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Anxiety Therapy in Colorado

Explore support for anxiety, chronic stress, panic symptoms, and emotional overwhelm while browsing therapists across Colorado who fit your needs and goals.

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Use the filter options to find available therapists by specialty, insurance, location and age group.

Appointments may be available in as little as 48 hours. Many major insurance plans accepted.

How Anxiety Can Affect Emotional Wellbeing & Daily Life

Anxiety can affect emotional wellbeing, relationships, communication, confidence, routines, and the ability to feel emotionally present throughout daily life. Many individuals experience stress, emotional overwhelm, anxiety, frustration, exhaustion, avoidance behaviors, difficulty concentrating, or feeling disconnected from others while navigating challenges related to anxiety.

Over time, these experiences may affect work, school, parenting, intimacy, emotional regulation, self-esteem, decision-making, and overall quality of life. Some individuals notice ongoing strain connected to burnout, family dynamics, major life transitions, identity concerns, health-related stress, or difficulty balancing personal responsibilities and emotional needs.

Therapists across Colorado provide support for anxiety through approaches tailored to each individual’s experiences, goals, relationships, lifestyle, and emotional wellbeing.

How Therapy Can Help

Therapy can provide support, perspective, and practical tools for navigating challenges, improving emotional well-being, and building healthier patterns over time.

Better Understand Patterns & Behaviors

Therapy can help individuals recognize emotional patterns, thought processes, relationship dynamics, and behaviors that may be affecting daily life and overall well-being.

Develop Healthier Coping Strategies

Many people use therapy to build practical tools for managing stress, navigating challenges, improving communication, and responding to difficult situations more effectively.

Improve Emotional Awareness & Regulation

Therapy can support greater self-awareness, emotional balance, boundary-setting, and confidence in managing emotions across work, relationships, and everyday life.

Support Long-Term Personal Growth

In addition to addressing immediate concerns, therapy can help individuals strengthen resilience, improve self-understanding, and build healthier long-term habits and routines.

Evidence-Based Therapy Approaches for Anxiety

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) helps people identify unhelpful thought patterns, emotional responses, and behaviors while developing healthier coping strategies and practical tools for daily life. CBT is commonly used to support anxiety, depression, stress, relationship challenges, trauma-related concerns, and emotional regulation.

Learn more about Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) >

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) focuses on mindfulness, emotional flexibility, and values-based decision-making. ACT helps people respond to difficult thoughts and emotions more effectively while building healthier patterns that support long-term well-being and personal growth.

Learn more about Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) >

Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT)

Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) combines mindfulness practices with cognitive therapy techniques to help individuals better manage thought patterns, emotional reactions, and stress. This approach can support emotional regulation, self-awareness, and overall mental wellness.

Learn more about Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) >

Mindfulness-Based Therapy

Mindfulness-based approaches help individuals develop greater awareness of thoughts, emotions, physical sensations, and behavioral patterns without judgment. These techniques can support stress management, emotional regulation, self-awareness, and overall mental wellness.

Learn more about Mindfulness-Based Therapy >

Biofeedback

Biofeedback therapy helps individuals better understand how stress, emotions, and physical responses are connected. By tracking patterns such as breathing, heart rate, or muscle tension, therapy can support greater self-awareness, nervous system regulation, and long-term stress management.

Learn more about Biofeedback >

Frequently Asked Questions About Scheduling With WBC

Anxiety can make it feel as though your mind is constantly searching for problems to solve, risks to avoid, or situations to prepare for. Even when life appears relatively stable, anxiety may create a persistent sense of worry, tension, uncertainty, or emotional exhaustion that can be difficult to turn off.

Therapy helps people better understand how anxiety is showing up in their lives while developing practical tools to respond to it more effectively. Depending on your needs and goals, therapy may focus on identifying unhelpful thought patterns, reducing avoidance behaviors, strengthening coping skills, improving emotional regulation, or learning how to navigate uncertainty with greater confidence.

Many individuals seek therapy because anxiety is beginning to affect their relationships, work performance, decision-making, sleep, or overall quality of life. Others may feel tired of spending so much mental energy worrying about situations that haven't happened yet or replaying situations they cannot change.

One of the most valuable aspects of therapy is that it helps people move beyond simply managing symptoms. Many clients gain a deeper understanding of their triggers, patterns, and responses while developing skills that create lasting change.

The goal is not to eliminate anxiety completely. Anxiety is a normal human emotion. Instead, therapy helps people build a healthier relationship with anxiety so it has less influence over how they think, feel, and live.

Anxiety does not always look like panic attacks or constant nervousness. In many cases, it shows up through patterns that gradually become so familiar that they start to feel normal.

You may find yourself mentally rehearsing conversations before they happen, replaying interactions long after they end, seeking reassurance from others, struggling to make decisions, or spending significant time preparing for situations that may never occur. Some people notice that they avoid certain opportunities, postpone important tasks, or become highly perfectionistic because they fear making mistakes.

Others experience anxiety in more subtle ways. They may have difficulty relaxing, feel guilty when resting, constantly stay busy to avoid uncomfortable thoughts, or feel as though their mind is always running in the background.

Physical signs can also be easy to overlook. Muscle tension, headaches, fatigue, difficulty sleeping, digestive discomfort, restlessness, and feeling "on edge" are all common experiences for people living with anxiety.

A helpful question to consider is, "If I didn't spend so much time managing worry, uncertainty, or fear, what would I be doing differently?"

If several answers come to mind, anxiety may be having a larger influence on your life than you realize.

One of the most common misconceptions about anxiety is that it is simply excessive worrying. While worry can certainly be part of anxiety, the experience is often much more complex.

Anxiety can affect emotions, physical health, relationships, concentration, confidence, sleep, and behavior. Some people experience racing thoughts, while others primarily notice physical symptoms such as tension, fatigue, digestive discomfort, or feeling constantly on edge.

Another common misunderstanding is that anxiety means someone is weak, overly sensitive, or incapable of handling stress. In reality, anxiety often develops because the brain is working overtime to anticipate risks, solve problems, and keep a person safe. The challenge is that this protective system can become overly active, causing people to feel threatened or overwhelmed even when no immediate danger exists.

Many people also assume anxiety is always visible. In reality, some of the individuals struggling most with anxiety appear highly successful, organized, and capable on the outside. They may continue meeting responsibilities while privately feeling exhausted by the amount of effort it takes to manage their thoughts and emotions.

Understanding anxiety more accurately can reduce shame and help people recognize that their experiences are more common—and more treatable—than they may realize.

This is one of the most frustrating parts of anxiety for many people. Logically, you may recognize that a situation will probably be fine. You may even understand that your fears are unlikely to happen. Yet despite that awareness, your mind continues generating scenarios, questions, doubts, and possibilities.

The reason is that anxiety is not driven by logic alone.

Anxiety often functions as a protective system that is constantly scanning for potential threats, uncertainty, or problems. Its goal is not necessarily to predict what will happen—it is to prepare for what could happen. As a result, anxious thoughts can feel persistent even when part of you knows there is little reason for concern.

Many people respond by trying harder to think their way out of anxiety. They analyze situations, seek reassurance, replay conversations, or search for certainty. Unfortunately, these strategies often provide only temporary relief and can sometimes strengthen the cycle over time.

Therapy helps people understand these patterns and develop new ways of responding to anxious thoughts. Rather than trying to eliminate every worry, individuals often learn how to reduce the power those worries have over their attention, emotions, and decisions.

Many clients find relief in realizing that anxiety is not a personal failure. It is a pattern that can be understood, managed, and changed.

Stress and anxiety are closely related, but they are not the same thing.

Stress is typically connected to a specific challenge or demand. For example, you may feel stressed about a deadline, financial concern, major decision, or upcoming life event. Once the situation improves or passes, stress often decreases as well.

Anxiety tends to be more persistent. It may continue even when there is no immediate problem to solve. Rather than responding only to what is happening now, anxiety often focuses on what might happen in the future.

People experiencing anxiety may find themselves worrying about possibilities, anticipating worst-case scenarios, seeking certainty, or struggling to relax even when circumstances are relatively stable.

Another difference is that anxiety frequently leads to ongoing patterns such as avoidance, perfectionism, overthinking, reassurance-seeking, or difficulty tolerating uncertainty. These patterns can continue long after a stressful event has ended.

Everyone experiences stress and anxiety from time to time. The distinction becomes important when worry, fear, or nervous system activation begin interfering with daily functioning, emotional well-being, relationships, or quality of life.

Understanding the difference can help people better recognize what they are experiencing and determine whether additional support may be helpful.

Many people who seek therapy for anxiety have lived with it for years. Some describe themselves as lifelong worriers. Others cannot remember a time when they weren't overthinking, preparing for worst-case scenarios, or trying to stay one step ahead of potential problems.

When anxiety has been present for a long time, it can start to feel like part of your personality. You may begin to wonder whether being constantly worried, cautious, or on edge is simply who you are.

Fortunately, anxiety patterns can change.

While certain personality traits may remain, the way you respond to anxious thoughts, uncertainty, and fear can become much more flexible over time. Therapy helps people learn how to recognize anxiety-driven patterns, challenge behaviors that unintentionally keep anxiety going, and build confidence in their ability to navigate uncertainty.

Many people are surprised to discover that improvement does not come from eliminating every anxious thought. Instead, it often comes from no longer organizing their lives around those thoughts.

Over time, individuals frequently report feeling less consumed by worry, less dependent on reassurance, and more willing to engage in opportunities, relationships, and experiences they may have previously avoided.

The goal is not to become someone who never feels anxious. The goal is to help anxiety take up less space so you can spend more time focused on the life you want to live.

No matter how long anxiety has been present, meaningful change is possible.

Yes. For many people, online therapy can be an effective and convenient way to receive support for anxiety.

Research has shown that virtual therapy can be highly effective for many anxiety-related concerns, particularly when evidence-based therapeutic approaches are used. Online sessions provide opportunities to build coping skills, strengthen self-awareness, and work toward meaningful goals while meeting from the comfort of home.

Some individuals actually find online therapy easier when experiencing anxiety. Attending sessions from a familiar environment can reduce barriers that sometimes make it difficult to seek support in the first place.

Virtual therapy may also improve access to care by expanding therapist options and reducing travel time. This can be especially helpful for individuals with busy schedules, caregiving responsibilities, transportation challenges, or concerns about attending in-person appointments.

The effectiveness of therapy often depends more on the quality of the therapeutic relationship and the appropriateness of treatment than whether sessions occur online or in person.

For many individuals, online therapy provides a flexible and effective way to begin addressing anxiety and building skills for long-term well-being.

One of the most common reasons people delay seeking support is because they believe they should be able to manage anxiety on their own.

They may tell themselves:

Everyone worries.
This is just part of being responsible.
I don't have panic attacks, so it can't be that serious.
Other people have it worse.
I just need to try harder to control my thoughts.

Over time, however, many people realize that anxiety is influencing far more than their emotions. It may be shaping decisions, limiting opportunities, affecting relationships, interfering with sleep, or causing them to spend an enormous amount of energy trying to feel certain, prepared, or in control.

You do not need to reach a crisis point before seeking help. A useful question to consider is, "How much of my life is being organized around avoiding anxiety?" For some people, the answer includes avoiding difficult conversations. For others, it means postponing opportunities, second-guessing decisions, overpreparing, seeking reassurance, or constantly anticipating what could go wrong.

If anxiety is regularly influencing your choices, consuming mental energy, or preventing you from fully engaging in the life you want to live, therapy may be worth exploring.

Seeking support is not a sign that you are incapable of handling life. It is often a sign that you are ready to stop letting anxiety make so many decisions on your behalf.

We Work With Your Insurance

Westside Behavioral Care works with many major insurance providers to help make therapy more accessible and affordable. Coverage for counseling may vary depending on your plan, therapist availability, and whether you are seeking virtual or in-person sessions.

You can filter therapists based on your plan to find covered care quickly.

Browse Therapists

View the full directory of therapists who meet your selected criteria, including those with availability beyond the soonest openings shown above.

Laurie Hintz
Laurie Hintz

Licensed Professional Counselor

Laurie specializes in trauma, anxiety, and relationship therapy for adults and seniors, utilizing ACT and CBT to help clients achieve lasting emotional wellness and personal growth.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Major Life Transitions
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Lone Tree, CO 80124
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Sara Smith
Sara Smith

Licensed Professional Counselor

Sara uses EMDR and an empathetic, humorous approach to help adults heal from trauma, anxiety, and addiction, fostering authentic growth and lasting resilience.


  • EMDR, Substance Use, and Anxiety
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Denver, CO 80206
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Lynzee Buseck
Lynzee Buseck

Licensed Professional Counselor

4.9· 9 reviews

Lynzee creates a safe space for children and teens to overcome anxiety and depression using CBT, building trust and comfort with the help of her certified therapy dog.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Denver, CO 80218
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Kristin Van Scoyk
Kristin Van Scoyk

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Kristin supports adults through perinatal mental health and fertility struggles using a compassionate, client-centered approach focused on mindfulness and growth.


  • Depression, Anxiety, and Women's Issues
  • Self Pay, and more
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Kate Christman
Kate Christman

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

5.0· 4 reviews

Kate uses EMDR and somatic techniques to help adults overcome trauma, anxiety, and relationship issues, providing a compassionate, affirming space for her clients to find lasting healing.


  • Anxiety, Trauma, and Relationship Challenges
  • Humana and Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Diana Baumgarten
Diana Baumgarten

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

5.0· 2 reviews

Seeing kids 10-18 years old.

Diana uses EMDR, CBT, and play therapy to help children, teens, and adults navigate anxiety and trauma through a compassionate, relationship-focused approach.


  • Child Abuse, Anxiety, and Depression
  • Humana and Self Pay
  • In-Person · Lakewood, CO 80214
Morgan Governale
Morgan Governale

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Morgan helps women and adults navigate ADHD, anxiety, and life transitions using ACT and EMDR to overcome self-doubt and find lasting balance.


  • ADHD, Anxiety, and Women's Issues
  • Self Pay
  • In-Person · Denver, CO 80211
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Kim Hunt
Kim Hunt

Licensed Professional Counselor

4.0· 2 reviews

Kim empowers adults to overcome trauma and anxiety using EMDR and CBT, helping her clients build healthy boundaries and find lasting emotional balance.


  • Anxiety, Depression, and Bipolar Disorder
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado
Caitlyn Concklin
Caitlyn Concklin

Licensed Clinical Social Worker

Not seeing couples.

Caitlyn empowers adolescents and adults to heal from trauma and anxiety through a collaborative, person-centered approach that fosters resilience and helps them reclaim their unique stories.


  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Anxiety, and Depression
  • Self Pay
  • Video Call · Throughout Colorado

Need Help Finding the Right Therapist?

Searching for a therapist can sometimes feel overwhelming, especially when looking for support that feels comfortable and aligned with your needs. Our team can help answer questions, explain therapy options, and connect you with therapists based on preferences like communication style, areas of focus, scheduling, availability, and insurance coverage.