If you’ve decided that virtual IOP in Florida is the right next step in your mental health treatment, the practical questions become real: what does an actual day look like? How long will it last? What happens in the first week? This guide walks through what to expect from start to finish.
This is informational. Specific program structure varies; verify with your provider.
The basic structure of virtual IOP
A typical virtual IOP runs three to five days per week, three hours per day, for six to twelve weeks. The core components:
- Group therapy — the program’s primary clinical work
- Individual therapy — once weekly with a licensed clinician
- Psychiatric consultation — when medically indicated
- Skill-building modules — coping skills, distress tolerance, communication
Virtual IOP delivers the same clinical model as in-person IOP, just over secure video. Here’s a primer on what IOP is and who it fits.
What your first week looks like
Day 1 is usually orientation: you meet your clinical team, your group cohort, and learn the platform and schedule. Many people are nervous on day 1; that’s completely normal. The structure is designed to make day 1 manageable.
Days 2-5: actual group sessions begin. Group sizes are typically 6-12 participants — small enough for everyone to participate, large enough to provide diverse perspectives. The first week is largely about getting comfortable with the rhythm — three hours of focused clinical work feels long at first and gets easier.
By the end of week one, most patients have completed their first individual therapy session, started learning the program’s core skills (often DBT or CBT-based), and started building rapport with their cohort.
Insurance and cost in Florida
Most commercial insurance plans cover virtual IOP in Florida when it’s medically necessary. Out-of-pocket cost typically runs $0 to $2,500 for a full course depending on plan tier and where you are in your benefit year.
Major commercial carriers in Florida:
- Florida Blue
- Aetna
- UnitedHealthcare
- Cigna
- Humana commercial
For the full list of carriers Thrive accepts, see our insurance overview.
Tech requirements
You need:
- Stable internet connection (broadband recommended)
- A device with camera and microphone (laptop, tablet, or smartphone)
- A private space where you won’t be interrupted
- Headphones (optional but recommended for privacy)
The program will walk you through tech setup before your first session.
What completion looks like
Most patients complete virtual IOP in 6-12 weeks. The decision about when to step down from IOP to weekly outpatient therapy is made by your clinical team based on your progress on specific treatment goals.
After completion, most patients continue with weekly therapy and possibly psychiatric medication management. Some return for “booster” IOP sessions if symptoms recur. Thrive’s published outcomes data tracks symptom reduction across patients completing treatment.
Common questions about virtual IOP in Florida
Can I do virtual IOP while working full-time?
Yes — most programs offer schedule options that work alongside full-time employment.
What if I need to miss a session?
Most programs allow occasional missed sessions for legitimate reasons. Confirm the policy with your provider before enrolling.
Will my insurance cover virtual IOP?
Most commercial plans cover virtual IOP for behavioral health when medically necessary, under federal MHPAEA law. Specifics depend on your plan tier.
How is privacy maintained over video?
Reputable programs use HIPAA-compliant platforms with end-to-end encryption. Joint Commission telehealth accreditation includes a privacy review.
What happens if I’m in crisis during the program?
Programs have crisis protocols. If you’re in immediate crisis right now, call 988.
Next steps
If you’re a Florida resident considering virtual IOP, the most useful first step is a free clinical consultation that includes insurance verification.
Get started with Thrive — free, confidential insurance verification. Most members receive a benefits summary within 24 hours.
This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for individualized clinical advice or specific insurance verification.