Community listing from public records — not yet authored by the provider.
Acceptance and Commitment (ACT) Therapists in Oregon
182 providers found
Find Oregon therapists who practice Acceptance and Commitment (ACT).
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a third-wave behavior therapy developed by Steven Hayes, focused on building psychological flexibility — the capacity to fully experience the present moment, hold thoughts and feelings without being controlled by them, and act in line with your values. As of April 2026, 182 Oregon therapists on this directory practice ACT. 146 offer telehealth, 50 accept Oregon Health Plan, 34 offer sliding-scale fees, and 121 are currently accepting new clients. ACT has strong evidence for anxiety, depression, chronic pain, OCD, substance use, and the existential / meaning-making questions that show up in midlife and grief. Unlike CBT (which evaluates whether thoughts are accurate), ACT focuses on your relationship with thoughts — defusing from them, accepting their presence without obeying them, and choosing values-aligned action regardless. Most clients see meaningful change in 12–20 sessions.
Community listing from public records — not yet authored by the provider.
Community listing from public records — not yet authored by the provider.
Community listing from public records — not yet authored by the provider.
Community listing from public records — not yet authored by the provider.
Community listing from public records — not yet authored by the provider.
RelatedAcceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) (modality)
Therapists tagged with this related modality.
RelatedACT (modality)
Therapists tagged with this related modality.
RelatedVerified Oregon telehealth therapists
Available statewide — see anyone in Oregon from home.
Additional Oregon telehealth providers
Fewer than 3 providers match this therapy type directly. These licensed Oregon telehealth providers may also be able to help.
Video Introductions
Meet these providers before you reach out.
Related Articles
From Oregon providers writing about this topic.
Borderline Personality Disorder Is More Treatable Than Its Reputation
If there is one thing more people should know about borderline personality disorder, it is that its hopeless reputation is decades out of date. BPD is still spoken of, sometimes even within the mental health professions, as though it were a life sentence. The modern research says otherwise: with specialized…
Growing Together: Updates, New Programs & Ways to Get Involved (July 2026 Newsletter)
Welcome to the very first Facing Giants newsletter! First, thank you. Whether you've toured the space, attended an event, seen us at a community event, brought your child to play, partnered with us, sponsored our mission, facilitated a program, begun using the space to serve your own clients or grow…
How to License a Withdrawal Management Program in Oregon
Most licensing guides for Oregon behavioral health programs point operators toward the same two rule sets: the outpatient Certificate of Approval process and the residential substance use disorder rules in OAR chapter 309, division 19. Withdrawal management gets treated as a subheading inside the residential conversation. That is a mistake…
The AI Feature I Chose Not to Build
As a therapist, I have complicated feelings about artificial intelligence. When AI became widely available, I was both fascinated and uneasy. Like a lot of people, I wondered where it would take us. Would it improve people's lives? Replace jobs? Weaken human connection? Change healthcare? I still don't know the…
When should I talk to a therapist about gender identity?
Have you ever wondered if the discontentment or discomfort about your body or perceived identity could be gender dysphoria? For most of us, we are not offered that kind of language or conceptualization to name it for what it is. Before we get into it, let’s differentiate between dysphoria and…
Common Signs of Adult Autism That Show Up in Relationships (and Are Often Missed)
When most people think of autism, they picture the diagnostic criteria: differences in social communication, repetitive behaviors, strong interests, sensory sensitivities, and a preference for routine. While these characteristics are important, they don’t always help people recognize what autism actually looks like in day-to-day relationships. Many autistic a
Acceptance and Commitment (ACT) — key facts & evidence
Researched data on this topic — every figure links to its source.
APA Division 12 (Society of Clinical Psychology) rates Acceptance and Commitment Therapy as having "Strong Research Support" for chronic pain - its highest evidence tier for ACT.
Source: Association for Contextual Behavioral Science (documenting APA Div 12 ratings)For depression, APA Division 12 rates ACT as having "Modest Research Support" - a lower tier than chronic pain. ACT also carries Modest Research Support for mixed anxiety, OCD, and psychosis.
Source: Association for Contextual Behavioral Science (documenting APA Div 12 ratings)A 2015 meta-analysis of 39 randomized controlled trials (1,821 patients) found ACT outperformed control conditions with a Hedges' g of 0.57 at post-treatment and follow-up across mental and physical health problems.
Source: A-Tjak et al., Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics (Karger) (2015)The same 2015 meta-analysis found ACT about as effective as established treatments: head-to-head comparisons with cognitive behavioral therapy showed no significant difference (p = 0.140).
Source: A-Tjak et al., Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics (Karger) (2015)A 2024 systematic review of 21 RCTs (1,298 participants) reported ACT produced medium-sized improvements in chronic pain for pain interference, functional impairment, pain acceptance, and depression at post-treatment.
Source: Systematic review and meta-analysis, PMC (2024)Frequently asked questions
Common questions about this coverage in Oregon.
How many Oregon therapists specialize in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)?
Do Oregon ACT therapists accept the Oregon Health Plan (OHP)?
Is telehealth available for Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) in Oregon?
Do Oregon ACT therapists offer sliding scale fees?
Are Oregon ACT therapists accepting new clients?
How is ACT different from CBT?
What does "living by your values" actually mean in ACT?
Will ACT make me "accept" my depression and not try to change it?
182 Oregon therapists listed on Oregon Counselors Directory specialize in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). This approach, which promotes psychological flexibility, is available through telehealth with 61 providers, offering broad accessibility across Oregon. 50 therapists accept the Oregon Health Plan (OHP), making ACT accessible for Medicaid-eligible individuals. Furthermore, 60 therapists offer sliding scale fees, adapting to income levels for more equitable access. 121 providers are currently accepting new clients, and 66 offer in-person sessions, catering to diverse client preferences. These therapists may employ ACT to address various concerns, such as anxiety, depression, and stress management.





