A physician-led virtual practice bringing therapy, psychiatry and testing to patients where they are - not an app, a medical practice.
The wait is the problem. In behavioral health, the gap between the day someone decides to ask for help and the day a clinician can actually see them is measured in weeks - sometimes months. Televero Behavioral Health built its entire model around closing that gap.
Founded in 2020 and headquartered in Austin, Texas, Televero is a licensed medical practice that delivers behavioral health care over secure video. That distinction matters more than it sounds. Many virtual mental health companies describe themselves as apps, platforms or marketplaces. Televero calls itself a medical practice - which means its clinicians can diagnose and prescribe where permitted, under HIPAA rules and state medical board oversight.
The practice offers online therapy and counseling, psychiatry with medication management, and neurotesting for conditions including ADHD and autism. Care is delivered by a network of more than 150 licensed providers - physicians, nurse practitioners and licensed counselors - working as coordinated teams rather than as isolated contractors.
The company's stated purpose is direct: care should be available right when it is needed, and it should work. In practice that means same-day and same-week appointments, hours running from 8am to 8pm seven days a week, and coverage that accepts commercial insurance, Medicare and Medicaid so cost is not the thing that keeps someone from starting.
That last point separates Televero from a large slice of the market. Accepting Medicaid and Medicare is operationally harder than running a cash-pay concierge service, and many competitors quietly avoid it. Televero built its growth on serving those patients rather than around them.
"No waiting rooms. No runaround. Just care that starts when you need it."
- Televero Behavioral Health
Demand for behavioral health care has outrun the supply of providers, and the shortage is worst in rural and community settings. The result: long waits, patients bounced between disconnected specialists, and coverage that limits who can even get in the door.
Televero's answer is rapid access backed by clinical oversight and payer integration. By delivering licensed clinicians over video across 20+ states, the practice reaches communities that lack local psychiatrists and counselors - without replacing the clinician with a chatbot.
Care runs on a collaborative model: MDs, nurse practitioners and licensed counselors coordinate as one team, with outcomes tracked and reported patient by patient.
Virtual talk therapy from licensed clinicians using evidence-based modalities - CBT, DBT, ACT and EMDR - delivered over secure video and matched to each patient.
Physician- and nurse-practitioner-led psychiatric evaluation, diagnosis, prescribing and ongoing medication management for behavioral health conditions.
At-home ADHD testing, cognitive testing and autism evaluations, supervised by a Televero provider and resulting in a personalized treatment plan.
MDs, nurse practitioners and counselors work as one coordinated team, with measurement-based outcomes tracked and reported for accountability.
Televero operates as an insurance-based virtual medical practice. It bills commercial insurance, Medicare and Medicaid for therapy, psychiatry, medication management and neurotesting. Alongside direct-to-consumer patient care, it partners with clinics, community organizations and referral networks to extend behavioral health access.
Approximate figures place annual revenue near $8.9M with a team of roughly 51-200 staff behind its 150+ providers. Reported funding is modest relative to its growth - a sign the model leans on operating revenue and payer reimbursement more than on venture capital.
It competes with virtual psychiatry and therapy players - Talkiatry, LifeStance, Cerebral, Brightside, Rula and Texas-focused Legion Health - as well as traditional in-person practices. Its edge is the combination of insurance breadth, physician leadership and published outcomes.
Figures reported by the company; treat as approximate.
"You don't have to be ready - you just have to be willing."
- Televero Behavioral Health, on starting care
Televero is led by Chief Executive Officer Ray Wolf, whose background runs through operating roles across healthcare and technology companies, including a stint as the company's own Chief Operating Officer before taking the top job.
Wolf holds an MBA from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and an engineering degree from Stony Brook University, and has completed executive education at Harvard Business School and Stanford Graduate School of Business. That operator's lens shows up in Televero's focus on the unglamorous machinery of healthcare - licensing, billing, clinical supervision and measurable outcomes.
The practice's clinical depth spans psychiatry, counseling and psychological testing, delivered under HIPAA compliance and state medical board oversight.
The physician-led behavioral health practice launches in Austin, Texas with virtual therapy and psychiatry.
At-home ADHD, cognitive and autism evaluations join the service line, supervised by providers.
Collaborative care combining MDs, nurse practitioners and counselors is formalized with tracked outcomes.
The provider network grows past 150 clinicians serving patients across 20+ states.
Named to the Inc. 5000 at #54 with 4,962% three-year growth.
The company updates its Televero Behavioral Health identity and website.
It is a physician-led virtual behavioral health practice offering online therapy, psychiatry, medication management and neurotesting - including ADHD, cognitive and autism evaluations - delivered by licensed clinicians over secure video.
Yes. Televero accepts commercial insurance as well as Medicare and Medicaid, and verifies coverage before the first appointment.
Headquartered in Austin, Texas, Televero serves patients across 20+ states, with appointments available 8am to 8pm, seven days a week.
It is a licensed medical practice, not an app or marketplace, which means its providers can diagnose and prescribe where permitted, under HIPAA and state medical board oversight.
Ray Wolf serves as Chief Executive Officer, leading a network of 150+ licensed providers including physicians, nurse practitioners and counselors.
Profile compiled from public sources. Metrics such as growth rate, satisfaction and revenue are company-reported or estimated and should be treated as approximate.