Castle Pines, Erie, or Windsor.

Affordable Family Therapy for Colorado Residents

Grouport provides Colorado families with Family Therapy at $148 per session on average ($640/month), which is 40-50% below the national average of $175–$300 per session and $757–$1,299 per month. Cost matters in a state where Front Range housing has pushed many households' budgets to the edge, but timing also shapes value: Colorado's 8–12 week average wait time can delay support during active conflict, whether that's a blended family in Highlands Ranch still working out new house rules or a parent and adult child in Fort Collins trying to reset after a difficult holiday. Grouport's 24–48 hour matching is designed for households that need a start date aligned with real pressure, not a waitlist window.

Affordability and Income

At $148 per session on average ($640/month), Grouport's Family Therapy pricing is positioned against national per-session averages of $175–$300. For Colorado's median household income of $92,470, Grouport represents 0.16% of annual income per session, compared to traditional therapy at 0.19%–0.32%. That difference becomes more meaningful when access is already constrained and household costs are higher than the income alone suggests—Denver and Boulder rents, ski-resort-area childcare in Summit and Pitkin counties, and the long commutes that come with living in Parker or Longmont and working downtown all eat into the same paycheck. With 76.51% of the state designated as a shortage area and an 8–12 week wait, families may have fewer appointment choices and less ability to shop for price or scheduling fit. Predictable pricing helps households commit to weekly care without restarting the search.

Hidden Cost and Barriers

Beyond session fees, Colorado families often absorb additional costs tied to in-person appointments along the Front Range. In Denver and Boulder, garage parking commonly runs $10–$35 per session, which totals $520–$1,820 annually for weekly sessions, and downtown Colorado Springs near the Tejon Street corridor sits in the same range. Time costs add up too: a 27-minute commute each way through I-25 traffic or up US-36 becomes 47 hours annually spent traveling to and from appointments. For a two-partner household coordinating around aerospace shift schedules at Lockheed or healthcare rotations at UCHealth, those 47 hours can mean missed work time, after-school childcare logistics, or one parent always being the one who has to leave early. Online sessions remove the $520–$1,820 in annual parking and eliminate the 47 hours of commuting, which makes consistent attendance more realistic across busy weeks.

Immediate Availability

Colorado's 8–12 week average wait time for therapy equals 56–84 days without structured support while conflict and stress continue at home. For a Greeley family dealing with sibling tension between teens, or for adult siblings in Grand Junction trying to coordinate caregiving for an aging parent on the Western Slope, 56–84 days can also mean more time spent repeating the same arguments without a neutral setting to slow the cycle down. Grouport eliminates that delay with clinician matching in 24–48 hours, giving Colorado families a faster path to starting Family Therapy when timing affects stability and follow-through.

How it Works

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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

Your family will meet weekly and privately with your therapist for 60-minute video sessions for consistent care with real results.

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What online Family Therapy can help with in Colorado

Online family therapy is a specialized form of counseling that helps families in Colorado navigate and resolve conflicts, improve communication, and strengthen emotional connections. It focuses on the family as a unit rather than just individual members, emphasizing the importance of collaboration and mutual understanding. ‍ Therapy sessions provide a safe and structured environment where family members can openly express their thoughts and feelings without judgment. A licensed therapist facilitates discussions, helping families identify unhealthy patterns and work toward sustainable solutions.


Whether your family is experiencing tension, facing a major transition, or simply looking to strengthen its foundation, online family therapy offers valuable tools for long-term success. Find Your Therapist Match and take the first step toward lasting change.

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What online Family Therapy can help with in Colorado

Online family therapy addresses a broad range of challenges that can impact relationships, emotional well-being, and overall family harmony for Colorado residents. Whether you’re navigating everyday stressors or working through deeper issues, our therapists provide guidance and support tailored to your family's unique situation.


If your family is experiencing challenges, online family therapy can provide the structured support needed to move forward more healthily.


For Colorado residents balancing work, school, and caregiving responsibilities, a consistent weekly format can support communication routines, reduce recurring conflict cycles, and create clearer expectations at home. When multiple household members are involved, a structured setting also helps keep conversations focused, so progress is not lost between sessions.


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We focus on fostering open communication, rebuilding trust, and equipping families with the tools to create healthier interactions. If your family is struggling with any of the following, therapy can help:

  • Communication & Conflict Resolution – Learn to express thoughts and emotions in a constructive, supportive way.
  • Burnout & Stress – Address overwhelming pressures that may be affecting family dynamics.
  • Addiction or Substance Use Recovery – Support for individuals and families affected by substance use.
  • Eating Disorder Recovery – Guidance in rebuilding relationships while addressing disordered eating.
  • Post-Traumatic Stress – Navigate the emotional impact of traumatic events together.
  • Major Life Transitions (New Move, Divorce, etc.) – Adjust to significant changes as a family unit.
  • Grief & Loss – Work through the emotions tied to losing a loved one.
  • Financial Matters – Manage financial stressors that may cause tension between family members.
  • Coping with Aging Parents – Address the complexities of caring for elderly family members.
  • Sibling & Family Relationship Issues – Improve dynamics and resolve conflicts between family members.
  • Processing Past Events – Heal from past experiences affecting present relationships.
  • Developing Coping Skills – Build strategies for managing emotions and stress effectively.

Mental Health Conditions We Treat in

Colorado

Whether you're addressing these challenges within family therapy or alongside it, Grouport offers licensed therapists who specialize across the full range of mental health needs and evidence-based approaches. Whatever you're looking for, we have a therapist for your needs.

USA

Meet Our Therapists

Our therapists represent a wide range of clinical specialties & diverse backgrounds. They all undergo the most stringent credentialing process. Grouport therapists are caring, expert mental health professionals with years of experience helping people get the tools they need to see long-lasting change.

Grouport therapists are fully licensed clinical professionals (LCSW, LMFT, PhD, PsyD) with specialized training in evidence-based Family Therapy in Colorado.
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Success Stories

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.”

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Affordable Family Therapy & Care Options in Colorado.

User Profile

Family Therapy

$160/session
billed at $640/month

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Group Therapy

$35/session
billed at $140/month

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Individual Therapy

$112/session
billed at $448/month

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or Learn More

Partnership

Couples Therapy

$123/session
billed at $492/month

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or Learn More

Frame

Teen Therapy

$112/session
billed at $448/month

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or Learn More

IOP Therapy

$337/week
billed at $1348/month

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or Learn More

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FAQs About Family Therapy in Colorado

Do you offer sliding scale pricing in Colorado?

Grouport's online format already provides significant cost savings - 40-70% below traditional therapy rates. While we don't offer individual sliding scale adjustments, our group therapy option provides the most affordable access at just an average of $32 per session ($140/month). We also accept HSA/FSA cards, which reduce costs by 20-30% through tax savings, and can provide receipts for out-of-network insurance reimbursement. You’ll also receive discounts if you pay quarterly or biannually or anytime you do multiple sessions together there are discounts automatically included in those plans.

Can I use my HSA or FSA for Grouport's online therapy in Colorado?

Yes! Our online therapy services qualify for HSA (Health Savings Account) and FSA (Flexible Spending Account) payment. Simply use your HSA/FSA debit card as your payment method, or pay out-of-pocket and submit a reimbursement claim to your HSA/FSA administrator using the detailed receipts we can provide upon request. Using HSA/FSA funds means you're paying for therapy with pre-tax dollars, effectively reducing your therapy costs by 20-30% depending on your tax bracket.

Can family therapy help with grief or loss in Colorado?

Yes, family therapy in Colorado is valuable after loss (death, miscarriage, pet death, divorce, moving, job loss). Grief affects family dynamics since people grieve differently, causing misunderstanding and isolation. Family therapy helps by creating space for everyone to express grief, validating different grieving styles, maintaining family functioning during grief, preventing one person's grief from dominating, addressing anger or blame around loss, helping children understand and process loss, preserving memories appropriately, and adapting to life without the lost person or situation. Family grief therapy helps families support each other through loss rather than each person suffering alone.

Do you see couples for family therapy or is that different in Colorado?

Couples therapy and family therapy in Colorado are distinct services with different focuses. Couples therapy addresses the romantic relationship between partners, communication, conflict resolution, intimacy, trust, shared goals, etc. Family therapy involves parents and children working on family dynamics, parenting issues, and family-wide patterns. Some families need both, couples work on their relationship separately, then family sessions address parent-child issues. If you're unsure which you need, your intake assessment and care coordinators will help determine the right starting point. Many families begin with family therapy and add couples sessions, or vice versa.

How do we know if we need family therapy versus something else?

You should consider family therapy when multiple family members are affected by issues, problems primarily occur in family interactions, you're struggling with communication or conflict, parenting issues are straining relationships, life changes are affecting the whole family, or individual therapy hasn't fully resolved issues with family roots. You should consider individual therapy instead when one person has a specific mental health condition (depression, anxiety) needing focused treatment, personal history or trauma requires individual processing, or someone needs space to explore issues privately. Couples therapy would be relevant when the romantic relationship between partners is the primary concern. If unsure, contact us and we'll help you determine the best starting point for your situation.

What if one parent thinks the other is the problem in Colorado?

It's common for parents to initially blame each other for family issues. A skilled family therapist doesn't take sides or determine who's "right." Instead, they, validate each person's perspective, help parents see how both contribute to patterns (even unintentionally), shift focus from blame to understanding, highlight each person's positive intentions, show how current approaches aren't working for anyone, and collaboratively develop new strategies. Family therapy in Colorado views problems as circular patterns, not one person's fault. The goal isn't determining blame but creating healthier interactions. Often both parents feel blamed initially, but therapy helps them become partners in solving problems.

Can family therapy help adult family relationships in Colorado?

Yes, family therapy in Colorado helps adult family relationships including adult children and aging parents, adult siblings, in-law conflicts, and multigenerational patterns. Common issues include: navigating caregiving for aging parents, resolving long-standing sibling rivalries, addressing childhood wounds, establishing healthy boundaries with parents, managing family business or finances, and healing after family estrangement. Adult family therapy focuses on changing current patterns, improving communication, resolving past hurts, and establishing new ways of relating. It's never too late to improve family relationships, many adults find therapy helps them understand family dynamics and create healthier adult relationships.

Can online therapy help with urban racial/ethnic stress in Colorado?

Experiencing racism in cities, navigating predominantly white professional spaces, code-switching, microaggressions, cultural isolation from your community, pressure to assimilate, therapy helps you process the psychological impacts of this. Finding a therapist who understands your cultural background matters for this work. Cities are diverse but that doesn't mean racism doesn't exist. The stress of navigating it affects mental health.

Is online therapy cheaper than in-person therapy in expensive cities in Colorado?

Usually, yes. In-person therapy in places like NYC, SF, LA, Boston run $200-400+ per session easily. Grouport's pricing is the same whether you're in Manhattan or Montana, which means significant savings if you're located in an urban city. Grouport’s Individual therapy sessions average $103/session and our group sessions are between $25-$35/session which are both way less than one in-person individual therapy or group therapy session in most expensive cities. You're also saving commute time and money, no $20 Uber rides or subway fare to get to appointments.

What if I feel like I'm failing at city life in Colorado?

Lots of people move to big cities with high hopes then feel like they're failing because they're not thriving the way they imagined. Maybe your career isn't taking off, you're lonely, you're broke, you're exhausted. Therapy provides space to process disappointment, reality check whether you're actually failing or just being too hard on yourself, and figure out if you want to stay where you’re at or if it's time to go somewhere else.

What if I don't like my therapist in Colorado?

We want you to feel comfortable with your therapist, so switching therapists is always an option at any time. Simply contact our support team at support@grouporttherapy.com, and we will match you with a different therapist from there. We will present you alternative therapist options and time slots that fit your preferences, and you will ultimately select which therapist you would like to switch to.

How does pricing compare to other therapy options in Colorado?

Grouport pricing is well below traditional in-person therapy in Colorado. Family therapy at $148 per session on average ($640 per month) is 40-50% below the national average of $175-$300 per session and $757-$1,299 per month. The flat monthly rate also makes budgeting predictable.

Family Therapy Across All of Colorado

Counties

Adams County
Alamosa County
Arapahoe County
Archuleta County
Baca County
Bent County
Boulder County
Broomfield County
Chaffee County
Cheyenne County
Clear Creek County
Conejos County
Costilla County
Crowley County
Custer County
Delta County
Denver County
Dolores County
Douglas County
Eagle County
El Paso County
Elbert County
Fremont County
Garfield County
Gilpin County
Grand County
Gunnison County
Hinsdale County
Huerfano County
Jackson County
Jefferson County
Kiowa County
Kit Carson County
La Plata County
Lake County
Larimer County
Las Animas County
Lincoln County
Logan County
Mesa County
Mineral County
Moffat County
Montezuma County
Montrose County
Morgan County
Otero County
Ouray County
Park County
Phillips County
Pitkin County
Prowers County
Pueblo County
Rio Blanco County
Rio Grande County
Routt County
Saguache County
San Juan County
San Miguel County
Sedgwick County
Summit County
Teller County
Washington County
Weld County
Yuma County

Cities

Denver
Colorado Springs
Aurora
Fort Collins
Lakewood
Thornton
Arvada
Westminster
Pueblo
Centennial
Boulder
Greeley
Longmont
Loveland
Grand Junction
Broomfield
Castle Rock
Commerce City
Parker
Littleton
Brighton
Northglenn
Englewood
Wheat Ridge
Lafayette
Erie
Durango
Montrose
Steamboat Springs
Glenwood Springs

Zip Codes

80202, 80203, 80204, 80205, 80206, 80207, 80209, 80210, 80211, 80212, 80214, 80215, 80216, 80218, 80219, 80220, 80221, 80222, 80223, 80224, 80226, 80227, 80228, 80229, 80230, 80231, 80232, 80233, 80234, 80235, 80236, 80237, 80238, 80239, 80241, 80246, 80247, 80249, 80260, 80264, 80903, 80904, 80905, 80906, 80907, 80908, 80909, 80910, 80911, 80915, 80916, 80917, 80918, 80919, 80920, 80921, 80922, 80923, 80924, 80925, 80926, 80927, 80928, 80929, 80930, 80010, 80011, 80012, 80013, 80014, 80015, 80016, 80017, 80018, 80019, 80521, 80524, 80525, 80526, 80528, 80537, 80538, 80539, 80540, 80542, 80543, 80544, 80549, 80550, 80551, 80553, 80534, 80501, 80503, 80504, 80508, 80512, 80516, 80517, 80513, 80515, 80514, 80547, 80401, 80403, 80465, 80467, 80482, 80487, 81657, 81615, 81601, 81611, 81501, 81503, 81504, 81401, 81403, 81301, 81303, 81101, 81003, 81004, 81005

If you have an address in Colorado, Grouport can serve you regardless of your ZIP code.

Online Family Therapy in All 50 States

Grouport offers online family therapy across the United States. Connect with licensed therapists who specialize in helping families navigate conflict, communication, and connection.

Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
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