Telehealth LCSW

Open Window Therapy

Licensed clinical social work, available via telehealth across multiple states.

Telehealth-only solo LCSW practice with active licenses in 3-5 states. State-gated intake, transparent licensure display, and a tech-setup page that handles the 'will this actually work for me?' question patients are too embarrassed to ask.

Practice setup + Growth plan

Open Window Therapy example site preview

Practice context

Telehealth-only LCSW practices grew during the pandemic and stayed grown — many clinicians prefer the format, and patients in license-shortage states (rural areas, parts of the Mountain West, some New England states) often have telehealth as their only realistic option. The buyer wants to know whether the clinician is licensed in their state before they read any further.

The buyer is searching for a therapist who works in their state, in their time zone, with their insurance or budget. Maybe they have moved recently, maybe they live far from the nearest in-person therapist, maybe they prefer the format. The site has to surface state coverage first, then specialties, then the fit details.

The cross-state regulatory load is real and changing fast. The Social Work Licensure Compact has been enacted in 30+ states but is not yet issuing multistate licenses (rule-making in progress through 2025-2026). The template ships the 'SWLC-eligible' badge as default-HIDDEN until the compact actually activates — this keeps the practice from making premature claims. Florida out-of-state telehealth providers need separate registration; that block is state-conditional too.

Services this example supports

Individual psychotherapy via telehealth (45-50 min)
Anxiety, depression, life transitions, work-related stress
EMDR via telehealth (where modality-suitable)
Couples therapy via telehealth
Specialty work: perinatal, LGBTQ+ affirming, chronic illness adjustment
Cross-state continuity (when patient moves to another covered state)
Cash-pay with superbill provided; some in-network panels
Evening and weekend availability across multiple time zones

Pages we'd build

  • Home — 'therapy from wherever you are in [states]' headline with state list
  • States Served — explicit per-state license display + SWLC status note
  • Tech Setup — platform, bandwidth, privacy at home
  • Services — modalities and specialties offered
  • Fees & Insurance — cash rate, in-network panels by state
  • About the Therapist — credentials, training, what makes a fit
  • Book — state-gated intake form (first field: 'what state are you in?')

Why this layout works

Telehealth-only buyers screen by state first — every other detail is secondary if the clinician is not licensed where the patient lives. State-led hero copy and a state-gated intake form prevent the disappointing inquiry that wastes both sides' time. The tech-setup page handles the patient who is interested but worried about whether they can actually do telehealth in their living room with kids around — that question kills bookings when it goes unanswered. The SWLC badge stays OFF by default because the compact has not started issuing multistate licenses yet; the template ships the badge component ready to enable, but the default is honest. Florida telehealth registration is a state-conditional block.

What's included

Hover any pill to see what it removes from the practice's day.

  • State-by-state license displayPatients know immediately if you can see them.
  • State-gated intake formOut-of-state inquiries are caught before they become disappointments.
  • Tech-setup explainerFirst-visit logistics handled without a phone call.
  • Time-zone availability tableCross-state scheduling expectations set up front.
  • Good Faith Estimate noticeFederal compliance handled for self-pay.
  • HTTPS / SSL securedBrowser padlock without thinking about certs.

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