Written by Klarity Editorial Team
Published: May 16, 2026

Finding the right provider for ADHD care can feel overwhelming—especially when you’re navigating the world of online mental health services. If you’ve been searching for ‘online ADHD treatment’ or ‘telehealth ADHD medication,’ you’re not alone. Millions of Americans are turning to virtual care for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, but the landscape has changed dramatically in recent years.
This comprehensive guide breaks down everything you need to know about telehealth ADHD providers in 2026, including which platforms are still operating, what medications they prescribe, how much they cost, and how they compare to emerging options like Klarity Health.
The telehealth mental health boom that exploded during the COVID-19 pandemic has undergone significant growing pains. Between regulatory scrutiny, company shutdowns, and evolving prescribing policies, today’s ADHD telehealth landscape looks very different than it did just three years ago.
Key developments that reshaped the industry:
These changes haven’t eliminated access to legitimate ADHD care online—they’ve simply made it more important to understand which providers offer comprehensive, responsible treatment.
One of the biggest points of confusion for patients seeking online ADHD treatment is understanding what medications providers can and will prescribe. Schedule II stimulants like Adderall, Vyvanse, and Ritalin remain the gold-standard treatment for most adults with ADHD, but telehealth policies vary dramatically.
As of 2026, very few direct-to-consumer telehealth platforms prescribe Schedule II ADHD medications. The COVID-era Ryan Haight Act waiver—which allowed providers to prescribe controlled substances via telehealth without an in-person visit—has been extended through late 2025, but its future remains uncertain.
Providers that DO prescribe stimulants when medically appropriate:
Providers that DO NOT prescribe stimulants:
This isn’t necessarily because these platforms lack qualified providers—it’s a business and liability decision. Many platforms found that the regulatory scrutiny and compliance costs associated with controlled substance prescribing outweighed the benefits.
If you’re looking for ADHD treatment but prefer to avoid stimulants—or if your provider determines stimulants aren’t appropriate for your situation—several non-controlled alternatives exist:
Most telehealth platforms, including those that don’t prescribe stimulants, will prescribe these alternatives. However, for many adults with ADHD, non-stimulant medications are less effective than stimulants.
The table below provides a detailed side-by-side comparison of major telehealth providers for ADHD and mental health care as of late 2025. Understanding these differences helps you make an informed choice based on your specific needs.
| Provider | Current Status | ADHD Treatment? | Stimulant Prescriptions? | Other Controlled Substances? | Insurance Accepted? | Estimated Cash Price | States Served |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Klarity Health | 🟢 Active | ✅ Yes (diagnosis & treatment) | ✅ Yes (when appropriate) | ✅ Yes (evaluated case-by-case) | ✅ Yes (plus cash pay) | $149 initial / $59 follow-up | 50 states |
| Talkiatry | 🟢 Active | ✅ Yes (full psychiatric care) | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes (benzos, sleep aids when needed) | ✅ Yes (in-network focus) | $25-$400/visit depending on insurance | 43 states |
| Cerebral | 🟡 Limited | ✅ Yes (existing patients only) | ❌ No (stopped May 2022) | ❌ No | 🟡 Some plans | $99-$365/month subscription | 50 states |
| Done | 🔴 Shut Down | ❌ N/A | ❌ N/A | ❌ N/A | ❌ N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Brightside | 🟢 Active | ❌ No (anxiety/depression only) | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | $95-$349/month subscription | 50 states |
| PlushCare | 🟢 Active | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | $19.99/mo + $129/visit | 50 states |
| Teladoc | 🟢 Active | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | $75-$200/visit | 50 states |
| MDLive | 🟢 Active | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | $0-$82/visit | 50 states |
| Amwell | 🟢 Active | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ✅ Yes | $79-$120/visit | 50 states |
| Hims & Hers | 🟢 Active | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No | ❌ No (cash only) | $85/month + visit fees | 50 states |
The ADHD treatment gap is real. If you need comprehensive ADHD care including the possibility of stimulant medication, your options are surprisingly limited. Most general telehealth platforms simply won’t treat ADHD with controlled medications, even if you’ve been stably managed on Adderall for years.
Specialized psychiatric platforms offer more flexibility. Talkiatry and Klarity Health stand out as providers willing to prescribe the full range of ADHD medications when clinically appropriate. The key difference? Talkiatry operates primarily through insurance networks (which means potential wait times and administrative hurdles), while Klarity offers both insurance and transparent cash-pay options with typically faster appointment availability.
Subscription models can get expensive. Platforms like Cerebral and Brightside charge monthly fees that can exceed $300-400 when combining therapy and medication management. If you only need occasional check-ins for medication monitoring, you might pay for services you don’t use.
One of the most frustrating aspects of comparing telehealth providers is understanding true costs. Here’s what you need to know about different pricing models:
How it works: You pay a flat monthly fee that includes a certain number of visits, messaging with providers, and medication management.
Pros:
Cons:
Example costs:
How it works: You pay for each appointment separately, with no ongoing subscription.
Pros:
Cons:
Example costs:
How it works: The provider accepts your health insurance, and you pay your plan’s standard copay or coinsurance.
Pros:
Cons:
Example costs:
For most stable ADHD patients who need quarterly medication check-ins, transparent pay-per-visit pricing often costs less annually than subscription models. Here’s the math:
Subscription model (Cerebral medication management):
Pay-per-visit model (Klarity):
Even if you needed monthly visits on Klarity’s model ($59 × 12 + $149 initial = $857), you’d still save over $300 compared to Cerebral’s subscription—and you wouldn’t be locked into monthly charges during months you don’t need an appointment.
While this guide focuses on ADHD treatment, many patients have co-occurring conditions. Understanding which providers treat what conditions helps you find comprehensive care.
Research shows that 60-80% of adults with ADHD have at least one other mental health condition. The most common include:
What this means for treatment: You need a provider who can address multiple conditions simultaneously, not just prescribe ADHD medication in isolation.
| Condition | Klarity Health | Talkiatry | Cerebral | Brightside | General Telehealth |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADHD with anxiety | ✅ Comprehensive | ✅ Comprehensive | 🟡 Limited (no stimulants) | ❌ No ADHD treatment | ❌ No controlled meds |
| ADHD with depression | ✅ Comprehensive | ✅ Comprehensive | 🟡 Limited | ❌ No ADHD treatment | ❌ No controlled meds |
| ADHD with insomnia | ✅ Including sleep meds | ✅ Including sleep meds | ❌ No controlled sleep aids | ❌ No sleep aids | ❌ No sleep aids |
| ADHD with PTSD | ✅ Trauma-informed | ✅ Full psychiatric care | 🟡 Therapy only | ✅ (but no ADHD meds) | ❌ Limited |
Klarity Health’s advantage: By accepting insurance while also offering transparent cash-pay rates, Klarity provides flexibility that subscription services and insurance-only providers can’t match. Their providers can prescribe the full range of medications needed for complex presentations—from stimulants for ADHD to SSRIs for anxiety to appropriate sleep medications when needed—all while maintaining the clinical judgment to avoid over-prescribing.
The federal prosecution of Done Global’s executives and Cerebral’s settlement over prescribing practices revealed serious problems in the telehealth ADHD space. These cases aren’t just legal footnotes—they offer important lessons for patients seeking care.
Based on investigative reporting and legal documents, watch out for providers that:
Legitimate ADHD telehealth services include:
Klarity Health, for example, conducts thorough initial evaluations, requires regular follow-ups for stimulant prescriptions, and maintains clear communication channels with patients—all hallmarks of responsible prescribing practices.
Most major telehealth providers now operate nationwide, but there are important nuances:
Even when a provider operates in your state, local regulations can affect what services they offer:
California, Texas, Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, and Illinois all have different telehealth regulations, but the major providers listed here serve all six states. However:
The good news? These state-level variations are handled behind the scenes by legitimate telehealth providers. If a platform operates in your state, they’ve already ensured their practices comply with local regulations.
One decision you’ll face is whether to use insurance or pay out-of-pocket. Both have legitimate use cases.
Choose insurance-based care if:
Best insurance-friendly options:
Choose self-pay care if:
Best cash-pay options:
Some providers offer the best of both worlds. Klarity Health, for instance, accepts many insurance plans but also maintains transparent cash-pay rates. This means:
This flexibility is particularly valuable given how unpredictable insurance coverage can be, especially for mental health services.
Understanding what actually happens when you sign up for telehealth ADHD treatment helps set appropriate expectations.
A proper ADHD assessment should include:
Red flag: If your ‘evaluation’ consists mainly of filling out a quick questionnaire online with minimal provider interaction, seek care elsewhere. ADHD diagnosis requires clinical judgment, not just a symptom checklist.
After starting medication, expect:
What responsible providers track:
Stimulant medications cannot be prescribed with refills—federal law requires a new prescription for each fill. Different providers handle this in different ways:
The streamlined approach (Klarity Health model):
The appointment-required approach:
The pharmacy-coordinated approach:
Yes—currently. The COVID-era policy allowing telehealth providers to prescribe controlled substances without an in-person examination has been extended through late 2025. However, this remains subject to change, and the long-term future of stimulant prescribing via telehealth is uncertain. Responsible providers maintain clinical standards equivalent to in-person care, including comprehensive evaluations and ongoing monitoring.
If you have an existing ADHD diagnosis and medication regimen, transferring care to a telehealth provider is generally straightforward. You’ll still need an initial evaluation, but the provider will review your history, confirm the diagnosis, and typically continue effective treatment. Bring documentation of your previous diagnosis and medication history if available.
If you use your employer-provided health insurance, your employer’s insurance claims will show that psychiatric/behavioral health services were used, but not the specific diagnosis or medications. If you prefer complete privacy, paying out-of-pocket ensures no insurance claims are filed. HIPAA protects the details of your medical information.
This depends entirely on the provider. Talkiatry and Klarity Health can prescribe any FDA-approved ADHD medication, including Adderall (amphetamine/dextroamphetamine), when clinically appropriate. However, many providers have moved away from Adderall in favor of alternatives like Vyvanse or methylphenidate formulations due to ongoing shortages and insurance coverage issues. Your provider will work with you to find an effective medication that’s available and affordable.
Unfortunately, some pharmacies have become hesitant to fill stimulant prescriptions from telehealth providers, particularly after the Done controversy. If you encounter this:
Legitimate telehealth providers are familiar with this issue and can often resolve it quickly.
For ADHD specifically, medication is often the most effective treatment, but many adults benefit from adding:
The decision depends on your symptoms, preferences, and life circumstances. Unlike some platforms that bundle therapy with medication management (and charge accordingly), providers like Klarity let you choose medication management alone or combined with therapy based on your needs.
Finding the right ADHD medication often requires trial and error. There are two main medication families (amphetamines like Adderall/Vyvanse and methylphenidates like Ritalin/Concerta) and multiple formulations of each. If your first choice doesn’t work well or causes side effects, your provider should be willing to try alternatives. This is why ongoing access to your prescriber is so important—you need someone responsive during the adjustment process.
Choosing a telehealth ADHD provider depends on your specific situation. Here’s a decision framework:
The telehealth ADHD landscape in 2026 is more mature and more carefully regulated than it was during the pandemic boom years. While this means fewer providers willing to prescribe controlled medications, it also means higher standards and more accountability.
The key takeaway: Legitimate, comprehensive ADHD care via telehealth absolutely exists, but not all platforms are created equal. The collapse of Done and the restrictions imposed on Cerebral have created a gap in the market—one that responsible providers like Klarity Health are well-positioned to fill.
Unlike the quick-fix, assembly-line approach that got some startups in trouble, quality telehealth ADHD care combines convenience with clinical excellence. You should expect:
Whether you choose insurance-based care through Talkiatry, transparent cash-pay services through Klarity, or another option, the most important factor is finding a provider who treats you as an individual, not a prescription quota.
Ready to get started? Klarity Health offers comprehensive ADHD evaluations and ongoing medication management with transparent pricing, provider availability in all 50 states, and acceptance of both insurance and cash pay. Initial consultations can often be scheduled within days, not weeks—because when you’re struggling with untreated ADHD, every day matters.
The information in this guide is based on current provider policies, regulatory developments, and industry analysis as of late 2025. Key sources include:
AP News – ‘Top executives of ADHD telehealth company Done charged with fraud,’ June 14, 2024. [Associated Press wire report]
TIME Magazine – ‘Why Online Therapy Startups Like Cerebral, Done, and Ahead Are Falling Short,’ November 1, 2022. [Investigative journalism]
TechTarget Healthcare IT News – ‘Pushing ADHD telehealth prescriptions costs Cerebral millions,’ November 6, 2024. [Industry analysis]
Telehealth and Telecare Aware – ‘Done effectively done at the close of June,’ June 19, 2024. [Industry newsletter]
Teladoc Health – Official prescription policy FAQ, updated 2023-2025. [Provider policy documentation]
This guide is for informational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice. ADHD diagnosis and treatment should always involve consultation with qualified healthcare providers who can evaluate your individual circumstances.
📅 Research Currency Statement
Verified as of: January 4, 2026
Providers verified active: Cerebral, Brightside, Talkiatry, PlushCare, MDLive, Teladoc, Amwell, Hims/Hers
Providers with uncertain status: Done (federal prosecution 2024), Ahead (closed 2022)
Key sources: 2024-2025 DOJ press releases, industry news, official provider policies, competitor reviews
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