Get Better, Together

Online Group Therapy in Colorado

With research-backed evidence supporting the healing power of group therapy, we believe that support groups should be at the heart of any treatment plan. When you surround yourself with other group members who share a similar situation, you start seeing results.

Our groups are highly structured and use evidence-based methods that focus on a particular diagnosis or life challenge. Every group is always led by a licensed therapist. Over time, our groups will become a place to look forward to seeing the same faces each week, and an outlet to build trust and vulnerability with the people who understand you.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Mental Health & Group Therapy in Colorado

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

Mental Illness Prevalence

The mental illness prevalence rate in Colorado is 26.3 percent among adults, indicating a high statewide need for structured supports such as group therapy.

Wait Time

The average wait time for therapy in Colorado is 8–12 weeks, which can delay timely entry into group therapy programs.

Median Household Income

The median household income in Colorado is $92,470, which influences what residents can realistically pay for ongoing group therapy and related costs.

Percentage Who Need Therapy

In Colorado, 27.3 percent of adults who needed mental health care did not receive it, reflecting a substantial gap that can affect access to group therapy.

Provider Shortage

In Colorado, 76.51 percent of counties are designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, which can contribute to delays and limited options for group therapy.

Mental Health Providers per 100k Residents

Colorado has 477.5 mental health providers per 100,000 residents, but high demand can still limit openings for group therapy participation.

Colorado's mental health picture is demand-driven rather than supply-constrained. Roughly 26.3% of Colorado adults experience mental illness in any given year (about 1.57 million residents), and the state's 477.5 providers per 100,000 residents is solid relative to many states, yet 8 to 12-week average waits at Front Range practices are among the longest in the country.


With 76.51% of counties designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas and 27.3% of adults who needed mental health care unable to access it, the gap shows up most acutely in mountain towns, Western Slope counties, and the Eastern plains, where local provider density drops sharply outside Denver, Colorado Springs, Boulder, and Fort Collins.


For families on Colorado's $92,470 median household income, the combination of $150 to $250 per-session pricing, Denver parking at $10 to $35 per session, and a 26-minute average commute means consistent attendance compounds time and money costs. Online group therapy removes the parking and commute math while bypassing the multi-practice calling routine that 12-week waits typically require.


UNDERSTANDING THE CHALLENGE

Group Therapy challenges in Colorado

The Problem

Colorado's 5,957,493 residents are spread across 64 counties and 104,094 square miles of mountains, high plains, and Front Range metros, and group therapy access is constrained by demand more than supply. With 477.5 providers per 100,000 residents and 26.3% experiencing mental illness, about 1.57 million Coloradans, the state's clinician base is solid on paper but overwhelmed in practice. Eighty-seven percent of residents live in urban areas, with most providers concentrated in Denver, Colorado Springs, Boulder, and Fort Collins, and average wait times of 8 to 12 weeks for a clinician accepting new clients are among the longest in the country. Residents in mountain towns and Western Slope counties wait longer still, and the search itself often involves calling six or more practices before finding an opening.

The Impact

The 8 to 12-week wait at most Colorado practices means 1.57 million residents experiencing mental illness wait through the period when professional structure tends to matter most. A Colorado resident with worsening depression symptoms can lose two months between deciding to seek help and starting care, time during which sleep, work performance, and relationships often deteriorate. For Front Range residents, weekly therapy adds 26-minute average commutes (about 45 hours a year) and parking that runs $10 to $35 per session in Denver, or $520 to $1,820 a year on top of session fees. Mountain town and Western Slope residents wait longer still, and many ultimately delay care or accept whichever clinician opens up first rather than the right clinical fit.

The Solution

For the 1.57 million Coloradans waiting through 8 to 12-week queues at Front Range practices, Grouport replaces the months-long search with a 24 to 48-hour clinician match. Sessions happen over secure video from anywhere in Colorado, which eliminates the Denver parking costs ($10 to $35 per session, $520 to $1,820 a year), the 26-minute average commutes, and the multi-practice calling routine that demand-driven urban systems produce. At $32 per session on average ($140 a month), 70-80% below the $50 to $150 national group therapy range, the cost works for families on the state's $92,470 median household income who otherwise absorb both session fees and high cost-of-living pressure in Denver, Boulder, and Colorado Springs.
In Colorado, 76.51 percent of counties are designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, which can contribute to delays and limited options for group therapy.
Online care lets Coloradans attend weekly group therapy from home, which removes both the months-long wait at Front Range practices and the parking and commute costs that come with Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs, and Fort Collins clinics. Mountain town and Western Slope residents access the same specialized clinicians as Front Range residents, without the multi-practice calling routine that demand-driven urban systems produce.

Getting Group Therapy in Colorado: Wait Times and Barriers

Colorado's mental-health workforce looks healthier on paper than it functions in practice. The state averages 477.5 providers per 100,000 residents, but those clinicians cluster heavily along the Front Range in Denver, Colorado Springs, Boulder, and Fort Collins, while the Western Slope, the San Luis Valley, and the high mountain counties cut off by winter passes have a much thinner bench. 76.51 percent of Colorado's 64 counties carry Mental Health Professional Shortage Area designations, and tourism, energy, and seasonal agricultural work complicate consistent attendance for residents whose schedules shift week to week. 26.3 percent of Coloradans experience mental illness annually, yet 27.3 percent of those who needed treatment did not receive it, one of the higher unmet-need shares in the Mountain West. Even with the comparatively shorter 8 to 12 weeks average wait, accessing in-person Group Therapy from a mountain county can mean a full day off work, a cost that does not fit a $92,470 median household income.

Geographic Barriers

Colorado's size and distribution of services shape access in ways residents feel immediately. The state spans 104,094 square miles across 64 counties, from the Eastern Plains to the Front Range corridor and across the Continental Divide into the high-country valleys and Western Slope. The practical question is often not whether care exists somewhere, but whether it exists within a workable distance and schedule. When 76.51 percent of counties are designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, residents in many parts of the state face fewer local options for ongoing group therapy participation. That can mean longer travel requirements, fewer session times that align with work or school, and fewer alternatives if a group is full. Even in areas with more providers, residents may still need to contact multiple practices to find a group with an opening, a compatible time, and a structure that supports consistent weekly attendance. Mountain-pass closures during winter storms can also break that consistency for residents on the Western Slope.

Extended Wait Times

When the average wait for therapy in Colorado runs 8 to 12 weeks, the practical effect is that residents enter group care later, often with symptoms that have intensified during the delay and routines that have eroded around the original stressor. A long queue also flattens choice. After waiting 8 weeks, most people will not turn down a poor clinical fit or a group time that conflicts with work, because restarting the search means another multi-month gap. That trade-off matters more for group therapy than for some other formats, because the structure relies on showing up at the same time every week and building trust with the same members session after session. With 477.5 mental health providers per 100,000 residents in Colorado, capacity is already stretched, and an 8 to 12-week wait reflects that strain rather than a temporary spike.

Systemic Challenges

Across Colorado, access barriers in group therapy are structural, not situational. With 27.3 percent of adults who needed mental health care unable to access it and 477.5 providers per 100,000 residents, the clinicians who are practicing carry full caseloads, which limits scheduling flexibility, makes weekly continuity harder, and increases the chance that residents accept whatever opens up first rather than the best clinical fit. With 76.51 percent of the state designated provider shortage areas, residents on the Eastern Plains, the San Luis Valley, and the Western Slope have fewer specialty options for trauma, mood, or family-focused group work, while Front Range metros like Denver, Boulder, and Colorado Springs absorb concentrated demand. The 8 to 12 week wait reflects how quickly capacity is consumed, and the system pressures compound for residents who would benefit most from specialized, ongoing group care.

Urban-Rural Divide

Colorado's urban-rural pattern in group-therapy access tracks the Front Range almost exactly. Denver, Colorado Springs, Boulder, Fort Collins, and Aurora carry most of the state's clinicians, while the Eastern Plains counties, the San Luis Valley, and the Western Slope mountain towns often have one or two practices per county or none at all. In the metros, the friction is multi-month waitlists at established practices and few openings in specialized groups even with 477.5 providers per 100,000 residents on paper. In the rural counties, the friction is the absence of any nearby clinician at all, with shortage designations covering 76.51 percent of the state. For residents, the experience often becomes a tradeoff between waiting 8 to 12 weeks for a nearby option or expanding the search across a wider geography, which adds time, complexity, and drop-off risk for ranching, mining, and ski-town workforces before care even begins.
For Colorado residents, the core access problems are predictable: high need, uneven capacity across a 76.51 percent shortage footprint, and 8 to 12 week delays that slow entry into Group Therapy. Online sessions can reduce those barriers by enabling matching in 24 to 48 hours through secure video, helping residents start care without navigating months-long waitlists or county-by-county availability constraints. That structure also supports consistent participation across mountain communities and front-range population centers, where travel time and seasonal weather can otherwise interrupt weekly attendance.

Affordable Group Therapy for Colorado Residents

Affordability and Income

At a Colorado median household income of $92,470, the topline disguises sharp regional differences between Denver and Boulder tech salaries and the wage realities of the San Luis Valley, the Western Slope mining and agriculture towns, ski-resort hospitality work in Summit and Eagle counties, and oil-and-gas shift rotations in Weld County. Group therapy at the national rate of $50 to $150 per session, or $216 to $649 a month for weekly attendance, can be unworkable during shoulder seasons or rig downtime. Grouport averages $32 per session, billed at $140 a month, which is 70 to 80 percent below the national group rate and predictable across pay cycles. That stability matters because 27.3 percent of Colorado adults who needed mental health care did not receive it, 76.51 percent of counties are designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, and the 8 to 12 week average wait time pushes the start of care further out. Households trying to secure consistent weekly attendance benefit when the cost does not flex with hourly schedules or seasonal income.

Hidden Cost and Barriers

Colorado's metro logistics add recurring costs to in-person care that grow quickly across the Front Range. In Denver and Colorado Springs, paid parking commonly runs $10 to $35 per session, totaling $520 to $1,820 per year for weekly appointments. Time costs add up as well: a 26-minute one-way commute creates 45.1 hours of travel time annually for weekly sessions, time that residents carve out on top of the appointment itself. Those burdens land across the state, including residents in mountain communities, the Western Slope, and the Eastern Plains who travel into higher-demand areas for services. For residents in tech, healthcare, ski-resort tourism, and oil and gas work, the recurring travel time often competes with shift schedules that don't flex easily. The parking and commute add-ons are typically the deciding factor in whether weekly attendance holds over a year of care.

Immediate Availability

For Colorado residents, the 8 to 12-week average wait time amounts to 56 to 84 days without professional care after the decision to seek treatment has been made. In that window, symptoms typically compound, coping capacity narrows, and the most effective early-intervention period passes unused. The same system pressures behind the 56 to 84-day wait drive the broader access gap: 27.3 percent of Colorado adults who needed mental health care didn't receive it. Grouport bypasses that queue by matching residents with a licensed group therapist in 24 to 48 hours, letting care begin while motivation, context, and clinical urgency are all still aligned. Beginning quickly also makes it easier to commit to the weekly rhythm that drives the strongest outcomes in group therapy.
Grouport provides Colorado residents with Group Therapy at $32 per session on average ($140 per month), compared with national pricing of $50–$150 per session and $216–$649 per month. Cost matters most when it intersects with access: Colorado's 8–12 week average wait time for therapy and the 76.51 percent of counties designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas can force residents to choose between delaying care or paying more for limited openings. Against a median household income of $92,470, predictable monthly pricing helps residents plan for consistent attendance, while faster matching reduces the time-to-start barrier that often accompanies traditional scheduling. A flat $140 monthly rate also makes the cost picture predictable from the first session, so residents can plan around it rather than around variable per-visit pricing. Matching in 24 to 48 hours reduces the time between deciding to start and attending a first group.

How it Works

Community

Choose your online therapy group

Choose your desired online therapy group and sign up for our weekly plan. Most of our groups are $35/session, but our skills groups are $25/session.

Networking

Personalized match

We’ll ensure you're matched to an online therapy group that best fits your mental health challenges and schedule. Don’t worry if you’re not entirely sure which group is right for you, as after signing up, a care coordinator can help make sure you get started in the group that’s right for you. We typically match you to a group right away!

Video call

Meet weekly with your group

Join your group over video chat at the same time each week for 60-minute sessions. You’ll meet with the same members & therapist with a group of up to 12 members. Additional membership perks can include weekly handouts, symptom tracking, and one-off workshops.

Find Your Group

We treat the full spectrum of mental health needs, and life challenges in Colorado.

Our team of providers uses a diverse set of therapeutic modalities to create a holistic, personalized treatment program with your background, mental health needs, and recovery goals in mind. No matter the level of your symptoms, or what you’re dealing with, we have a group for you & can provide the care needed to get better.

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Get Help for:

Self harm

Self-Harm, Suicidal Ideation, Self-injury, Suicide Survival

Common Treatments

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Exposure Response Prevention (ERP), Exposure Therapy, Internal Family Systems (IFS), Eye Movement Desensitization & Reprocessing (EMDR), Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT), Psychodynamic Therapy, Motivational Interviewing (MI), Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT), Trauma-Focused CBT (TF-CBT), Narrative Therapy, Schema Therapy, Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT), Somatic Therapy, Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), Prolonged Exposure (PE), Interpersonal Therapy (IPT), Behavioral Activation

  • OCD
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Trauma & PTSD
  • Borderline Personality Disorder
  • Bipolar Disorder
  • Narcissistic Abuse 
  • Eating Disorders
  • Body Dysmorphia 
  • Agoraphobia 
  • Anger Management
  • ADHD
  • Substance Abuse & Addiction
  • Postpartum depression or anxiety
  • Panic
  • Phobias
  • Grief & Loss
  • Relationship Challenges
  • Couples Issues
  • Parenting
  • Supporting a loved one
  • Work stress & burnout
  • Self-harm, Self-injury, Suicidal ideation
  • Chronic Illness
  • Divorce
  • Teen/Adolescent Groups 
  • Gender identity 
  • LGBTQIA Support

Common Treatments:

  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) 
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
  • Exposure Response Prevention Therapy (ERP)
  • Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
  • Emotion-focused Therapy (EFT)
  • Exposure Therapy
  • Motivational Interviewing 
  • Interpersonal Therapy
Vector Heart
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 Group Therapy in Colorado
FIND YOUR MATCH

a healthier future starts right here

Grouport’s Results

80% of our members start with moderate to severe mental health symptoms

70% of our members feel significantly better within just 8 weeks

50% of our members achieve remission levels within just 8 weeks

80%
of our members start with moderate to severe mental health symptoms

70%
of our members feel significantly better within just 8 weeks

50%
of our members achieve remission levels within just 8 weeks

Find your Group

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Affordable Group Therapy & Care Options in Colorado

Group, individual, couples, family, IOP, and teen therapy — all online, all therapist-led. Mix and match care options to fit your needs — and get discounted pricing when you bundle.

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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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Partnership

Couples Therapy

$123/session
billed at $492/month

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or Learn More

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Family Therapy

$160/session
billed at $640/month

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or Learn More

IOP Therapy

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

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Frame

Teen Therapy

$112/session
billed at $448/month

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or Learn More

Meaningful Results

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

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.”

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!”

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."

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.”

Emily

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

Olivia

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

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."

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FAQs for Group Therapy in Colorado

What if I'm seeing a therapist who's licensed in another country in Colorado?
To practice in the US (even via telehealth), providers need US state licensure. Foreign credentials aren't automatically recognized. Some people abroad see therapists in their home countries via telehealth, but US residents should see US-licensed providers.
Can I cancel my membership at any time in Colorado?
Yes! You can cancel anytime, and your membership will remain active until the end of your current billing period. After that, your plan will not renew, and no further payments will be charged. ✅ No long-term commitment – cancel whenever you need. ✅ Full access through your last billing period after canceling.
Can therapy help with urban loneliness in Colorado?

Cities are full of people but despite that urban loneliness is very real. You can be surrounded by millions and feel completely alone. Online therapy addresses this by providing genuine connection with a therapist who actually knows you. Therapy can help with urban loneliness in several ways. Talking to someone who actually pays attention beyond surface level interactions, it explores why genuine connection feels so hard in cities, and addresses social anxiety or trust issues that prevent deeper relationships. Therapy can help with rebuilding self-worth that loneliness erodes. There can be different reasons for urban loneliness. It can be due to mismatch between you and the cities frenetic pace, where everyone's busy with their own lives, transient population, where people leave constantly making investment in relationships seem pointless, social media replacing real interaction, but it does not provide same fulfillment, work-centric lifestyle, where colleagues aren't friends, and high cost of living, preventing the kind of leisurely socializing relationships need. Therapy can also help process grief over the disconnection, develop strategies for building meaningful relationships in urban contexts, and address depression that loneliness often causes. The connection with your therapist itself counters loneliness, providing weekly relationship.

What about therapy for city transplants in Colorado?
Moving to a new city is hard. You don't know anyone, everything's unfamiliar, you miss home but also don't want to go back. Therapy helps with adjustment, building community, managing homesickness, and processing the identity shift of becoming a city person. Lots of transplants struggle. You're not failing just because the transition is difficult.
Can I bring up something that happened outside group?
Bringing outside experiences into group therapy is central to therapy. Whatever's happening in your life is material for group. However, dominating every session with outside content without engaging within the confines of group process limits benefits so it’s important to balance between bringing outside issues, listening to others in the group, and participating in group's here and now interactions. The therapist facilitates using outside examples productively, focusing on relevant skills that require time to go over, while maintaining group cohesion. Your life outside group is always relevant material and you should certainly incorporate things that happen in your life into group as that is why you are there.
What issues does online group therapy help with in Colorado?
Online group therapy addresses anxiety, depression, social anxiety, grief, trauma & PTSD, relationship issues, life transitions, anger management, Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), Bipolar, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), self-esteem, stress management, emotion regulation skills (DBT groups), chronic illness, parenting challenges, substance use recovery, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and much more. So, we offer pretty much any kind of group where shared experience and peer feedback add value. Groups are often organized around specific themes so you're with people dealing with similar situations.
Can I leave a group if it's not working for me in Colorado?
Yes, but planned endings benefit both you and the group. If the group isn't helping after 6-8 sessions, discuss concerns with the therapist first as well as a care coordinator and sometimes the therapist can ultimately make adjustments that will result in a major difference for you. If you're certain the group isn't the right fit, you can always switch groups as fit is important and dictates the quality of your experience in group. This is why we provide the flexibility to switch groups at any time, and our care coordinators will work with you to make sure you’re satisfied with whichever group fit you’re in.
Can I take breaks from group or do I have to attend continuously in Colorado?
Occasional absences for illness, vacation, emergencies, or just general life situations are expected and manageable. So, breaks are possible and sometimes life demands that you take a pause. We of course get that, but know that gaps do disrupt continuity since you miss out on group dynamics and lose some of the connection. If you need to take a break, come back when you can. But if it's just a matter of scheduling or group fit, then perhaps switching to another group that works better for you from a fit and scheduling standpoint is the better course of action. We’ll always work with you to switch groups when you’d like to. Commitment is part of what makes groups effective so discuss with a care coordinator if you are having issues with attendance.
Can group therapy address trauma in Colorado?
Absolutely, we have specific groups geared to Trauma & PTSD. So for trauma we would recommend a trauma group. We also find that Dialectical Behavior Therapy “DBT” groups are often also helpful for trauma & PTSD. The shared experience among trauma survivors is healing and realizing you're not alone in what happened or how it affected you is essential for progress. Trauma groups are usually structured carefully so that you can process trauma effectively, and they can include specific trauma techniques like EMDR or rooted in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT).
How does online therapy work?
Online therapy with Grouport works through video sessions where you meet with a licensed therapist from the comfort of your home. After you sign up, we match you with a therapist within 24-48 hours based on your needs, schedule, and preferences. Sessions are conducted via our HIPAA-compliant video platform - you simply log in at your scheduled time and connect with your therapist. You'll receive the same evidence-based treatment and professional care as in-person therapy, with the added convenience of attending from anywhere.
What technology do I need for online therapy in Colorado?
You’ll need a device with a camera and microphone such as a smartphone, tablet, laptop, or desktop computer along with a stable internet connection. Grouport's platform works on most modern devices and browsers. If you can video call with friends or family, you can attend Grouport therapy sessions. Many of our sessions happen within our member portal, in which case it uses our proprietary video chat technology. If the session doesn’t happen within our member portal, many of our sessions also happen over Zoom’s HIPAA compliant platform, so in that case you would have to download zoom which you can do for free.
What if I have technical problems during a session?
If you experience technical difficulties, first try refreshing your browser or reconnecting to your internet. If that doesn’t work, try a private browser, a different web browser, or try joining from another device. Your therapist will be there while you try to reconnect. If problems persist, contact our technical support team by emailing them at support@grouporttherapy.com. We can often resolve issues quickly. We also recommend testing your connection a couple of minutes before your session to prevent any issues.

Group 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
Elbert County
El Paso County
Fremont County
Garfield County
Gilpin County
Grand County
Gunnison County
Hinsdale County
Huerfano County
Jackson County
Jefferson County
Kiowa County
Kit Carson County
Lake County
La Plata 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
Greeley
Boulder
Centennial
Highlands Ranch
Loveland
Broomfield
Castle Rock
Longmont
Parker
Commerce City
Littleton
Northglenn
Englewood
Grand Junction
Wheat Ridge
Lafayette
Brighton
Montrose
Durango
Steamboat Springs
Vail

Zip Codes

80010, 80011, 80012, 80013, 80014, 80015, 80016, 80017, 80018, 80019, 80020, 80021, 80022, 80023, 80024, 80025, 80026, 80027, 80030, 80031, 80033, 80034, 80035, 80036, 80037, 80038, 80040, 80104, 80108, 80109, 80110, 80111, 80112, 80113, 80120, 80121, 80122, 80123, 80124, 80125, 80126, 80127, 80128, 80129, 80130, 80134, 80135, 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

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

Ready To Get Started?

Let’s find the right therapist match for you, so you can get consistent & effective care.

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