Anxiety Therapy in Oregon

1,859 providers found

Oregon therapists treating anxiety disorders across the full spectrum — generalized anxiety, panic disorder, social anxiety, phobias, OCD, and stress-driven anxiety.

As of April 2026, Oregon Counselor Directory lists 1,859,859 Oregon therapists who specialize in anxiety, panic disorder, social anxiety, and related conditions. Of those, 134 offer telehealth so you can be matched with someone outside your immediate area; 49 accept Oregon Health Plan (OHP); 65 offer sliding-scale fees for clients who are uninsured or out-of-network; and 167 are currently accepting new clients. The directory's anxiety specialists draw from evidence-based approaches including Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) when anxiety is rooted in a specific traumatic event, exposure-and-response prevention (ERP) for OCD-spectrum anxiety, and somatic / mindfulness-based work for the body component. You can filter by city, insurance, modality, sliding scale, telehealth, and current availability — and most therapists offer a free 15-minute consultation so you can find the right fit before committing.

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Maddie Gregory

LPC

Anxiety Therapy

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

GriefObsessive-Compulsive (OCD)Trauma and PTSDCognitive Behavioral (CBT)Family TherapyTelehealth
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Vicki Templeton

MA · Tigard, OR

Anxiety Therapy

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

ADHDGriefObsessive-Compulsive (OCD)Cognitive Behavioral (CBT)Couples CounselingTelehealth
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Greg Clift

MCOUN · Bend, OR

Anxiety Therapy

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

ADHDObsessive-Compulsive (OCD)Trauma and PTSDCognitive Behavioral (CBT)Couples CounselingTelehealth
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Jacob L. Merritt

MA, LPC, NCC

Anxiety Therapy

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

GriefObsessive-Compulsive (OCD)Cognitive Behavioral (CBT)TelehealthOHP
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Tricia O'Connor

LPC · Portland, OR

Anxiety Therapy

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

GriefObsessive-Compulsive (OCD)Trauma and PTSDCognitive Behavioral (CBT)Couples CounselingTelehealth
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Colin Ryan

LCSW

Anxiety Therapy

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

GriefObsessive-Compulsive (OCD)Cognitive Behavioral (CBT)Couples CounselingTelehealth
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Kevin R Reilly

MA, LPC, NCC · Keizer, OR

Anxiety Therapy

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

ADHDObsessive-Compulsive (OCD)Trauma and PTSDCognitive Behavioral (CBT)Couples Counseling
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Elizabeth Keating - NOCD

LMHC, LPC

Anxiety Therapy

Community listing from public Oregon licensing records — not authored or endorsed by the provider. Personal bio appears once the profile is claimed.

Obsessive-Compulsive (OCD)Trauma and PTSDTelehealth

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Frequently asked questions

Common questions about this coverage in Oregon.

How do I find an anxiety therapist in Oregon who actually has openings?
There are 1,1,859 Oregon therapists specializing in anxiety on this directory, and you can filter to the {{accepting_count}} who are currently accepting new clients. Many therapists keep a waitlist that's shorter than it sounds — call or email two or three at once and the first to respond is usually within a week. If you have OHP, {{ohp_count}} of these providers accept it; if you're in a rural part of Oregon, {{telehealth_count}} offer telehealth so you're not limited to your zip code.
What kind of therapy works best for anxiety — CBT, EMDR, or medication?
For most anxiety disorders, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) has the strongest evidence base — it teaches you to identify and rework the thought patterns that fuel anxious spirals, and most people see meaningful relief in 12–20 sessions. EMDR is more commonly used when the anxiety stems from a specific traumatic event. Medication (typically SSRIs or short-term benzodiazepines) is prescribed by a psychiatrist or psychiatric nurse practitioner — not a therapist — and works best alongside therapy, not as a replacement. Many Oregon clients combine weekly therapy with a low-dose SSRI for the first 6–12 months.
Can a therapist prescribe anti-anxiety medication in Oregon?
Only psychiatrists, psychiatric nurse practitioners (PMHNPs), and primary care doctors can prescribe medication in Oregon. Therapists, counselors, and psychologists cannot. If you're looking for a "one-stop" experience, search our prescriber directory at /prescribers — many work in coordination with talk therapists. Some clients see a PMHNP every 1–3 months for medication management while doing weekly therapy with a separate counselor.
How long does anxiety therapy usually take?
Most evidence-based anxiety therapies are short-term by design. Standard CBT runs 12–20 weekly sessions, and many clients notice meaningful change by session 6–8. Generalized anxiety or anxiety with co-occurring trauma sometimes requires 6–12 months of work. Therapy isn't open-ended — a good therapist will set goals with you in the first 1–2 sessions and check in every few months on your progress.
Will my insurance cover anxiety therapy in Oregon?
Almost certainly yes. Oregon's mental health parity laws require commercial insurance and OHP to cover medically necessary mental health treatment at the same level as physical health. {{ohp_count}} of our anxiety specialists accept OHP / Oregon Health Plan; the rest accept a mix of Kaiser, Moda, Providence, Regence, BlueCross, Cigna, Aetna, and PacificSource. {{sliding_count}} also offer sliding-scale fees for clients who are uninsured or out-of-network.
Is online therapy effective for anxiety, or do I need to be in-person?
Online therapy is as effective as in-person for most anxiety disorders — multiple randomized trials confirm this for generalized anxiety, social anxiety, and panic disorder. Specific phobias and severe agoraphobia sometimes benefit from in-person exposure work. {{telehealth_pct}}% of our anxiety specialists offer telehealth, so you can try a few sessions virtually before deciding what fits.
Should I use ChatGPT or an AI app for anxiety instead of a therapist?
AI tools can be a useful supplement — for journaling, reframing thoughts at 2 a.m., or practicing what you want to say in a hard conversation. They are not a substitute for a licensed therapist for moderate or severe anxiety, panic disorder, or anxiety with trauma roots. Studies through 2026 are clear that AI chat can validate distorted thinking back to you and lacks the relational repair that drives clinical change. If you are using ChatGPT every day to manage symptoms, that is a signal to add a real therapist — many of the {{accepting_count}} Oregon anxiety specialists here keep AI use as a between-session tool while doing the deeper work in session.
Is it really anxiety, or is my gut trying to tell me something?
Both can be true at once and a good therapist helps you tell them apart. A useful test: anxiety is usually loud, urgent, and gets worse the more you avoid the situation. Genuine intuition is usually quiet, neutral about the outcome, and stays consistent over weeks. If a feeling spikes whenever you think about a specific person, place, or pattern (and only there), it is more likely a signal worth listening to. If it spikes everywhere — work, relationships, driving, future planning — that points to anxiety. Therapy can help you build the discrimination muscle so you stop second-guessing every gut feeling.
What is exposure therapy and is it as scary as it sounds?
Exposure therapy is the gold-standard treatment for phobias, OCD, and panic disorder. The name sounds harsher than the practice — a trained Oregon therapist builds a graded "fear ladder" with you, starting with the easiest version of the trigger and only moving up after each rung feels manageable. You stay in control of the pace. Modern exposure work also uses imaginal exposure (rehearsing the feared scenario in detail) and interoceptive exposure (recreating the body sensations of panic) so you can do most of it without leaving the office. Most clients report exposure feels challenging in sessions 2–6 and surprisingly empowering by session 10.
Can I use psilocybin or ketamine to treat anxiety in Oregon?
Oregon has legal psilocybin services through licensed Service Centers (Measure 109), but psilocybin is approved for general adult use and not specifically prescribed for anxiety. Some Oregonians explore it for anxiety adjacent to existential or end-of-life concerns. Ketamine-assisted psychotherapy (KAP) is more established for treatment-resistant anxiety and depression and is offered at several Oregon clinics. Both work best when paired with a regular therapist for integration — see /treatments/psychedelics for prescriber and KAP-trained Oregon therapists. Neither replaces evidence-based talk therapy as a first-line treatment.
What's the difference between an anxiety attack and a panic attack?
Clinically there is no formal distinction — both refer to the same physiological event: a sudden surge of adrenaline that produces racing heart, shortness of breath, dizziness, chest tightness, and a sense of impending doom. The DSM-5 only formally defines panic attacks. "Anxiety attack" is the colloquial term people use for milder, slower-onset episodes that don't fully meet panic criteria. Either way, the treatment is the same: targeted CBT (cognitive restructuring + interoceptive exposure) usually resolves them in 8–12 sessions for the majority of clients.
What is generalized anxiety disorder versus social anxiety versus panic disorder?
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is persistent, free-floating worry about everyday things — work, money, relationships, health — that lasts at least six months and is hard to control. Social anxiety disorder is fear of being scrutinized or judged in social or performance situations, often paired with avoidance. Panic disorder is recurrent unexpected panic attacks, usually with avoidance of places where another attack might occur. Treatment overlaps (CBT works for all three) but the targets differ — exposure for social anxiety and panic, worry-postponement and tolerance-of-uncertainty work for GAD.
Will I need to talk about my childhood, or can we just focus on what's happening now?
Modern anxiety treatment is mostly present-focused. Standard CBT looks at current thought patterns, behaviors, and triggers rather than excavating childhood. That said, if your anxiety has trauma origins or attachment-based roots, your therapist may suggest including some history work because the patterns repeat. You always have the right to set the pace; a good Oregon therapist will follow your lead and only widen the lens with your consent.
How do I know if my anxiety is bad enough to need therapy?
The honest threshold isn't severity — it's interference. If anxiety is changing what you do (avoiding situations, declining invitations, leaving jobs, missing sleep, snapping at people you love) or how you feel most days, therapy will help. You don't need to be in crisis to benefit; in fact, earlier work tends to resolve faster. Of the {{accepting_count}} Oregon anxiety specialists currently accepting new clients here, most can tell you in the first session whether they think therapy is the right fit or whether you'd benefit more from a different resource (medication evaluation, primary-care work-up for underlying medical contributors, etc.).