Relationship Issues Therapists in Oregon
195 providers found
Whether you are navigating dating, dealing with relationship conflict, or processing a breakup, Oregon relationship therapists help you understand patterns, improve communication, and build healthier connections.
Oregon Counselor Directory lists 195 therapists who specialize in relationship issues as of April 2026 — couples in distress, attachment-based individual work for people who keep landing in similar patterns, navigating breakups and divorces, family-of-origin work, friendship and workplace relational struggles, and ethical non-monogamy or open relationships. 157 offer telehealth, 41 accept Oregon Health Plan, 51 offer sliding-scale fees, and 178 are currently accepting new clients. Common evidence-based approaches: Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) — the most-researched couples modality — Gottman Method, Imago, Internal Family Systems for the inner work that drives outer patterns, attachment-based individual therapy, and Discernment Counseling for couples who aren't sure whether to commit to repair or end. Whether you're working on a relationship or working on yourself within one, the directory's relationship specialists can help.
Community listing from public records — not yet authored by the provider.
Video Introductions
Meet these providers before you reach out.
Related Articles
From Oregon providers writing about this topic.
Starting a Methadone Clinic in Oregon: What You Actually Need to Know
Most people who ask about opening a methadone clinic in Oregon are surprised by the same thing: how many separate regulatory bodies have to say yes before a single patient can be admitted. This is not a process where you get one approval and open. It is a process where…
Revenue Cycle Management for Treatment Programs: Reducing Denials and Improving Cash Flow
Revenue cycle management in behavioral health is more complex than most clinical operators expect—and more consequential than most administrative teams are positioned to manage effectively. The combination of behavioral health-specific billing codes, level-of-care authorization requirements, utilization management scrutiny, and payer-specific claim rules creates a system where small process
From Solo Practice to Group: The Five Operational Decisions That Decide Whether You Scale or Stall
The transition from solo private practice to a small group is the single least-discussed stage of behavioral health practice ownership. The clinical training prepares you for the work. The business literature is built for either lifestyle solo practice or 100-clinician multi-state platforms. The five-to-fifteen-clinician range — where most thriving Oregon…
How Busy Professionals Make Time For Couples Therapy
Therapy Intensives for Busy Couples: Deep, Focused Support for Meaningful Connection In the whirlwind of responsibilities, obligations, and balancing two careers, even the strongest couples can find themselves feeling disconnected. Many high-achieving couples, though successful professionally, often struggle to carve out time for their relationship. Stress, unresolved conflict, or emotional…
Oregon Insurance Panel Credentialing Guide for Therapists in Private Practice
For LPCs, LMFTs, LCSWs, and Psychologists with an LLC and active website. Verify all links and email addresses before submitting — payer contacts change frequently. Phase 1: Foundation Setup (Do This First — Before Any Payer Application) Every payer below pulls from the same core documents. Get these in order…
AI in the Therapy Office: A Practical 2026 Stack for Small Behavioral Health Practices
AI tooling for outpatient behavioral health crossed a threshold in 2025 that most small practices have not yet adjusted to. Ambient documentation, payer-aware coding assistants, intake automation, and workflow agents have moved from "promising demos" to commodity products with real HIPAA-compliant deployments. The result is that the stack a 1-…
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about this coverage in Oregon.
How many Oregon therapists specialize in relationship issues?
Do Oregon therapists specializing in relationship issues accept OHP/Oregon Health Plan?
Is telehealth available for relationship issues in Oregon?
Do Oregon therapists specializing in relationship issues offer sliding scale fees?
Are Oregon therapists specializing in relationship issues accepting new clients?
Should I do individual therapy or couples therapy first?
What is attachment style and is it real?
I keep ending up with the same kind of partner. Is that fixable?
As of April 2026, Oregon Counselor Directory lists 195 therapists specializing in relationship issues across the state. These providers offer various approaches to help couples and families navigate their challenges. A significant 157 of these therapists provide telehealth sessions, enabling residents from diverse regions of Oregon to access support remotely. Of these, 41 accept the Oregon Health Plan (OHP), offering affordable therapy options to eligible Medicaid recipients. Additionally, 77 therapists offer sliding scale fees, accommodating clients with varying income levels. Currently, 118 providers are open to accepting new clients, and 96 offer in-person sessions. Therapists may utilize evidence-based methods such as Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), or Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT) to address relationship issues.