Get Better, Together

Online Group Therapy in Nevada

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 for residents across Nevada. 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 Nevada

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 Nevada is 24.6 percent among adults, which is about 803,797 residents based on the total population.

Wait Time

The average wait time for therapy in Nevada is 12 to 16 weeks, which can delay entry into ongoing group therapy.

Median Household Income

The median household income in Nevada is $75,561, which influences affordability decisions for ongoing group therapy.

Percentage Who Need Therapy

In Nevada, 18.5 percent of adults who needed mental health care did not receive it, which indicates a sizable gap for residents seeking group support.

Provider Shortage

Nevada has a provider shortage percentage of 79.40 percent, reflecting widespread Mental Health Professional Shortage Area designation across counties.

Mental Health Providers per 100k Residents

Nevada has 263.1 mental health providers per 100,000 residents, which is not enough to meet demand when many providers have full caseloads.

Nevada's mental health picture combines significant need with one of the country's widest access gaps. About 24.6% of Nevada adults experience mental illness in any given year (roughly 803,797 residents), and the state's 263.1 mental health providers per 100,000 residents concentrate in Las Vegas and Reno-Sparks.


With 79.40% of counties designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas and 18.5% of adults who needed mental health care without receiving it, the gap hits hardest in the 15 counties outside Clark and Washoe where rural residents face 100-plus mile drives to the nearest clinician.


For families on Nevada's $71,646 median household income, the practical cost of $150 to $250 per-session in-person care plus long drives or 12 to 16-week waits in the metros makes consistent attendance hard. Emergency-department mental health visits rise when no other option opens. Online group therapy with licensed Nevada clinicians delivers care to rural and metro residents alike, in days rather than months.


UNDERSTANDING THE CHALLENGE

Group Therapy challenges in Nevada

The Problem

Nevada's 3,267,467 residents are spread across 17 counties and 110,572 square miles, with most of the population concentrated in the Las Vegas and Reno-Sparks metros, and the state runs one of the country's most acute mental health access gaps. With 79.40% of counties designated provider shortage areas and 18.5% of adults who needed mental health care unable to access it, the system is structurally short of capacity rather than backed up by demand. Only 263.1 providers per 100,000 residents serve the entire state, and 12 to 16-week average waits mean residents seeking group therapy often wait months for an opening. For the 803,797 Nevadans experiencing mental illness, about 24.6% of adults, the gap between needing care and starting it is among the widest in the country.

The Impact

Across Nevada's 110,572 square miles, the access crisis concentrates in Clark and Washoe counties where most of the population sits, while 803,797 residents experiencing mental illness compete for limited group therapy openings. Residents in rural counties report 100-plus mile drives for appointments when providers exist at all, and 263.1 providers per 100,000 across 17 counties cannot absorb the 18.5% unmet demand. Emergency departments in Las Vegas and Reno see rising mental health visits because residents have nowhere else to turn, and the shortage hits hardest for rural residents who face the longest waits and fewest options. A 12 to 16-week wait isn't just inconvenient, it's a window during which symptoms compound and the willingness to start fades.

The Solution

For the 803,797 Nevadans facing one of the country's widest mental health access gaps, Grouport bypasses the structural shortage by matching residents with licensed Nevada clinicians in 24 to 48 hours, not the 12 to 16 weeks typical at local practices. Sessions happen over secure video from home, which avoids the 100-plus mile drives that rural residents face and the emergency-department escalation that follows when no other option opens in Clark or Washoe counties. At $32 per session on average ($140 a month), 70-80% below the $50 to $150 national group therapy range, the cost fits Nevada's $71,646 median household income while also working for the rural residents who historically face the longest waits and fewest options at local clinics.
Nevada has a provider shortage percentage of 79.40 percent, reflecting widespread Mental Health Professional Shortage Area designation across counties.
Online care lets Nevadans attend weekly group therapy from home, which bypasses the structural shortage that drives 100-mile drives in rural counties and the 12 to 16-week waits in Clark and Washoe. Rural-county residents access the same licensed clinicians as Las Vegas and Reno residents, and weekly attendance holds steady regardless of which county a resident lives in.

Getting Group Therapy in Nevada: Wait Times and Barriers

Nevada's mental-health workforce ratio of 263.1 providers per 100,000 residents is one of the thinnest in the country, and 79.40 percent of the state is federally designated a Mental Health Professional Shortage Area. Clinicians cluster in Las Vegas, Reno, Henderson, and Carson City, while the rural mining counties of the Great Basin and the I-80 corridor have almost no in-person Group Therapy capacity. casino round-the-clock shift work, mining rotations, and warehouse logistics put a large share of Nevada workers on shifts that do not match daytime clinic hours, and the 12 to 16 weeks average wait further narrows options. 24.6 percent of Nevadans experience mental illness annually and 18.5 percent of those who needed treatment did not receive it. Set against a $75,561 median household income, the cost and timing of in-person care reshape who can actually access it.

Geographic Barriers

Nevada's geography amplifies the effect of provider scarcity. The state's 3,267,467 residents are distributed across 110,572 square miles of Great Basin desert, mountain ranges, and remote valleys, with most population concentrated in the Las Vegas and Reno-Carson corridors and the rest scattered across long stretches of US-95 and US-50. So the distance between where residents live and where services are available can be substantial. When 79.40% of 17 counties are shortage areas, residents outside the most resourced corridors may have to search across county lines to find openings, and that search can be repeated if a group is full or not a fit. For group therapy, geography affects more than travel time. It can limit the ability to attend consistently, especially when weekly sessions are expected and missed sessions disrupt progress. Sierra Nevada snowfall on passes like Donner and summer thunderstorm flash-flooding through desert washes can also break that weekly rhythm.

Extended Wait Times

A 12 to 16-week wait is long enough that the original reason for seeking help can shift before the first group session ever begins. In Nevada, where 18.5 percent of adults who needed mental health care did not receive it, that delay does not sit in isolation; it sits inside a system where openings are already scarce and residents often accept whatever group schedule appears first. Group therapy depends on consistent weekly attendance, so taking a slot that does not fit work, caregiving, or commute demands tends to undercut the outcome before treatment really starts. The 12-week mark is also where many residents drop the search entirely, not because the need has resolved, but because the effort of staying on a waitlist, returning calls, and verifying coverage becomes its own barrier to care.

Systemic Challenges

Across Nevada, the combination of high unmet need and a thin provider base makes access barriers systemic rather than situational. With 18.5 percent of adults who needed mental health care unable to access it and only 263.1 providers per 100,000 residents, the clinicians who are practicing carry full caseloads, which limits scheduling flexibility, makes weekly continuity harder, and pushes residents toward whatever opens up rather than the best clinical fit. With 79.40 percent of counties designated provider shortages, residents in the rural counties along U.S. 50, the mining communities of Elko and White Pine, and the agricultural valleys of northern Nevada have fewer specialty options for trauma, gambling-related issues, or family-focused group work, while Las Vegas and Reno absorb concentrated demand. The 12 to 16 week wait reflects how quickly capacity is consumed, and the system pressures compound for residents who would benefit most from specialized clinicians.

Urban-Rural Divide

Nevada's urban-rural pattern in group-therapy access is among the most concentrated in the country. Las Vegas, Henderson, Reno, North Las Vegas, and Sparks carry essentially all of the state's clinicians, while the rural counties of Elko, White Pine, Lincoln, and Esmeralda, the mining towns of central Nevada, and the small communities along Highway 95 often have one practice per county or none at all. In the metros, residents may find more listings yet still face full caseloads because 263.1 providers per 100,000 must serve 3,267,467 people, many of them shift-working hospitality, gaming, and warehouse workers. Outside those metros, the 79.40 percent shortage-area designation across the 17 counties translates into fewer viable options and longer distances. The 12 to 16 week average wait becomes a common friction point, and the 18.5 percent unmet need reflects how often residents cannot convert intent into actual care.
For Nevada residents, the numbers point to a predictable pattern: a 79.40 percent shortage-area designation, 12 to 16 week waits, and a large geographic footprint that makes consistent attendance harder. Online Group Therapy can reduce these barriers by removing the travel burden and matching residents within 24 to 48 hours rather than requiring the full average wait. That structure helps support weekly participation across both Las Vegas and Reno population centers and the rural stretches in between, where in-person options can be especially thin.

Affordable Group Therapy for Nevada Residents

Affordability and Income

At a Nevada median household income of $75,561, the cost of weekly therapy reads very differently for the Las Vegas hospitality and gaming workforce, the Reno tech-and-warehouse economy, the rural mining counties in Elko and the central basin, and the tourism-driven small towns along the Lake Tahoe corridor. Group therapy at the national rate of $50 to $150 per session, or $216 to $649 a month for weekly attendance, is a difficult commit when tips, shifts, and seasonal hours drive most of household income. Grouport averages $32 per session, billed at $140 a month, which is 70 to 80 percent below the national group rate. That stability matters in Nevada, where 89.27 percent of counties are designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas and the average wait time runs 8 to 12 weeks. When availability is tight statewide, a predictable monthly cost is often what allows residents to commit to consistent weekly attendance instead of cycling in and out of care as schedules and paychecks shift.

Hidden Cost and Barriers

Nevada's 110,572 square miles and provider concentration in Las Vegas and Reno mean most residents face significant travel for in-person care. The average distance to a licensed provider is 45 miles, meaning a 90-mile round trip per session. At $4 per gallon, that's about $15 in fuel per visit, and over a year of weekly sessions, Nevada residents drive 4,680 miles and spend $780 on gas alone. Those costs are separate from the time burden of repeated travel across vast distances, and they fall hardest on residents in rural counties, mining communities, and the smaller hubs like Elko and Pahrump, where the nearest in-person option may sit an hour or more away. For residents working hospitality, gaming, and casino shifts that don't flex easily, missing a half-day for travel means lost wages, which raises the missed-session rate in a format that depends on consistent weekly attendance.

Immediate Availability

Nevada's 12 to 16-week average wait time works out to 84 to 112 days of waiting after the decision to seek care has already been made. During that span, symptoms typically compound, routines destabilize, and the early-intervention period when treatment is most effective tends to slip away. The 84 to 112-day wait sits inside a broader access gap: 18.5 percent of Nevada adults who needed mental health care didn't receive it. Grouport eliminates the queue by matching residents to a licensed group therapist in 24 to 48 hours, allowing weekly group sessions to begin while motivation is intact and clinical urgency still favors action. A faster start also reduces the disengagement that happens when months pass between intake and first session, which is when most waitlist attrition occurs.
Grouport provides Nevada residents with Group Therapy at $32 per session on average ($140/month), compared with national pricing of $50–$150 per session and $216–$649 per month. Cost matters most when it intersects with access: Nevada's 12 to 16 week average wait time for therapy and the 79.40 percent of the state's 17 counties designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas can force residents into higher-cost stopgap options or prolonged delays before weekly care begins. A predictable price point helps residents plan for consistent attendance, while faster matching reduces the period spent searching across limited local openings. Grouport's matching in 24 to 48 hours also reduces the period spent waiting for an in-state opening, so residents can begin weekly care without spending months in queue. A flat $140 monthly rate keeps the budgeting picture predictable from the first session.

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 Nevada

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 for Nevada residents. 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
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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 Nevada
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 Nevada

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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Family Therapy

$160/session
billed at $640/month

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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 Nevada

Do recording laws vary by state?
Yes. Some states require all parties' consent to record conversations (two-party consent), while others only require one party's consent. If you want to record your private individual therapy sessions, ask your therapist first, they might say yes or might say no, and they need to follow your state's recording laws. Recording without consent could be illegal. Group therapy sessions cannot be recorded due to confidentiality protections for other group members, regardless of what your state's recording laws allow.
What if therapy isn't helping—am I wasting money in Nevada?
If you've genuinely tried for 12+ sessions and seen zero improvement, it may be a sign that you need a different therapist. Perhaps you need a different approach or different modality. Perhaps you need greater intensiveness combining multiple types of therapy like individual therapy and group therapy, or you need a comprehensive treatment plan that tackles different parts of your symptoms or diagnoses. Before concluding therapy isn't helping, ask yourself. Have you been consistent? Are you practicing skills outside sessions? Have you been honest with your therapist? How does the therapist fit feel? What do you feel like is missing from your care? Discuss lack of progress with your therapist and these different things and they might adjust the approach to better suit your needs. Usually there is a way to get things on a better track whether that's the current therapist adjusting the approach, switching therapists, or adding more sessions or types of care so that your treatment plan is fully addressing everything you need. With therapy overtime and consistent practice you should see progress over time.
What about therapy for urban service workers in Nevada?

Service work in cities, restaurant, retail, delivery is exhausting and often poorly paid. You deal with entitled customers, long hours, no benefits, and rent that takes most of your paycheck. Therapy addresses the stress, helps you navigate whether this is temporary or if you're stuck, and processes the class dynamics and indignity of service work in expensive cities. You deserve mental health support even if you're not a high-earning professional.

How do I fit therapy into a demanding city job in Nevada?

Online therapy is way easier to fit in than traditional therapy. There are some adjustments you can make to fit therapy in including, early morning sessions before work starts since lots of therapists work with city professionals on tight schedules and they offer 7am or 8am slots, lunch break sessions, evening sessions after work, weekend sessions if available, and shorter sessions like 30-45 minutes instead of full hour. Other strategies include taking sessions from your office (if you have private space), scheduling around predictable work patterns, biweekly sessions if weekly impossible. You may sometimes need to choose between career and self-care. If your job genuinely makes therapy impossible, your job might be the problem. Therapy helps you make that determination. Online format eliminates commute time, you can do session, then return to work in 5 minutes versus losing 2 hours for in-person. This is huge for demanding jobs.

How do I know if I'm ready to leave the group in Nevada?
Many times people look at group as part of their wellness routine and as an ongoing part of ensuring their continued wellbeing. So, it can be like something you consistently do on a weekly basis for your continued wellbeing. That said, if you feel like you've met your goals, feel equipped to handle your mental health independently, and the group stops feeling like active growth then it's possible that it might be the right time to graduate from the group and that’s a positive sign of progress. Your therapist can help you assess readiness and help you explore if it's beneficial to stick with the group for ongoing care maintenance or if you’d be better off leaving the group. It’s always up to you if you wish to stick with the group, switch to another type of group, or stop.
How is online group therapy different from online individual therapy in Nevada?
Online Group therapy differs from individual therapy in several ways in that you share therapist attention with other members versus exclusive focus on you, you receive feedback from multiple perspectives not just the therapist, you learn by observing others' experiences and progress, and you practice interpersonal skills in real-time with peers. Groups create this whole other dimension as you get multiple perspectives and see how others handle similar problems which helps you feel less alone. Cost per session is typically lower than individual therapy, as groups cost about $25 - $35 per group session. Group provides community and reduces isolation in ways individual therapy cannot. However, individual therapy offers personalized attention, and exploration of issues you might not share in groups. Many people benefit from both simultaneously, group for skill-building and support and individual therapy for deeper personal work. Neither is better, they serve different functional needs but have complementary purposes. Many people find group therapy to be more powerful than individual therapy because of the connection factor.
Can I do online group therapy if I'm very introverted?
Yes, introverts often do really well in group therapy once they get past initial discomfort. You don't have to be the loudest person to benefit and what often happens is that introverts open up overtime. Quiet observation is totally valid and a skilled group therapist makes space for different communication styles. The therapist works with your natural communication style while encouraging growth promoting challenges. Groups benefit from diverse personalities such as introverts who provide balance and thoughtfulness to session.
How is online group therapy different from in-person in Nevada?
Online group therapy provides the same therapeutic benefits as in-person groups while adding some unique features. Everyone joins by video from wherever they are physically located. It’s the same therapeutic experience, just a different format. Many people actually prefer online since there’s no commute, you can do it from home, and this way it's easier to make it part of your consistent routine. The therapist also manages online-specific differences like coordinating turn taking, managing technology problems, and ensuring engagement. Nonetheless it's shown to be as effective as in person group therapy, and many people find it to be even more effective for a variety of reasons.
What happens in an online group therapy session in Nevada?
Sessions usually start with a brief check-in where each member shares how it's going and what came up since last week. Then discussion can shift to a skill-building exercise, a support oriented framework, or processing. The therapist facilitates but group members drive a lot of the conversation and the therapist ties things back to what the appropriate evidence-based treatment in the situations expressed would be so that they reinforce and drive accountability to adherence to treatment. Every group has its own structure so it can really be based on the type of group, therapist style, and member needs. Format of course can vary by group type and for example skills groups are more structured with teaching components whereas process groups are more free-flowing based on member needs.
Can I attend online therapy sessions from anywhere in Nevada?
You can attend your online therapy sessions from anywhere. The key requirements are any private location with internet access
Where are sessions held in Nevada?
All therapy sessions are 100% virtual and take place via secure video chat. Whether you're in group, individual, couples, family, IOP, or teen therapy, sessions are held at a recurring time that fits your schedule.
What therapy approaches do you use?
Grouport therapists use evidence-based mental health treatments, proven effective through research, including: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for anxiety, depression, and negative thought patterns; Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) for emotion regulation and distress tolerance which is helpful for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), Bipolar Disorder, Anger Management & more; Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) for OCD, Gottman Method for couples and families; trauma-focused approaches like EMDR and CPT; Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT); Solution-Focused Brief Therapy; and attachment-based approaches. We will present to you therapist options who specialize in the needs that are relevant for you. Your therapist will discuss their approach and tailor treatment to your specific needs and goals. The combination of research-backed methods and personalized care ensures effective treatment.

Group Therapy Across All of Nevada

Counties

Churchill County
Clark County
Douglas County
Elko County
Esmeralda County
Eureka County
Humboldt County
Lander County
Lincoln County
Lyon County
Mineral County
Nye County
Pershing County
Storey County
Washoe County
White Pine County
Carson City

Cities

Las Vegas
Henderson
Reno
North Las Vegas
Sparks
Carson City
Elko
Mesquite
Boulder City
Fernley
Fallon
Winnemucca
Pahrump
Gardnerville
Minden
Incline Village
Laughlin
Ely
Tonopah
Lovelock
Yerington
Battle Mountain
Dayton
Silver Springs
Indian Hills
Spring Creek
Zephyr Cove
Stateline
Caliente
Hawthorne

Zip Codes

89101, 89102, 89103, 89104, 89106, 89107, 89108, 89109, 89110, 89113, 89117, 89118, 89119, 89120, 89121, 89122, 89123, 89128, 89129, 89130, 89131, 89134, 89135, 89138, 89139, 89141, 89142, 89143, 89144, 89145, 89002, 89011, 89012, 89014, 89015, 89027, 89030, 89031, 89032, 89044, 89052, 89074, 89081, 89084, 89086, 89015, 89005, 89007, 89012, 89014, 89501, 89502, 89503, 89506, 89509, 89511, 89512, 89521, 89431, 89433, 89434, 89436, 89439, 89440, 89701, 89703, 89706, 89721, 89801, 89820, 89825, 89048, 89406, 89445, 89447, 89045, 89301, 89040, 89403, 89408, 89410, 89049, 89310, 89410

If you have an address in Nevada, 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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