Grace River Christian Counseling Center is a private therapy practice in Oklahoma City offering individual counseling, couples therapy, and family sessions, with an explicit Christian framework integrated into treatment. The practice works with adolescents and adults, maintains a small staff model, and accepts most major insurance plans alongside self-pay options.
Grace River positions itself as a faith-informed counseling provider rather than a secular mental health clinic. Sessions incorporate Christian principles and worldview into therapeutic work, making it most relevant for clients who want their counselor to share or respect their religious foundation. The practice is not hospital-based and does not provide crisis stabilization or psychiatric medication management; it functions as outpatient talk therapy only.
The practice offers individual therapy (addressing depression, anxiety, trauma, life transitions, and spiritual concerns), couples counseling (focused on communication, infidelity recovery, and premarital work), and family sessions. Sessions are typically 50 minutes and scheduled weekly, though frequency is negotiated at intake.
Session fees run $100 to $150 per hour depending on the clinician and insurance status, according to standard Oklahoma City private-practice pricing. Most major insurances (Blue Cross, Aetna, United, Cigna, Oklahoma Health Care Authority) are accepted; clients should verify their specific plan's mental health benefits and copay structure before the first session. Self-pay rates are higher; confirm current fees directly with the office, as insurance reimbursement rates shift annually.
Grace River occupies a distinct niche: clients seeking religious integration. Its closest competitor is Edmond Clinical Psychology, a larger practice across the metro that also employs Christian-identified clinicians but operates with less explicit theological framing in marketing. For clients who want therapy but prefer secular neutrality on religion, providers like the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center's psychology clinic or the Norman-based Integrative Counseling Services do not market faith-based approaches.
For uninsured or low-income clients, Grace River's private-pay model makes it less accessible than Community Health Centers, Inc., which operates sliding-scale clinics across Oklahoma City. For couples in crisis or individuals with untreated bipolar disorder or psychosis, the practice's outpatient-only scope means clients need concurrent psychiatric care elsewhere; OU Medicine Psychiatry or Mercy Health Systems provide that tier of service.
The choice hinges on two questions: do you want therapy integrated with Christian worldview (Grace River fits), and can you pay private-practice rates or use insurance that the practice accepts (also required)?
Grace River is best for clients who are Christian (or open to Christian-informed work), psychologically stable enough for outpatient therapy, insured or able to pay self-pay rates ($100–$150 per session), and seeking help with anxiety, depression, relational conflict, or spiritual questions. Adults with mild to moderate trauma also fall within scope if they are not in active crisis.
The practice does not serve acutely suicidal clients, active substance users seeking detox, unmedicated psychosis, or clients who want therapeutic neutrality on religion. It is not equipped for emergency psychiatric assessment (those clients need ER or crisis hotline first).
A typical first session runs 50 minutes and includes intake paperwork (history, current symptoms, insurance and payment information), a clinician assessment of presenting problems and goals, and a preliminary treatment plan. Expect to discuss your faith background and whether you want it woven into your work; this is an opening conversation, not a demand.
Most practices require arrival 15 minutes early for paperwork. Insurance verification usually happens before your appointment; if you do not know your plan's mental health benefits, call your insurer or bring your card to confirm copay and deductible status. A second appointment is typically scheduled before you leave.
Grace River operates from a private office (not a hospital or clinic building), with standard business hours Monday through Friday, typically 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., though evening slots may exist; verify current hours by phone before scheduling, as small practices adjust seasonally or for clinician availability. Parking is private lot or street access depending on the location; ask the office whether accessible parking is available if you need it.
The practice does not offer telehealth for every client or every situation, so confirm whether virtual sessions fit your plan before booking. New clients should expect a 1- to 3-week wait, typical for Oklahoma City private practices.
Grace River fills a specific need for religiously engaged clients in Oklahoma City who want therapy that honors their faith without stigma, and its small-practice model allows continuity with a single clinician over time.
