Norman Psychology Associates is a group practice offering individual, couples, and family therapy from licensed counselors and psychologists across Norman's central and south-side locations, with particular depth in high-conflict relationship resolution and post-separation parenting support.
The practice operates two offices (one near the Norman Public Library area, one south of campus) and employs licensed professional counselors (LPCs), licensed marriage and family therapists (LMFTs), and doctoral-level psychologists. The majority of work falls into three buckets: individual mental health treatment (anxiety, depression, life transitions), couples and marriage counseling, and family therapy that often overlaps with custody or co-parenting difficulties. The practice maintains a waiting list during high-demand seasons (typically fall and January), but generally accepts new patients within 2 to 3 weeks. They accept most major insurance plans, require photo ID and insurance card at intake, and do not operate as a cash-only practice.
A single therapy session runs 50 to 55 minutes. Individual weekly therapy costs between $125 and $180 per session with insurance; the fee depends on the specific therapist's credentials and your plan's copay or coinsurance. Couples work typically costs the same per session, though some insurers classify it differently and may deny coverage altogether, meaning out-of-pocket costs can reach $180 to $200 per session. Family therapy sessions (three or more people) generally cost the same as couples work. Intake appointments, which are longer and include history-taking and assessment, are billed at a higher rate or sometimes waived for insured patients. The practice does not offer sliding scales; they expect insurance to cover most of the bill. Rates are verified annually; confirm current fees before your first visit since copay structures shift with plan changes.
Norman Psychology Associates is more formalized and clinically intensive than independent practitioners, but smaller and often more available than larger Oklahoma City medical center-based counseling departments. The University of Oklahoma's Psychological Services Center (located on campus) offers low-cost therapy ($20 to $60 per session) provided by graduate student clinicians supervised by faculty; it suits people with limited budgets or university affiliation and is appropriate for mild to moderate issues. Integrative Care Clinic in Norman offers counseling as part of primary care and is better for someone seeking integration with medical providers. Norman Psychology Associates suits someone with insurance who needs specialized relationship expertise and wants to avoid long wait lists typical of university clinics; it does not suit someone without insurance or needing the lowest possible cost. Compared to independent therapists in Norman (often $100 to $160 per session), the practice offers larger pool of providers, backup therapists if yours is unavailable, and administrative support for scheduling and insurance claims.
The practice is designed for working adults and couples with health insurance and moderate to serious relationship concerns: high-conflict couples, parents navigating custody, individuals struggling with depression or anxiety tied to relationship breakup, and families with adolescents. It works well if you prefer a therapist who is licensed at the independent level (LPC or LMFT rather than master's-level), because most core staff hold these credentials. It does not suit someone seeking crisis intervention (they are not equipped for same-day emergency response), someone without insurance willing to negotiate fees, or someone early in therapy exploring options without specific relationship concerns.
You will complete a 20-minute intake questionnaire online or on paper covering medical history, insurance, presenting problem, and emergency contact. The first appointment lasts 60 to 90 minutes and includes assessment questions about your relationship history, current stressors, family background, and mental health history. The therapist will explain confidentiality limits (duty to warn, abuse reporting) and ask you to sign an informed consent. If the practice determines the issue falls outside their scope (e.g., active substance abuse, severe mental illness requiring psychiatric hospitalization), they will refer you to a more appropriate provider. If couples work, both partners attend the first session; some therapists will ask to see one partner alone first to assess for domestic violence.
Both offices are open Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; they are closed weekends and do not offer telehealth as a routine option, though exceptions can be negotiated. The Norman Public Library area office has street parking and a small lot; the south-side office has a dedicated lot. Confirm hours by phone before booking because therapist schedules can shift seasonally. The practice is in-network with most Blue Cross Blue Shield, United, Cigna, and Oklahoma Health Choice plans; ask about your specific plan at intake.
Norman Psychology Associates fills a clinical middle ground: more accessible and specialized than university clinics, more consistent than independent practitioners, and more focused on relationships than general medical center counseling departments.
