{
  "data": {
    "slug": "insurance-for-kids-mental-health-plain-english",
    "title": "Insurance for kids' mental health, in plain English",
    "description": "A plain-English parent guide to insurance for kids' mental health care. What is covered, what to ask your plan, and what to do when bills are higher than expected.\n",
    "url": "https://psychiatryforkids.com/articles/insurance-for-kids-mental-health-plain-english",
    "category": "Treatment Approaches",
    "secondaryCategories": [],
    "audience": "kids",
    "focus": "psychiatry",
    "publishedAt": "2026-04-25T00:00:00.000Z",
    "updatedAt": "2026-04-25T21:38:40.732Z",
    "wordCount": 762,
    "timeRequiredMinutes": 4,
    "authors": [],
    "reviewers": [
      {
        "name": "Emora Health Clinical Team",
        "slug": "emora-health-clinical-team",
        "subtitle": "Emora Health Therapists & Clinical Reviewers",
        "credentials": [
          "LCSW",
          "LPC",
          "Licensed Psychologist"
        ],
        "identifiers": []
      }
    ],
    "heroImage": null,
    "intro": "Insurance for kids' mental health is annoying. Here is the short version in plain words. What is covered. What costs money. What to call your plan about. Five minutes.",
    "bodyText": "Insurance for kids' mental health is annoying. Here is the short version. What is covered. What costs money. What to call your plan about. Five minutes. The fast version Therapy is usually covered. You pay a copay per visit.Medication is almost always covered. Generic versions are cheap.Doctor visits are covered like any other doctor visit.Long testing batteries are the wild card. Always call first.The law says mental health has to be covered like physical health. The four pieces Doctor visits. Pediatrician visits for mental health stuff are covered like any other doctor visit. Normal copay. The pediatrician can handle a lot of mental health care for kids. You do not always need a specialist. Therapy. Sessions with a therapist, psychologist, or counselor. Covered. You pay a copay each time, usually $20 to $60 if the therapist is in-network. Medication. Pills your kid takes. Covered. Generic versions are cheap (often $5 to $20 per month). Brand names cost more. Long evaluations and testing. The 6 to 12 hour psychological testing battery. Covered sometimes, denied sometimes. Always call your plan before booking. Costs $1,500 to $4,500 if not covered. The two laws that matter The Affordable Care Act. Most plans have to cover mental health. You cannot be charged more or denied because your kid has a mental health condition. The Mental Health Parity Act. Mental health benefits have to be the same as physical health benefits. Same copay levels. Same visit limits. Same rules. If your plan is breaking this rule, you can appeal and you will often win. The five words to know In-network. The doctor has a deal with your insurance. You pay less.Out-of-network. No deal. You pay more.Copay. Flat fee per visit. Pay at the visit.Deductible. What you pay before insurance starts paying.Prior authorization. Pre-approval for some services. The doctor handles it. Before you book, call your plan A short list of questions. Write them down. Get the rep's name and a reference number for the call. Is this provider in-network?What is my copay or coinsurance for behavioral health?Have I met my deductible?Do I need prior authorization?Are these CPT codes covered for this diagnosis? The provider's office knows the codes. Ask them, then call your plan. Why finding an in-network therapist is so hard It is not in your head. About half of US child mental health clinicians do not take insurance directly because the rates are too low and the paperwork is too much. Three things help: Call clinicians directly to confirm they take your specific plan. The website lists are usually wrong.Ask about telehealth. Often more in-network options online.If you cannot find an in-network provider with reasonable wait time, ask your insurance about a \"single case agreement\" to cover an out-of-network provider at in-network rates. When the bill is higher than you expected Three common reasons: The provider was actually out-of-network. Always confirm directly with the office, not just the website.You had not met your deductible yet. Each year resets.The wrong code was billed. Sometimes a behavioral health visit gets billed under medical (or vice versa) and gets denied. The office can refile. If the bill is wrong, call the office first to check the codes. Then call your insurance to appeal. Many bills get corrected. If your plan won't cover what you need Three options that work: Appeal. Your doctor writes a letter explaining why this care is needed. The insurance company has to consider it. Many appeals succeed. Sliding-scale care. Community mental health centers and many universities have therapy and psychiatry at reduced fees based on income. Quality is usually good, the trade-off is sometimes a waitlist. HSA or FSA. If you have one of these accounts, mental health care counts as a qualified expense. Use those dollars for therapy, psychiatry, and even testing. On Medicaid For families on Medicaid, mental health for kids is usually well covered. Often no copays. The hard part is finding a clinician who takes Medicaid. Your state Medicaid office, your pediatrician, and the local community mental health center are the right places to start. The takeaway Most mental health care for kids is covered. The system is harder to use than it should be. The questions worth asking are short. The most useful single thing you can do is call your plan before you book any non-routine appointment, get answers in writing where you can, and appeal when something gets denied that should not have been. Your kid's care is worth the phone call.",
    "bodyHtml": "<p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Insurance for kids' mental health is annoying. Here is the short version. What is covered. What costs money. What to call your plan about. Five minutes.</span></p><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The fast version</span></h2><ul><li value=\"1\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Therapy</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> is usually covered. You pay a copay per visit.</span></li><li value=\"2\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Medication</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> is almost always covered. Generic versions are cheap.</span></li><li value=\"3\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Doctor visits</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> are covered like any other doctor visit.</span></li><li value=\"4\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Long testing batteries</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> are the wild card. Always call first.</span></li><li value=\"5\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The law says mental health has to be covered like physical health.</span></li></ul><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The four pieces</span></h2><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Doctor visits.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Pediatrician visits for mental health stuff are covered like any other doctor visit. Normal copay. The pediatrician can handle a lot of mental health care for kids. You do not always need a specialist.</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Therapy.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Sessions with a therapist, psychologist, or counselor. Covered. You pay a copay each time, usually $20 to $60 if the therapist is in-network.</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Medication.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Pills your kid takes. Covered. Generic versions are cheap (often $5 to $20 per month). Brand names cost more.</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Long evaluations and testing.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> The 6 to 12 hour psychological testing battery. Covered sometimes, denied sometimes. Always call your plan before booking. Costs $1,500 to $4,500 if not covered.</span></p><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The two laws that matter</span></h2><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The Affordable Care Act.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Most plans have to cover mental health. You cannot be charged more or denied because your kid has a mental health condition.</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The Mental Health Parity Act.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Mental health benefits have to be the same as physical health benefits. Same copay levels. Same visit limits. Same rules. If your plan is breaking this rule, you can appeal and you will often win.</span></p><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The five words to know</span></h2><ul><li value=\"1\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">In-network.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> The doctor has a deal with your insurance. You pay less.</span></li><li value=\"2\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Out-of-network.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> No deal. You pay more.</span></li><li value=\"3\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Copay.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Flat fee per visit. Pay at the visit.</span></li><li value=\"4\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Deductible.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> What you pay before insurance starts paying.</span></li><li value=\"5\" dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Prior authorization.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Pre-approval for some services. The doctor handles it.</span></li></ul><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Before you book, call your plan</span></h2><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">A short list of questions. Write them down. Get the rep's name and a reference number for the call.</span></p><ol><li value=\"1\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Is this provider in-network?</span></li><li value=\"2\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">What is my copay or coinsurance for behavioral health?</span></li><li value=\"3\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Have I met my deductible?</span></li><li value=\"4\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Do I need prior authorization?</span></li><li value=\"5\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Are these CPT codes covered for this diagnosis?</span></li></ol><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The provider's office knows the codes. Ask them, then call your plan.</span></p><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Why finding an in-network therapist is so hard</span></h2><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">It is not in your head. About half of US child mental health clinicians do not take insurance directly because the rates are too low and the paperwork is too much.</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Three things help:</span></p><ul><li value=\"1\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Call clinicians directly to confirm they take your specific plan. The website lists are usually wrong.</span></li><li value=\"2\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Ask about telehealth. Often more in-network options online.</span></li><li value=\"3\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">If you cannot find an in-network provider with reasonable wait time, ask your insurance about a \"single case agreement\" to cover an out-of-network provider at in-network rates.</span></li></ul><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">When the bill is higher than you expected</span></h2><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Three common reasons:</span></p><ol><li value=\"1\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The provider was actually out-of-network. Always confirm directly with the office, not just the website.</span></li><li value=\"2\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">You had not met your deductible yet. Each year resets.</span></li><li value=\"3\" dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The wrong code was billed. Sometimes a behavioral health visit gets billed under medical (or vice versa) and gets denied. The office can refile.</span></li></ol><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">If the bill is wrong, call the office first to check the codes. Then call your insurance to appeal. Many bills get corrected.</span></p><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">If your plan won't cover what you need</span></h2><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Three options that work:</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Appeal.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Your doctor writes a letter explaining why this care is needed. The insurance company has to consider it. Many appeals succeed.</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Sliding-scale care.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> Community mental health centers and many universities have therapy and psychiatry at reduced fees based on income. Quality is usually good, the trade-off is sometimes a waitlist.</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><b><strong style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">HSA or FSA.</strong></b><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\"> If you have one of these accounts, mental health care counts as a qualified expense. Use those dollars for therapy, psychiatry, and even testing.</span></p><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">On Medicaid</span></h2><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">For families on Medicaid, mental health for kids is usually well covered. Often no copays. The hard part is finding a clinician who takes Medicaid. Your state Medicaid office, your pediatrician, and the local community mental health center are the right places to start.</span></p><h2 dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">The takeaway</span></h2><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Most mental health care for kids is covered. The system is harder to use than it should be. The questions worth asking are short. The most useful single thing you can do is call your plan before you book any non-routine appointment, get answers in writing where you can, and appeal when something gets denied that should not have been.</span></p><p dir=\"ltr\"><span style=\"white-space: pre-wrap;\">Your kid's care is worth the phone call.</span></p>",
    "faq": [
      {
        "question": "What is in-network?",
        "answer": "It means the doctor or therapist has a deal with your insurance. You pay less. Out-of-network means no deal. You pay more, and may get some money back later. Always ask the office: 'Are you in-network with my plan?' Use the exact name on your card."
      },
      {
        "question": "What is a copay?",
        "answer": "A flat fee per visit. Common amounts: $20 for the regular doctor, $30 to $60 for therapy, $40 to $80 for a psychiatrist. You pay it at the visit."
      },
      {
        "question": "What is a deductible?",
        "answer": "What you pay before insurance starts paying. If your deductible is $1,000 and your kid's first therapy visit costs $200, you pay the full $200. After you have paid $1,000 total in covered services, insurance starts covering more. Family deductibles are usually higher than individual ones."
      },
      {
        "question": "Are kids' mental health meds covered?",
        "answer": "Almost always. Generic versions of stimulants and SSRIs are cheap. Brand-name ones cost more. If a med needs a prior approval, your doctor's office handles that. If you get sticker shock at the pharmacy, ask about the generic version."
      },
      {
        "question": "What if my plan won't cover something?",
        "answer": "Three options. Appeal the decision (your doctor writes a letter explaining why it is needed). Ask about sliding-scale or community options. Use HSA or FSA dollars if you have them, mental health care counts."
      }
    ],
    "references": [
      "Healthcare.gov. Mental health and substance abuse coverage.U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Mental Health Parity Help.American Academy of Pediatrics. Mental Health Initiatives.Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Mental Health Parity. From Emora Health Emora Health, Child psychiatryEmora Health, Therapy for kids"
    ],
    "citations": [],
    "citation": {
      "ama": "Emora Health Clinical Team. Insurance for kids' mental health, in plain English. Psychiatry for Kids. Updated 2026-04-25. Accessed 2026-04-26. https://psychiatryforkids.com/articles/insurance-for-kids-mental-health-plain-english",
      "apa": "Emora Health Clinical Team (2026). Insurance for kids' mental health, in plain English. Psychiatry for Kids. Retrieved 2026-04-26, from https://psychiatryforkids.com/articles/insurance-for-kids-mental-health-plain-english",
      "chicago": "Emora Health Clinical Team. \"Insurance for kids' mental health, in plain English.\" Psychiatry for Kids. Last modified 2026-04-25. https://psychiatryforkids.com/articles/insurance-for-kids-mental-health-plain-english."
    }
  },
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    "publisher": "Psychiatry for Kids",
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    "sponsor": "Articles are clinically reviewed under a sponsorship arrangement with Emora Health. The site itself is the publisher.",
    "license": "Free to read and cite with attribution to Psychiatry for Kids.",
    "docs": "https://psychiatryforkids.com/llms.txt",
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}