Anxiety is one of the most common reasons people seek help, and it is also one of the areas where online care works particularly well — many people find it easier to open up from a familiar, private space. This article explains what online help for anxiety looks like, what support is available, when medication might be discussed, and the crisis resources that come first if you are in danger.
If you are in crisis, reach out now
If you are thinking about harming yourself or are in immediate danger, call your local emergency number — 911 (US/Canada), 999 (UK), 112 (EU) — or a crisis line: 988 (US Suicide & Crisis Lifeline), 111 then option 2 or local NHS crisis lines (UK), Talk Suicide Canada at 988, or the EU-wide 112. You deserve support right now.
What online support offers
Through telehealth you can speak with a doctor or a mental-health professional by video, audio, or chat about how you have been feeling. They can listen, help you understand what you are experiencing, suggest evidence-based approaches, and connect you with further support such as talking therapy. The privacy and convenience of doing this from home removes a barrier that stops many people from seeking help at all.
Approaches that help
- Talking therapies such as cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), which has strong evidence for anxiety and is often delivered effectively online.
- Practical coping strategies — breathing techniques, grounding, sleep and routine support, and gradual exposure to feared situations.
- Lifestyle factors a doctor may explore with you, including caffeine, alcohol, exercise, and sleep.
- Medication in some cases, discussed and prescribed by a doctor when appropriate.
- Referral to specialist or ongoing care when that is the right next step.
When medication is considered
Medication is not always needed and is never the only option, but for some people it is a helpful part of treatment. A doctor will discuss the benefits, possible side effects, and alternatives with you, and review how you are doing over time. Any prescribing decision is individual and made together with you — not automatic.
This is support, not a substitute for crisis care
Online consultations are well suited to ongoing support and non-urgent help. If your safety is at risk, the crisis resources above come first — please use them.
Cost and coverage
Mental-health visits are often covered by insurance, and in some systems benefit from parity protections that put them on the same footing as physical-health care. Prices for out-of-pocket visits are shown before you book. Our guide on insurance benefits for online care explains how to check your coverage and submit a claim.
Taking the first step
Reaching out is often the hardest part, and you do not have to have the right words ready. You can see a doctor online and simply describe how you have been feeling. This article is general information, not a diagnosis or treatment plan; a clinician who knows your situation can give you tailored care — and if you are in crisis, please use the resources above now.