Get Better, Together

Online Group Therapy in North Carolina

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 in North Carolina. 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 North Carolina

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 North Carolina is 22.2 percent among adults, which equals about 2,452,217 residents based on the state population.

Wait Time

The average wait time for therapy in North Carolina is 12 to 16 weeks.

Median Household Income

The median household income in North Carolina is $69,904.

Percentage Who Need Therapy

In North Carolina, 21.3 percent of adults with any mental illness reported an unmet need for mental health care.

Provider Shortage

In North Carolina, 87.48 percent of counties are designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas.

Mental Health Providers per 100k Residents

North Carolina has 327.2 mental health providers per 100,000 residents.

North Carolina's mental health picture combines significant need with one of the country's most acute workforce shortages. About 22.2% of North Carolina adults experience mental illness in any given year (roughly 2,452,217 residents), and the state's 327.2 mental health providers per 100,000 residents serves them.


With 87.48% of counties designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas and 21.3% of adults who needed mental health care without receiving it, the gap hits hardest in the eastern coastal plain, the western mountain counties, and rural Piedmont communities. Most clinicians cluster in Charlotte, the Triangle, the Triad, and Asheville.


For families on North Carolina's $66,186 median household income, the practical cost of $150 to $250 per-session in-person care plus 50-plus mile drives and 12 to 16-week waits makes consistent attendance hard. Emergency-department mental health visits rise when no other option opens. Online group therapy with licensed NC clinicians delivers care to residents in coastal, mountain, and rural Piedmont counties in days rather than months.


UNDERSTANDING THE CHALLENGE

Group Therapy challenges in North Carolina

The Problem

North Carolina's 11,046,024 residents are spread across 100 counties and 53,819 square miles that run from the Outer Banks to the Piedmont metros to the Smoky Mountains, and the state runs one of the country's most acute mental health access gaps. With 87.48% of counties designated provider shortage areas and 21.3% of adults who needed mental health care unable to access it, the system is structurally short of capacity. Only 327.2 providers per 100,000 residents serve the state, and 12 to 16-week average waits mean residents seeking group therapy often wait months for an opening. For the 2,452,217 North Carolinians experiencing mental illness, about 22.2% of adults, most of the workforce sits in Charlotte, the Triangle, the Triad, and Asheville, leaving the eastern coastal plain and the western mountain counties materially under-served.

The Impact

Across North Carolina's 53,819 square miles, the access crisis hits 2,452,217 residents experiencing mental illness hardest in rural and medically under-served counties. Residents in the eastern coastal plain, the western mountain counties, and many rural Piedmont communities report 50-plus mile drives for appointments when providers exist at all, while 327.2 providers per 100,000 across 100 counties cannot absorb the 21.3% unmet demand. Emergency departments in Charlotte, the Triangle, and the Triad see rising mental health visits because residents have nowhere else to turn, and the shortage hits hardest for low-income and Medicaid-enrolled residents who face the longest waits and fewest in-network options. A 12 to 16-week wait functions as a multi-month gap during which symptoms compound.

The Solution

For the 2,452,217 North Carolinians facing one of the country's most acute access gaps, Grouport bypasses the structural shortage by matching residents with licensed NC clinicians in 24 to 48 hours, not the 12 to 16 weeks typical at local practices. Sessions happen over secure video from home, which means residents in the eastern coastal plain, the western mountain counties, and rural Piedmont communities access the same clinicians as Charlotte, the Triangle, the Triad, and Asheville residents. At $32 per session on average ($140 a month), 70-80% below the $50 to $150 national group therapy range, the cost works against North Carolina's $66,186 median household income, and the wait that historically functioned as a months-long care gap shrinks to days.
In North Carolina, 87.48 percent of counties are designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas.
Online care lets North Carolinians attend weekly group therapy from home, which bypasses the 12 to 16-week wait at urban practices and the structural shortage across 87.48% of counties. Residents in the eastern coastal plain, the western mountain counties, and rural Piedmont communities access the same licensed NC clinicians as Charlotte, the Triangle, the Triad, and Asheville residents.

Getting Group Therapy in North Carolina: Wait Times and Barriers

North Carolina's Group Therapy supply is shaped by a workforce ratio of 327.2 providers per 100,000 residents and one of the highest shortage shares in the Southeast, with 87.48 percent of North Carolina's 100 counties designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas. Clinicians cluster in Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, and Asheville, while the Outer Banks, the Black Mountains, and the Sandhills carry the weight of the state's geography. banking, biotech in the Research Triangle, tobacco country, and hurricane-prone coastal counties add an annual layer of disruption, and the 12 to 16 weeks average wait pushes the start of care into a different season for most help-seekers. 22.2 percent of North Carolinians experience mental illness annually and 21.3 percent of those who needed treatment did not receive it. Set against a $69,904 median household income, repeated in-person travel is its own access barrier.

Geographic Barriers

North Carolina's statewide shortage-area coverage creates geographic friction that affects residents in multiple ways across a state that runs from the Blue Ridge and the Smokies in the west through the Piedmont metros of Charlotte, Greensboro, and Raleigh to the Coastal Plain and the Outer Banks. When 87.48 percent of counties are designated shortage areas, residents are more likely to face fewer local options, narrower scheduling windows, and reduced ability to switch groups if the first match is not clinically appropriate. The scale of need matters: 22.2 percent of adults, about 2,452,217 residents, are experiencing mental illness, and that volume of need is distributed across the state rather than concentrated in a single corridor. With only 327.2 mental health providers per 100,000 residents, availability can become especially constrained for residents seeking group therapy formats that require consistent weekly attendance and stable group rosters. Hurricane-season flooding along the coast and winter ice storms in the Piedmont can further fracture that consistency.

Extended Wait Times

The 12 to 16-week wait for therapy in North Carolina reshapes how residents experience the entire process of seeking group support. Symptoms that prompted the search rarely stay static through a multi-month delay; sleep, focus, and relationships often shift in ways that make engagement harder once a slot finally opens, and the gains people had hoped to lock in feel further out of reach. The wait also narrows clinical fit: once 12 weeks have passed, declining an available group to wait for a better-matched one feels harder than accepting whatever fits the calendar. For a format that depends on weekly attendance, that compromise can quietly undercut outcomes. 21.3 percent of North Carolina adults already needed mental health care and did not receive it, so a 12 to 16-week queue is not an outlier; it is the system at baseline.

Systemic Challenges

Across North Carolina, the combination of high unmet need and a constrained workforce produces access barriers that are systemic, not incidental. With 21.3 percent of adults who needed mental health care unable to access it and 327.2 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 87.48 percent of counties designated provider shortages, residents in the eastern coastal plain, the Sandhills, and the western mountains around Asheville and the Cherokee homelands have fewer specialty options for trauma, grief, or family-focused group work, while the Research Triangle and the Charlotte metro absorb concentrated demand. The 12 to 16 week wait reflects how quickly capacity is consumed across all 100 counties, and the system pressures compound for residents who would benefit most from specialized clinicians.

Urban-Rural Divide

North Carolina's urban-rural pattern in group-therapy access tracks the I-85 corridor. Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, Durham, and Winston-Salem carry most of the state's clinicians, while the western mountain counties of the Blue Ridge, the eastern Coastal Plain tobacco and hog-farming communities, and the Outer Banks barrier island towns often have one or two practices per county or none at all. The state has 11,046,024 residents spread across 53,819 square miles, and 87.48 percent of counties are designated shortage areas, so residents in many communities face fewer local options and longer lead times. With 327.2 providers per 100,000, capacity tightens quickly when residents need a specific group focus or a consistent weekly slot, particularly for the banking, biotech, and Research Triangle workforce. For the 2,452,217 residents experiencing mental illness, the gap between need and available appointments shows up as limited choice and delayed starts.
For North Carolina residents, the numbers point to a consistent pattern: high need, 87.48 percent shortage-area coverage, and 12 to 16 week waits that can interrupt timely entry into Group Therapy. Online sessions can reduce these access constraints by allowing participation from anywhere in the state and matching in 24 to 48 hours rather than waiting the full average. That structure helps residents in mountain, Piedmont, and coastal communities maintain weekly consistency without relying on local provider density or navigating long travel between counties.

Affordable Group Therapy for North Carolina Residents

Affordability and Income

At a North Carolina median household income of $69,904, the figure spans Research Triangle tech-and-biotech salaries, the Charlotte banking and logistics economy, the Piedmont's textile and furniture-manufacturing legacy in the Triad, the agricultural counties of the eastern coastal plain, and the small-town tourism and small-business economies of the western Appalachian counties around Asheville and the Blue Ridge. Group therapy at the national rate of $50 to $150 per session, or $216 to $649 a month for weekly attendance, is a meaningful tradeoff for households outside the Triangle-Charlotte income belt. 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 North Carolina, where 350.9 mental health providers per 100,000 residents are unevenly distributed, 80.36 percent of counties are designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, and the average wait time runs 12 to 16 weeks. When local openings are scarce, a predictable monthly cost is often what makes consistent weekly group attendance possible.

Hidden Cost and Barriers

North Carolina's 53,819 square miles spread provider supply unevenly between the Research Triangle, Charlotte, and the rest of the state, and that geography turns into recurring travel costs for in-person group therapy. The average distance to care is 45 miles, meaning a 90-mile round trip per session. At $3 per gallon, that's about $15 in fuel per visit, and over a year of weekly sessions, residents drive 4,680 miles and spend $780 on gas alone, separate from time away from work or other responsibilities. With 87.48 percent of counties shortage-designated, residents in the eastern coastal plain, the mountains west of Asheville, and rural piedmont counties carry more of that travel load. The recurring fuel and time costs can become another reason residents delay starting care or fall off after a few sessions, even when symptoms are already affecting daily functioning.

Immediate Availability

For North Carolina residents, the 12 to 16-week average wait time amounts to 84 to 112 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 84 to 112-day wait drive the broader access gap: 21.3 percent of North Carolina 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 North Carolina 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: North Carolina's 12 to 16 week average wait time for therapy and the 87.48 percent of counties designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas can force residents into longer searches and repeated intake steps before weekly care begins. Predictable monthly pricing helps residents plan for consistent attendance rather than being pushed toward higher-priced options when a lower-cost slot is not immediately available. Grouport's matching in 24 to 48 hours also shortens the gap between deciding to start and attending a first session, which often matters more than the headline session price. A flat $140 monthly rate keeps the budgeting picture predictable from week one.

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 North Carolina

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 for residents across North Carolina.

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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
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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 North Carolina
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 North Carolina

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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or Learn More

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 North Carolina

Can my therapist see me if I'm temporarily in another state in North Carolina?
Technically no, unless they're licensed there. If you're on vacation or traveling for work and do a therapy session from a different state, your therapist should be licensed in that state.
Can I use my HSA or FSA for Grouport in North Carolina?
Yes! You can use your HSA (Health Savings Account) or FSA (Flexible Spending Account) debit card to pay for Grouport services. This gives you tax savings, you're paying with pre-tax dollars. Most online therapy platforms, including Grouport, are set up to accept HSA/FSA cards at checkout.
What if my shortage area doesn't believe in mental health in North Carolina?
Cultural stigma in shortage areas often dismisses mental health as being weak or just needing to pray more or city people problems. That stigma prevents people from getting help even when they're suffering. Online group therapy's privacy helps, you can get help without public judgment. And therapy validates that mental health is real and deserves treatment.
How do I know if I live in a shortage area in North Carolina?
If you've tried to find a therapist and can't, you're probably in one. Officially, you can check the HRSA shortage area database, but practically speaking if the nearest therapist is an hour+ drive, if wait lists are 3-6 months, if your area has fewer than one mental health provider per 30,000 people, you're in a shortage area. It's designated based on provider to population ratios.
What if I know someone in my group in North Carolina?
This is so rare that it almost never happens. In the very rare chance it does, talk to the therapist and talk to our care coordination staff if it happens. They will assist you and If you’re not comfortable in the group, you can always switch groups at any time. In the end of the day, the main thing that we’ll work with you on is to ensure that you're happy with your group fit.
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 happens in an online group therapy session?
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.
What if I feel like I don't fit in with the group in North Carolina?
Give it some time. Feeling Initial discomfort is normal. If after a couple of sessions you still feel like you’re questioning whether the group is the right fit or not, talk to a care coordinator and they can help you explore what might be best for you. Maybe a different group would be a better fit, or perhaps it's worth sticking with the group to see if it's just taking some time to ease into it, which can happen before you find your rhythm with the group. You can always switch groups at any time in the event you wish to switch to another group, and a care coordinator will work with you to make sure you’re happy with your group fit.
Can groups help with chronic illness or medical challenges?
Living with ongoing chronic health challenges is isolating and many people don't get what it's like. Being in group therapy with others managing chronic conditions reduces that isolation significantly. You’ll also get practical coping strategies from people who actually live the same or similar reality. Groups help members live fully despite limitations their chronic illness may present.
Do you treat children or only adults in North Carolina?
Grouport serves teens/adolescents (ages 11+), adults, couples, and families. Our teen therapy program consists of group therapy, individual therapy, and family therapy, or a combination based on what’s appropriate and the level of care your teen needs. So teens often combine group therapy + individual therapy at the level that meets their needs or they do our intensive outpatient program for more acute needs.
Do you offer financial assistance or scholarships in North Carolina?
While we don't currently offer financial assistance, we're committed to making therapy accessible. Group therapy at $32/session is our most affordable option and provides the same evidence-based treatment. We also provide superbills for insurance reimbursement upon request, accept HSA/FSA cards for tax savings, and offer flexible month-to-month billing with no long-term contracts. If cost is a significant barrier, contact our support team - we can discuss options that might work best for your situation.
What if I need more intensive treatment than weekly therapy in North Carolina?
If you need more support than weekly therapy provides, Grouport provides the flexibility to combine care at any frequency that you’d like on the schedule and duration that works for your needs. So, for example many people combine individual therapy with group therapy at various levels of frequencies, or they combine couples therapy with individual therapy, or family therapy with individual therapy etc… It’s normal to combine therapy options or increase session frequency during difficult periods. For higher levels of support, Grouport also offers a virtual Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) with 10 sessions per week which consists of nine group therapy sessions plus one-three individual therapy sessions per week depending on which IOP plan you choose. We're committed to matching you with the right level of care that fits your needs.

Group Therapy Across All of North Carolina

Counties

Alamance County
Alexander County
Alleghany County
Anson County
Ashe County
Avery County
Beaufort County
Bertie County
Bladen County
Brunswick County
Buncombe County
Burke County
Cabarrus County
Caldwell County
Camden County
Carteret County
Caswell County
Catawba County
Chatham County
Cherokee County
Chowan County
Clay County
Cleveland County
Columbus County
Craven County
Cumberland County
Currituck County
Dare County
Davidson County
Davie County
Duplin County
Durham County
Edgecombe County
Forsyth County
Franklin County
Gaston County
Gates County
Graham County
Granville County
Greene County
Guilford County
Halifax County
Harnett County
Haywood County
Henderson County
Hertford County
Hoke County
Hyde County
Iredell County
Jackson County
Johnston County
Jones County
Lee County
Lenoir County
Lincoln County
Macon County
Madison County
Martin County
McDowell County
Mecklenburg County
Mitchell County
Montgomery County
Moore County
Nash County
New Hanover County
Northampton County
Onslow County
Orange County
Pamlico County
Pasquotank County
Pender County
Perquimans County
Person County
Pitt County
Polk County
Randolph County
Richmond County
Robeson County
Rockingham County
Rowan County
Rutherford County
Sampson County
Scotland County
Stanly County
Stokes County
Surry County
Swain County
Transylvania County
Tyrrell County
Union County
Vance County
Wake County
Warren County
Washington County
Watauga County
Wayne County
Wilkes County
Wilson County
Yadkin County
Yancey County

Cities

Charlotte
Raleigh
Greensboro
Durham
Winston Salem
Fayetteville
Cary
Wilmington
High Point
Concord
Asheville
Greenville
Gastonia
Jacksonville
Chapel Hill
Huntersville
Apex
Burlington
Kannapolis
Wake Forest
Hickory
Mooresville
Wilson
Rocky Mount
Goldsboro
Salisbury
New Bern
Statesville
Kinston
Boone

Zip Codes

28202, 28203, 28204, 28205, 28206, 28207, 28208, 28209, 28210, 28211, 28212, 28213, 28214, 28215, 28216, 28217, 28226, 28227, 28262, 27601, 27603, 27604, 27605, 27606, 27607, 27608, 27609, 27610, 27612, 27613, 27401, 27403, 27405, 27406, 27407, 27701, 27703, 27704, 27705, 27101, 27103, 27104, 28301, 28303, 28304, 27511, 27513, 27518, 28401, 28403, 27260, 27262, 28025, 28027, 28801, 28803, 27834, 27858, 28052, 28054, 28540, 27514, 28078, 27502, 27215, 28081, 28083, 27587, 28601, 28602, 28115, 27893, 27896, 27801, 27804, 27530, 28144, 28560, 28677, 28501, 28607

If you have an address in North Carolina, 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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