Not every teletherapy platform is built with relational work in mind. Marriage and family therapists need tools that accommodate multiple participants, support clinical documentation for couples and family systems, and ideally bundle the administrative functions that keep a practice running. Below is a head-to-head look at six platforms MFTs should evaluate in 2026.
SimplePractice
SimplePractice is one of the most widely adopted all-in-one platforms among private-practice therapists, and it earns that reputation for MFTs in particular. Its Plus plan ($99 per month) includes native multi-participant video, so you can bring both partners or an entire family into a single session link without workarounds.1 The platform also offers Wiley Treatment Planners and customizable clinical templates, giving you access to relational assessments and family treatment plan structures out of the box.2 Lower-tier plans start at $49 per month (Starter) and $79 per month (Essential), though multi-participant video on the Essential plan requires an add-on.1 The biggest limitation is cost: once you layer on the features MFTs actually need, you are firmly in the highest pricing tier.
TherapyNotes
TherapyNotes pairs strong documentation tools with integrated telehealth, and it stands out for its couples and family therapy note templates.3 Solo practitioners pay $69 per month, while group practices start at $79 for the first clinician plus $50 for each additional provider.3 Multi-participant video and group appointment scheduling are built in, so bringing a second or third person into a session is seamless. Its standout strength is clinical documentation depth: the platform's structured note formats keep relational treatment plans organized and audit-ready. The trade-off is a more clinical, less visually modern interface that some therapists find dated compared to competitors.
TheraPlatform
TheraPlatform was designed from the ground up for behavioral health and includes built-in multi-participant video rooms, couples and family session templates, and interactive therapy tools such as whiteboards.3 Solo pricing ranges from $39 to $59 per month, making it one of the most affordable full-suite options. Its standout advantage is the combination of price and relational-therapy readiness. The limitation is brand recognition and ecosystem size: fewer third-party integrations exist compared to SimplePractice, and the user community is smaller, which means less peer-generated template sharing.
Doxy.me
Doxy.me is a browser-based, video-only telehealth tool that requires no downloads for clients, a genuine convenience for couples or family members joining from different locations.3 The Professional plan runs about $35 per month, and the Clinic tier adds stronger multi-participant support. Because Doxy.me handles telehealth and nothing else, you will need to pair it with a separate EHR for scheduling, notes, and billing. That is both its strength (simplicity, low cost, minimal client friction) and its weakness (no practice management, no MFT-specific templates, more software to juggle).
Zoom for Healthcare
Zoom for Healthcare layers HIPAA-compliant protections and a Business Associate Agreement onto the familiar Zoom interface. At roughly $15 to $25 per user per month, it is the least expensive option on this list and delivers full meeting functionality, including breakout rooms that are genuinely useful for separating partners during a session.3 However, Zoom is purely a video tool. You get no clinical documentation, no scheduling portal, and no billing integration, so it must be paired with an EHR like TherapyNotes or SimplePractice. If you are considering SimplePractice for marriage and family therapists, pairing it with Zoom for Healthcare is a common workaround before committing to a higher-tier plan. Its standout strength is the breakout room feature, which no other platform here replicates as cleanly for family therapy work.
VSee
VSee markets itself as a flexible telehealth platform for a range of healthcare providers, and it does support multiparty video and group calls. Pricing ranges from $49 to $99 per month for individual providers.3 Where VSee falls short for MFTs is specialization: it offers no couples or family therapy templates, no relational assessment tools, and no genogram integration. You are working with a generic telehealth shell. Its strength is customization at the enterprise level, so larger group practices with dedicated IT support may be able to configure it to their needs. For a solo MFT, though, the lack of clinical specificity makes it harder to justify over platforms that were built for behavioral health.
Key Takeaway
SimplePractice, TherapyNotes, and TheraPlatform each bundle practice management with native multi-participant video and MFT-relevant templates, making them the strongest standalone choices. Doxy.me and Zoom for Healthcare are compelling video-only tools at lower price points, but they require a separate EHR to run a complete practice. VSee fills a niche for larger organizations willing to customize, yet it offers the least out-of-the-box support for relational clinical work. The right choice depends on whether you value an all-in-one workflow or prefer to assemble best-of-breed tools, a decision that shapes both your daily efficiency and your monthly overhead.