Stephanie Williams holds a license as a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) and operates a private practice in Oklahoma City focused on talk therapy for adults navigating relationship conflict, anxiety, depression, and life transitions. She works with individual clients and couples, offering a flexible scheduling model that accommodates working professionals across the metro area.
Williams runs a solo counseling practice, not a group clinic or hospital-affiliated program. As an LPC, she has completed the education, supervised hours, and licensing exam required by Oklahoma to diagnose and treat mental health conditions using therapeutic conversation. An LPC differs from a psychologist (who holds a doctoral degree) or a psychiatrist (who prescribes medication); Williams provides talk therapy and does not dispense medication. Her practice accepts most major insurance plans, though out-of-pocket rates and coverage levels vary by plan.
Williams offers 50-minute individual sessions and couples therapy, with fees that typically fall between $100 and $150 per session depending on whether you use insurance. Specific pricing should be confirmed directly, as rates can shift and some insurance plans require higher out-of-pocket costs at the point of service. Most Oklahoma insurance policies cover outpatient mental health counseling if the provider is in-network; Williams participates with major plans commonly held by Oklahoma City residents, but you should verify your coverage before scheduling. If your plan requires a copay or has a deductible, the practice can usually quote that amount during intake.
Oklahoma City has counselors across multiple credential levels and specialties. Psychologists offer testing and assessment alongside therapy, which suits clients seeking diagnostic clarity or cognitive evaluation; they typically charge $120 to $180 per session. Large group practices like those affiliated with major employers or universities offer more schedule flexibility and sometimes on-site appointments, but less continuity with a single provider. Williams's solo practice model means you see the same person consistently, which many clients find helpful for building trust, though it can mean longer waits during her busier seasons. Community mental health agencies provide sliding-scale fees for uninsured or low-income clients, making them a better choice if cost is the primary constraint. If you need psychiatric medication management alongside therapy, you would need a psychiatrist or a nurse practitioner in addition to a counselor; Williams does not prescribe.
Williams works well for adults (not children or adolescents) with anxiety, depression, or relationship strain who have insurance or can pay out-of-pocket, prefer ongoing therapy with one provider, and value flexibility around scheduling. She is not suited to clients seeking medication evaluation, those without insurance coverage and unable to pay $100+ per session, or families with minor children needing therapy (her practice scope is adults only). If you are in crisis or having thoughts of harm, Oklahoma City mental health crisis services (call 988 for the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline) are more appropriate than a private counseling appointment.
Your first session typically includes an intake form covering your mental health history, current symptoms, medications, and what prompted you to seek counseling. Williams will ask about your goals for therapy and explain her approach and confidentiality boundaries (which include limits if you disclose abuse or imminent danger). You and she will discuss frequency of sessions; many clients start with weekly appointments and adjust from there. Insurance benefits and payment are usually confirmed before your second session so there are no surprises on billing.
Confirm current hours with Williams directly, as solo practices often adjust based on demand. Oklahoma City does not have a single "counseling district," so Williams's office location is specific to her practice; you can reach her through local directory listings or your insurance provider's network search. Parking and in-office vs. telehealth availability vary, so ask during your first contact. Some Oklahoma counselors offer sessions by video, which eliminates the commute and suits clients with work conflicts or mobility barriers.
Private counseling in Oklahoma City fills a gap between community mental health services (which serve uninsured populations) and psychiatric care (which focuses on medication). Williams provides reliable, continuous outpatient therapy for working adults with insurance, a core need across the metro area.
