Depression Therapy in Oregon

62 providers found

Oregon therapists treating depression, persistent depressive disorder, bipolar depression, postpartum depression, treatment-resistant depression, and depression with co-occurring conditions.

Oregon Counselor Directory lists 62 therapists who specialize in depression as of April 2026 — including major depressive disorder, persistent depressive disorder (dysthymia), postpartum depression, seasonal affective disorder, and depression with co-occurring anxiety, trauma, or grief. 105 offer telehealth across Oregon, 42 accept Oregon Health Plan, 52 offer sliding-scale fees, and 136 are currently accepting new clients. Effective treatments include Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Behavioral Activation (the most-evidenced fast-acting depression intervention), Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT), Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) for relapse prevention, and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). For depression that hasn't responded to two or more medication trials (treatment-resistant depression), Oregon clinics also offer TMS, the SAINT accelerated TMS protocol, and ketamine / esketamine — all paired with talk therapy for the most durable results.

Jennifer Sowers
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Jennifer Sowers

LPC · SISTERS, OR

Depression TherapySliding ScaleAccepting Clients

I’m here to meet you exactly where you are, with an open mind and heart, ready to explore whatever comes up. My goal is simply for you to feel well, whatever that means for you,…

AnxietyDepressionFirst RespondersAcceptance and Commitment (ACT)Clinical Supervision and Licensed Supervisors$90–$150TelehealthOHPSliding Scale
Karisa Quick
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Karisa Quick

LPCC · Portland, OR

Depression TherapySliding ScaleAccepting Clients

I’m a queer, nonbinary, white, neurodivergent therapist who is passionate about helping people recover from painful experiences, navigate life stress, and reconnect with their…

ADHDAnger ManagementAnxietyAcceptance and Commitment (ACT)Attachment-based$120–$150TelehealthSliding Scale
Steve Ratcliff
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Steve Ratcliff

MA, LPCC (NM), LPC (OR), LMHC (WA), NCC, CST · Oregon City, OR

Depression TherapySliding ScaleAccepting Clients

I am a licensed mental health counselor and AASECT certified sex therapist in private practice living in the Portland, OR region who specializes in treating Gender, Sexual, and…

AddictionADHDAlcohol UseAcceptance and Commitment (ACT)Attachment-basedTelehealthOHPSliding Scale
William Hale
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William Hale

LMFT · Tigard, OR

Depression TherapySliding ScaleAccepting Clients

I work with couples navigating conflict, low intimacy, or betrayal, and with adults impacted by complex trauma or disconnection. In couples counseling, we track your interactions…

AnxietyBurnoutcommunication challengesCouples CounselingEmotionally Focused$150–$195TelehealthSliding Scale
Toni Nelson Huff Counseling Services
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Toni Nelson Huff Counseling Services

LCSW · Oregon, OR

Depression TherapySliding ScaleAccepting Clients

I work exclusively with mature adults. Clients include those with chronic illness, family caregivers, those going through unexpected life experiences and increasingly…

AnxietyCancerChronic IllnessAcceptance and Commitment (ACT)Cognitive Behavioral (CBT)TelehealthSliding Scale
Higher Ground Counseling
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Higher Ground Counseling

LPC, LMFT, LCSW · Beaverton, OR

Depression TherapySliding ScaleAccepting Clients

Higher Ground Counseling is a specialized behavioral health practice dedicated to helping youth, adults, and families heal from trauma, sexual abuse, and problematic sexual…

ADHDAdoptionAnger ManagementArt TherapyAttachment-basedTelehealthOHPSliding Scale
Jenna Paulsen, Lacamas Counseling
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Jenna Paulsen, Lacamas Counseling

LMHC, MA · Camas, WA, OR

Depression TherapySliding ScaleAccepting Clients

Do you feel like you can't get away from spiraling thoughts and never ending emotional turmoil? You may feel confused, anxious, tired and disappointed with life. Whether you are a…

ADHDAnxietyBehavioral IssuesAcceptance and Commitment (ACT)Art TherapyTelehealthSliding Scale
Sara Blackwood
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Sara Blackwood

PCA · Bend, OR

Depression TherapySliding ScaleAccepting Clients

Do you ever feel misunderstood or like you don’t fit in? Is this causing you to feel anxious or disconnected from life? As a queer mental health professional, I have experience…

ADHDAutismDissociative Disorders (DID)Cognitive Behavioral (CBT)Dialectical Behavior (DBT)$80–$200TelehealthSliding Scale

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Frequently asked questions

Common questions about this coverage in Oregon.

How do I know if I have depression or am just going through a rough patch?
A useful rule of thumb: if low mood, low energy, loss of interest, or persistent hopelessness has lasted more than two weeks and is interfering with your work, sleep, or relationships, it's worth a clinical conversation. Therapists don't diagnose lightly — most use validated screeners like the PHQ-9 in the first session to distinguish between clinical depression, grief, burnout, and adjustment reactions. Of the 62 depression specialists on this directory, almost all offer a free 15-minute consult so you can describe what you're feeling without committing to a course of treatment.
What's the difference between CBT and DBT for depression?
CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) is the standard first-line treatment for depression — it focuses on the thought patterns and behaviors that maintain low mood, with concrete homework between sessions. DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy) was developed for chronic suicidality and emotion-dysregulation patterns, and it adds skills training in mindfulness, distress tolerance, and interpersonal effectiveness — useful when depression co-occurs with self-harm, eating issues, or borderline traits. For garden-variety depression, CBT is the more efficient fit.
Can I get depression therapy through OHP / Oregon Health Plan?
Yes. {{ohp_count}} of our depression specialists accept OHP, and Oregon's CCO system means most of those providers work directly with HealthShare, CareOregon, Trillium, PacificSource, or Yamhill CCO. The first step is finding an OHP-accepting provider with openings (filter for "Accepting clients" on this page) and calling them — they'll handle the prior-authorization paperwork on their end.
Is depression really a chemical imbalance, or is that outdated?
The "low serotonin" model is now considered an oversimplification — depression is more accurately understood as the result of stress, learned thought patterns, biology, sleep, social isolation, and inflammation interacting. That doesn't mean medication doesn't help (SSRIs do work for moderate-to-severe depression), but it explains why therapy alone is often as effective as medication for mild-to-moderate cases — and why combining the two outperforms either alone for severe cases.
How do I find a depression therapist who won't judge me?
A good fit is the single biggest predictor of therapy outcomes — bigger than the modality the therapist practices. Most therapists offer a free 15-minute phone consult; use it. Ask: "How do you typically work with depression?" and "Have you worked with someone like me before?" Listen for genuine warmth and curiosity, not a sales pitch. Of the 62 depression specialists here, {{telehealth_count}} offer telehealth so you're not limited to your immediate area when looking for the right fit.
How quickly should I expect to feel better in depression therapy?
Most clients notice some shift within 4–6 weeks of consistent weekly sessions — usually it shows up first as more energy, slightly better sleep, or one fewer dark day per week. Full remission of moderate depression typically takes 12–20 sessions. If you're not seeing any change after 8 sessions, that's a sign to talk to your therapist about adjusting the approach or, if appropriate, adding a medication consult.
What is treatment-resistant depression, and how do I know if I have it?
Depression is generally called treatment-resistant when you have tried at least two different antidepressants at adequate doses and durations (6–8 weeks each) without meaningful improvement. About one-third of people with major depression do not fully respond to a first medication, so this is more common than people realize. Oregon options for treatment-resistant depression include TMS (a non-invasive magnetic stimulation FDA-cleared since 2008), the SAINT accelerated TMS protocol (50–79% remission in one week), ketamine and esketamine (Spravato), and ECT for severe cases. A psychiatrist or psychiatric nurse practitioner can guide that path; most still pair it with talk therapy.
Is ketamine therapy for depression covered by Oregon insurance?
Coverage is split. Esketamine (Spravato) — the FDA-approved nasal spray version — is covered by most commercial Oregon insurance and OHP for treatment-resistant depression, with prior authorization. Off-label IV or IM ketamine and ketamine-assisted psychotherapy (KAP) are usually self-pay, $400–$700 per session in Oregon, with some clinics offering 6-session packages for $2,500–$4,000. Some clinics will provide a superbill for partial out-of-network reimbursement. Always confirm coverage with your specific plan before booking.
Should I try TMS or SAINT before a third antidepressant?
Increasingly, yes — that is the conversation many Oregon psychiatrists are having in 2026. TMS has fewer systemic side effects than another medication trial and often works when SSRIs and SNRIs have not. Standard TMS runs about 6 weeks, daily 20-minute sessions; the SAINT accelerated protocol compresses the entire course into 5 days of in-clinic work and shows higher remission rates in early studies. Both are FDA-cleared and increasingly covered by Oregon insurance for treatment-resistant depression. Talk to your prescriber about timing — many people pair TMS with weekly therapy for the most durable result.
How do I know if I need medication, therapy, or both for depression?
Mild-to-moderate depression often responds well to therapy alone — CBT, behavioral activation, IPT, and mindfulness-based approaches all have strong evidence. Severe depression, depression with suicidal ideation, or depression that has lasted longer than two years usually responds faster with both. The honest answer: if you are functioning (working, sleeping, eating) but feel persistently flat or hopeless, start with therapy. If you cannot get out of bed or are losing significant weight, see a prescriber first to stabilize, then add therapy. A good Oregon therapist will tell you within the first 2–3 sessions whether they think medication would help.
Is what I'm feeling depression, burnout, or just exhaustion?
There's real overlap. Burnout is typically tied to a specific overload — work, caregiving, prolonged stress — and lifts (slowly) when the load comes off. Clinical depression persists across contexts, even on vacation, and includes a loss of pleasure in things that used to feel good (anhedonia), changes in sleep and appetite, and a sense of hopelessness or worthlessness. Many Oregon clients show up burned out and discover depression underneath; many show up depressed and find the depression resolves once burnout is addressed. A good first session can usually tell which is dominant.
Why does my depression feel worse in the morning?
Diurnal mood variation — feeling worst on waking, slightly better as the day goes on — is a hallmark of melancholic depression. It's tied to cortisol cycles and circadian disruption rather than anything you're doing wrong. Behavioral activation therapy specifically addresses this with structured morning routines, light exposure within 30 minutes of waking, and small accomplishment-based wins to disrupt the morning paralysis pattern. If mornings are when you most consider not getting up, tell your therapist directly — they can target it.
I've heard exercise treats depression. Do I really need therapy too?
Exercise is a legitimate, evidence-based depression treatment — meta-analyses put 30 minutes of moderate aerobic activity 3–5x/week roughly on par with first-line antidepressants for mild-to-moderate depression. The catch: severely depressed people can't reliably exercise, which is the trap. Therapy helps with the activation problem, with co-occurring rumination and self-criticism, with thought patterns that exercise alone won't shift, and with the underlying causes (relationships, trauma, life transitions). Many Oregon therapists weave exercise prescriptions into the work rather than treating it as separate.
How long should I stay in therapy after I start feeling better?
Long enough to consolidate the gains. Stopping the moment you feel better is the most common reason depression returns — symptoms remit before the underlying patterns have shifted. Standard practice is to taper from weekly to every-other-week to monthly maintenance over about 3 months once symptoms are gone, then check in quarterly for the first year. Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy was specifically designed to prevent depression relapse and is offered by many Oregon therapists as a follow-on group format.