Get Better, Together

Online Group Therapy in Oklahoma

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 Oklahoma residents. 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 Oklahoma

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

Mental Illness Prevalence

25.9 percent of adults in Oklahoma experience mental illness annually, indicating substantial need for accessible group therapy options statewide.

Wait Time

The average wait time for therapy in Oklahoma is 12–16 weeks, which can delay entry into structured group therapy support.

Median Household Income

The median household income in Oklahoma is $63,603, which can make lower cost group therapy an important option for residents seeking consistent care.

Percentage Who Need Therapy

18.6 percent of adults in Oklahoma who needed mental health care did not receive it, reflecting barriers that group therapy can help reduce when access is available.

Provider Shortage

78.61 percent of counties in Oklahoma are designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, limiting the availability of in person group therapy.

Mental Health Providers per 100k Residents

Oklahoma has 432.3 mental health providers per 100,000 residents, which contributes to limited group therapy capacity and longer waits.

Oklahoma's mental health picture combines high prevalence with workforce capacity that runs thin outside the OKC and Tulsa metros. About 25.9% of Oklahoma adults experience mental illness in any given year (roughly 1,060,707 residents), and the state's 432.3 mental health providers per 100,000 residents serves them on paper.


With 78.61% of counties designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas and 23.4% of adults who needed mental health care without receiving it, the gap hits hardest in the Panhandle, the southeastern counties, and tribal communities where qualified group programs are functionally absent.


For families on Oklahoma's $63,603 median household income, the practical cost of $150 to $250 per-session in-person care plus 30-mile drives to Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, or Lawton and 12 to 16-week waits makes consistent attendance hard. Online group therapy with licensed Oklahoma clinicians delivers care to rural and tribal communities in days rather than months.


UNDERSTANDING THE CHALLENGE

Group Therapy challenges in Oklahoma

The Problem

Oklahoma's 4,095,393 residents are spread across 77 counties and 69,898 square miles, and the state's mental health infrastructure runs thin outside the OKC and Tulsa metros. With 432.3 providers per 100,000 residents and 25.9% of adults experiencing mental illness, about 1,060,707 Oklahomans, demand outpaces local supply across most of the state. Across 78.61% of counties designated provider shortage areas, residents seeking group therapy face a basic availability problem, there simply are not enough clinicians to serve the population. Most of the workforce clusters in Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, and Lawton, leaving the Panhandle, the southeastern counties, and many tribal communities with few or no nearby group therapy programs.

The Impact

Oklahoma's 432.3 providers per 100,000 residents across 77 counties leaves 1,060,707 Oklahomans experiencing mental illness with limited paths to consistent group care. Group programs fill quickly, scheduling consistent weekly attendance can be difficult when openings recycle slowly, and 12 to 16-week waits push residents in active distress toward 30-mile drives to Oklahoma City, Tulsa, or out of state. For households on the state's $63,603 median income, the barrier isn't only cost, it's that qualified clinicians running specific group formats don't exist in 78.61% of designated shortage counties, which leaves the Panhandle, the southeastern counties, and many tribal communities functionally without local specialized options.

The Solution

For the 1,060,707 Oklahomans cycling through limited local openings and 12 to 16-week waits, Grouport solves the supply problem by matching residents with licensed Oklahoma clinicians in 24 to 48 hours. Sessions happen over secure video from home, which means residents in the Panhandle, southeastern counties, and tribal communities access the same group programs as Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, and Lawton 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 Oklahoma's $63,603 median household income, and the gap between deciding to seek help and starting consistent care shrinks from months to days across 78.61% shortage counties.
78.61 percent of counties in Oklahoma are designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, limiting the availability of in person group therapy.
Online care lets Oklahomans attend weekly group therapy from home, which bypasses the 12 to 16-week wait at urban practices and the structural absence of specialized programs across 78.61% of counties. Residents in the Panhandle, southeastern counties, and tribal communities access the same licensed clinicians as Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, and Lawton residents.

Getting Group Therapy in Oklahoma: Wait Times and Barriers

Oklahoma's Group Therapy workforce of 432.3 providers per 100,000 residents serves a population where 78.61 percent of Oklahoma's 77 counties are federally designated Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, one of the highest shares in the country. Clinicians cluster around Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, and Lawton, while the Panhandle, Green Country, and the tribal jurisdictions covering most of the eastern half of the state have thinner coverage and long drives across open country. oil-and-gas, aerospace, and ranching layer in shift schedules that compete with weekday clinic hours, and the 12 to 16 weeks average wait pushes the start of care into a different quarter. 25.9 percent of Oklahomans experience mental illness annually and 18.6 percent of those who needed treatment did not receive it. For a $63,603 median household income, the cumulative cost of in-person attendance is its own barrier.

Geographic Barriers

Oklahoma spans 69,898 square miles across 77 counties, from the Panhandle and Black Mesa in the far west through the Wichita Mountains and Cross Timbers to the Ozark foothills, Green Country, and the Red River bottoms along the Texas border. That footprint shapes how residents experience availability. When 78.61 percent of counties are shortage areas, in-person group options are often concentrated in a limited number of population centers like Oklahoma City and Tulsa, while residents in smaller communities may have no nearby group that meets at a workable time. Even when a group exists, the ability to attend weekly depends on predictable transportation, weather, and time off work, all of which become harder when the nearest option is far from home. Spring tornado outbreaks across Tornado Alley and winter ice storms that shut down state highways can also turn a clinically appropriate weekly plan into a string of cancellations.

Extended Wait Times

The 12 to 16-week average wait time for group therapy in Oklahoma means the gap between recognizing a need and starting care often stretches into months. For residents already managing symptoms that affect sleep, work, or relationships, that delay can let the situation compound before structured support begins, and the longer it runs the harder it gets to keep the original commitment to seek help. Long waits also narrow practical choice: once someone has waited 12 weeks, declining a poor clinical fit or a group schedule that does not work and starting over feels costly, even when the match does not support the consistent attendance group therapy requires. With 25.9 percent of Oklahoma adults experiencing mental illness, a 12 to 16-week queue represents real load on a system already operating near capacity rather than a temporary backlog.

Systemic Challenges

Across Oklahoma, the combination of unmet need and a constrained workforce makes access barriers systemic rather than situational. With 18.6 percent of adults who needed mental health care unable to access it and 432.3 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 78.61 percent of counties designated provider shortages, residents in Little Dixie, the Panhandle, and the small towns across the Cherokee, Choctaw, and Chickasaw nations have fewer specialty options for trauma, grief, or culturally-grounded group work, while Oklahoma City and Tulsa absorb concentrated demand. The 12 to 16 week wait reflects how quickly capacity is consumed across all 77 counties, and the system pressures compound for residents who would benefit most from specialized clinicians for sustained weekly group care.

Urban-Rural Divide

Oklahoma's urban-rural pattern in group-therapy access concentrates the workforce in just a few places. Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, Broken Arrow, and Edmond carry most of the state's clinicians, while the Panhandle counties of the northwest, the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nation towns of the southeast, and the small oil-and-gas and agricultural communities in between often have one practice per county or none at all. With 432.3 providers per 100,000 residents statewide, specialized groups are limited, and residents may have to choose between a long wait for a better fit or a quicker opening that does not match their needs. In areas with shortage designations, the nearest option may not be a group at all, or groups run infrequently and fill fast. Even in the larger metros, demand exceeds capacity for energy-sector, healthcare, and aerospace workers, contributing to the 12 to 16 week wait across a state of 4,095,393.
For Oklahoma residents, the numbers point to a consistent theme: demand is high, 78.61 percent shortage-area coverage limits local capacity, 12 to 16 week delays are common, and 18.6 percent of adults who needed care did not receive it. Online Group Therapy can reduce the impact of shortage-area geography and long waits by enabling residents to join therapist-led sessions without relying on local in-person availability. That structure also helps support weekly attendance across rural and tribal communities where travel distances or visibility in close-knit towns would otherwise interrupt a consistent group routine.

Affordable Group Therapy for Oklahoma Residents

Affordability and Income

At an Oklahoma median household income of $63,603, weekly therapy lands across the Oklahoma City and Tulsa energy-and-aerospace economies, the rural counties tied to wheat, cattle, and oil-and-gas cycles, the Native nations' communities and tribal economies, and the small-town manufacturing and service workforce that spans the state. Group therapy at the national rate of $50 to $150 per session, or $216 to $649 a month for weekly attendance, is a difficult open-ended commit during rig downturns or commodity slumps. 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 Oklahoma, where 432.3 mental health providers per 100,000 residents, 78.61 percent of counties designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, and a 12 to 16 week average wait time leave many residents with few local choices. A predictable monthly cost lets residents commit to weekly attendance without restarting care every time the budget tightens.

Hidden Cost and Barriers

Oklahoma's low-density geography concentrates provider supply in Oklahoma City and Tulsa, leaving many residents with long drives for weekly in-person group care. The average distance to a licensed clinician is 30 miles, meaning a 60-mile round trip per session. At $3 per gallon, that's roughly $7 in fuel per visit, and over a year of weekly sessions, Oklahoma residents drive 3,120 miles and spend $364 on gas alone. Those costs rise further for residents in the panhandle, energy-sector communities, and rural counties whose nearest opening sits in OKC or Tulsa. Time costs compound the burden: a 60-mile round trip requires planning around shifts in oil and gas, agriculture, and manufacturing, where missing a half-day for travel cuts into earnings, not just hours. Missed sessions can be harder to reschedule when local capacity is limited, which raises the real cost of staying in care.

Immediate Availability

Oklahoma'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: 18.6 percent of Oklahoma 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 Oklahoma 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: Oklahoma's 12–16 week average wait time for therapy and the 78.61 percent of counties designated as Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas can force residents into longer searches and repeated intake steps before weekly care begins. Against a median household income of $63,603, predictable monthly pricing helps residents plan for consistent participation rather than balancing therapy costs against other essential expenses. Grouport's matching in 24 to 48 hours also reduces the period spent waiting for a local opening, so residents can begin weekly care without spending months in queue. 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 Oklahoma

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 Oklahoma 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
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 Oklahoma
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

girl with chart on face

Affordable Group Therapy & Care Options in Oklahoma

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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or Learn More

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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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 Oklahoma

What if my therapist's license expires or gets suspended—how would I know in Oklahoma?
You can verify your therapist's license status on your state licensing board's website. Most states have online databases where you can search by name and see if their license is active, expired, or suspended. You can also check if they have any disciplinary history. It's worth checking this when you start therapy and periodically if you're seeing someone long-term. If a therapist's license expires or gets suspended, they legally can't practice. They should tell you if this happens. If you discover your therapist is practicing with an expired or suspended license, that's a serious violation. You can report it to the state board and should find a new therapist immediately.
Why doesn't Grouport take insurance in Oklahoma?
Insurance has downsides. You need a formal diagnosis which goes in your medical record. It limits session frequency and duration. Involves tons of paperwork. Requires therapists to get approval for treatment. And it reimburses providers poorly, which is why many good therapists don't take insurance. Not accepting insurance keeps costs lower and gives you more control over your care. Many people find self-pay with potential reimbursement is better than dealing with insurance restrictions directly.
Can therapy help rural parents of kids with disabilities in Oklahoma?
Rural parents of disabled kids face enormous challenges, limited special education services, traveling for therapies and medical care, lack of respite care, fighting school districts for appropriate services, social isolation because there aren't other families in similar situations nearby. Therapy helps you cope with chronic stress, process grief about your child's diagnosis, advocate effectively, and maintain your own wellbeing while parenting a kid with extra needs. You can't pour from an empty cup.
What if my family doesn't believe in therapy in Oklahoma?
Rural culture often values toughing it out and handling things yourself, so yeah, family resistance is common. You don't necessarily need to tell them you're doing therapy. Just say you have a regular video call, or a meeting, or whatever. If they do know and disapprove, that's their issue to work through, not yours. You're an independent person making a choice about your own mental health. Therapy can actually help you deal with family pressure about therapy, which is useful as well.
What if I disagree with feedback someone gives me in Oklahoma?
Disagreement can be healthy and expected in groups. You don't have to accept everything people say. Take what's useful and leave what doesn't fit behind. Sometimes the most valuable feedback is initially hardest to hear and maybe you won’t be receptive to it initially, but over time you may find it helpful. Other times feedback genuinely doesn't apply to you and the therapist can help you figure that out if you need help. Like in all areas of life, groups teach that we can disagree with others while maintaining respect and connection. Good group members learn to offer feedback as advice not as a universal truth where they impose their feelings on others.
What if one person dominates the group in Oklahoma?
Good group therapists know how to manage this actively and effectively. This can happen in a group dynamic and it’s part of what therapists are trained to handle by making sure everyone gets time to share, redirecting when someone's monopolizing, and addressing the underlying needs driving someone to dominate. However, occasional longer sharing when someone's in crisis is appropriate and expected and groups flex to meet these kinds of urgent needs. The therapist's job is to balance everyone's needs and ensure equitable participation over time so everyone is benefiting.
What is online group therapy?
Online Group therapy is mental health treatment where 6-12 people with similar concerns meet regularly with a licensed therapist over video chat. Unlike individual therapy's one-on-one format, online group therapy leverages peer support and shared experiences for healing. Members share challenges, give and receive feedback, practice new skills together, and learn from others' perspectives and progress. Groups may focus on specific issues like anxiety, depression, grief, DBT skills, CBT, OCD, trauma & PTSD, Borderline Personality Disorder, Bipolar, anger management and more. Groups can also be general process groups addressing various concerns. The therapist facilitates group dynamics, teaches skills, and guides productive interactions. Research shows group therapy is as effective as individual therapy for many issues and provides unique benefits individual therapy cannot address. Because of this, Online Group Therapy has complimentary benefits, and is often a major driver of improved therapeutic outcomes for people who feel stuck as learning through others' experiences gives the accountability and adherence needed to stick with treatment and keeps you on track with what successful treatment looks like.
Can I leave a group if it's not working for me?
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 groups help me with work-related stress in Oklahoma?
Ofcourse. Work stress is nearly universal because that always creates some degree of stress in most people’s lives so that is an area everyone can relate to. It can be helpful to get perspective on whether your situation is actually toxic or you're catastrophizing, learn boundaries, or hear how others navigate similar dynamics. Groups can help separate what's fixable through your changes versus what might be out of your control. The group members reduce isolation of work stress and provide accountability for making needed changes where relevant.
How do you protect my information from data breaches in Oklahoma?
We use multiple layers of security to protect your information: (1) All data is encrypted both when stored and during transmission. (2) Our systems are HIPAA-compliant and regularly audited by third-party security experts. (3) Access to client data is strictly limited to essential staff with multi-factor authentication required. (4) We use intrusion detection systems to monitor for unauthorized access attempts. (5) Regular security training for all staff members. (6) Secure backup systems to prevent data loss. In the unlikely event of a breach, we're legally required to notify affected clients immediately and take corrective action.
Can I switch between devices during my subscription in Oklahoma?
Yes, you can attend sessions from any device with a camera and microphone as long as you have stable internet and privacy.
Are your therapists licensed and qualified?
Yes, all Grouport therapists are fully licensed mental health professionals (LCSW, LMFT, PhD, PsyD, LMHC, LMFT, or LPC) with master's or doctoral degrees in their field. Every therapist has completed thousands of clinical hours and passed state licensing exams. They maintain active licenses in the states where they practice, complete ongoing continuing education requirements, and carry professional liability insurance. Many specialize in specific treatment approaches like CBT, DBT, ERP, or trauma-focused therapy. You can view your matched therapist's credentials, specialties, and experience before your first session.

Group Therapy Across All of Oklahoma

Counties

Adair County
Alfalfa County
Atoka County
Beaver County
Beckham County
Blaine County
Bryan County
Caddo County
Canadian County
Carter County
Cherokee County
Choctaw County
Cimarron County
Cleveland County
Coal County
Comanche County
Cotton County
Craig County
Creek County
Custer County
Delaware County
Dewey County
Ellis County
Garfield County
Garvin County
Grady County
Grant County
Greer County
Harmon County
Harper County
Haskell County
Hughes County
Jackson County
Jefferson County
Johnston County
Kay County
Kingfisher County
Kiowa County
Latimer County
Le Flore County
Lincoln County
Logan County
Love County
Major County
Marshall County
Mayes County
McClain County
McCurtain County
McIntosh County
Murray County
Muskogee County
Noble County
Nowata County
Okfuskee County
Oklahoma County
Okmulgee County
Osage County
Ottawa County
Pawnee County
Payne County
Pittsburg County
Pontotoc County
Pottawatomie County
Pushmataha County
Roger Mills County
Rogers County
Seminole County
Sequoyah County
Stephens County
Texas County
Tillman County
Tulsa County
Wagoner County
Washington County
Washita County
Woods County
Woodward County

Cities

Oklahoma City
Tulsa
Norman
Broken Arrow
Edmond
Lawton
Moore
Midwest City
Enid
Stillwater
Owasso
Muskogee
Bartlesville
Shawnee
Bixby
Jenks
Ardmore
Yukon
Mustang
Claremore
Durant
Del City
Altus
El Reno
Duncan
Chickasha
McAlester
Miami
Guymon
Tahlequah

Zip Codes

73102, 73103, 73104, 73105, 73106, 73107, 73108, 73109, 73110, 73111, 73112, 73114, 73115, 73116, 73118, 73119, 73120, 73122, 73127, 73129, 74103, 74104, 74105, 74106, 74107, 74112, 74114, 74115, 74119, 74120, 74133, 74134, 73069, 73071, 74012, 74014, 73034, 73013, 73505, 73501, 73160, 73170, 73135, 73145, 73130, 73140, 73150, 73165, 73159, 73149, 73139, 73132, 73142, 73012, 73003, 73099, 73064, 73020, 74006, 74003, 74008, 74011, 74401, 74403, 74074, 74075, 73701, 73703, 74501, 74523, 74701, 74702, 74017, 74820, 74804, 73005, 74301, 74303, 73044, 73521, 73401, 73402, 73036, 73533, 73018, 73005, 74354, 73942, 74464

If you have an address in Oklahoma, 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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