If you are in CRISIS and need immediate assistance, call 911. Ask for the Crisis Intervention Team or request an officer trained in handling mental health cases.
Granger ISD’s Counseling Services operates Campus-based Mental Health Centers staffed by licensed therapists with Impact Counseling Services. For more information, contact your child’s school counselor.
24-hour Crisis Hotline — 1-800-841-1255
1009 N Georgetown Street, Round Rock, TX 78664
For emergencies call 9-1-1
For a non-emergency Monday – Friday 8:00am to 5:00pm
The Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) consists of highly trained Sheriff’s Office law enforcement officers that provide crisis intervention assistance to the citizens of Williamson County.
Dispatch 24 hours--512-864-8277
For emergencies call 9-1-1
For a non- emergency situation the MOT can be accessed directly or through local law enforcement
Mental health professionals that provide crisis intervention and resources to Williamson County residents. Response to calls during the hours of 8:00 am and 11:00 pm Monday through Saturday.
512-472-HELP (4357)
Composed of medical and mental health professionals, MCOT responds immediately on-site where a psychiatric crisis is occurring.
MCOT is available 24/7 and responds to calls from the home, school, street, or clinic.
Note: This resource is NOT for an immediate emergency, but rather for a crisis that is not an immediate threat; the team may take a couple of hours to get to you.
Services provided by Austin Travis County Integral Care
Crisis Hotline – The 24/7 Crisis Hotline provides access to licensed counselors 24/7. Hotline callers receive immediate assessments, crisis intervention services if needed and referral to additional community resources.
Psychiatric Emergency Services – PES is a walk-in psychiatric emergency service clinic staffed by licensed clinicians, psychiatrists, nurses, and qualified mental health professionals. PES provides psychiatric assessment, crisis intervention, linkage with resources, and physician services to children/youth and adults experiencing psychiatric distress.
Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. & Saturday-Sunday 10 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Nadine L. Jay Building
56 East Ave. Austin, TX 78701 (Take Capital Metro Transit Bus Routes 17, 21 or 22)
The Travis County Sheriff’s Office (TSCO) Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) is a group that is specifically trained to respond to persons in a mental crisis. The Crisis intervention team has two primary purposes:
Responding to emergency calls involving mental health consumers in a mental crisis
Diverting consumers from the criminal justice system and connecting them with mental health services.
Phoenix House has provided addiction treatment and prevention services in Texas since 1995. Each year, we help thousands of adolescents, adults, and families overcome drug and alcohol addiction to find recovery in order to lead productive, drug-free lives. Our continuum of care recognizes the long-term nature of recovery and provides a wide range of services—from prevention, early intervention, as well as residential and outpatient services for substance use disorders and co-occurring mental health problems. Using innovative, strengths-based, evidence-based treatment methods, we address each patient’s needs through an individualized treatment plan.
The Phoenix House Texas Central Administrative office is located in Dallas, with treatment programs located in Dallas, Austin, Houston, San Antonio, and Round Rock. All Phoenix House Texas programs accept private insurance, Tricare, managed Medicaid, CHIP, self-pay and state funding based on eligibility. Contact one of our patient access specialists to discuss financial eligibility to find what options are available to you.
24/7 Emergency Room Services at 601 E 15th Street Austin, TX 78701
The Inn provides short-term community-based residential crisis treatment to adults who are residents of Travis County.
The Inn is open 24/7.
The Inn provides residential services, medication stabilization, around-the-clock nursing services, psychosocial rehabilitative skills training, case management, and group treatment.
If you are a youth in crisis or a parent of youth under the age of 18 trying to access (STAR) services.
Offers hope after the death of a loved one by providing support networks, community education, and therapeutic activities that are free, peer-based, and ongoing.
They provide loss-specific grief support groups in Austin and Georgetown for grieving children, teens, and adults.
They also offer information/referral and community education on grief and bereavement.
Neema Counseling is a Christian counseling practice that specializes in serving adults, teens, and children as they navigate life’s challenges. The practice was founded in 2019 with a vision to help those who are hurting through face-to-face counseling in the Austin area and online counseling throughout the state of Texas. Neema is the Swahili word for grace. It is our desire that all clients, regardless of their faith or background, experience the Neema Counseling office as a place filled with grace that leads to hope and healing.
Call 24/7 at1-800-273-8255 (TALK)
Chat from 2 p.m.-2 a.m. by clicking Here
The National Suicide Prevention Hotline number for individuals who are deaf, hard of hearing, and for those with speech disabilities who use a TTY— 1-800-799-4TTY (4889)
IMAlive is a live online network that uses instant messaging to respond to people in crisis. People need a safe place to go during moments of crisis and intense emotional pain.
This is a resource through that National Suicide Prevention Lifeline that is geared towards young adults
For a crisis, the phone number and chat link is the same as the above in the National Suicide Prevention Hotline information.
Una persona capacitada le escuchará y hablará con usted. Si es necesario, podrá darle información sobre recursos o servicios existentes en su comunidad que podrán prestarle ayuda después de la llamada.
Crisis Text Line gives free 24/7 support to anyone, anywhere in the USA, anytime, about any type of crisis.
Text START to 741741.
This website is for U.S. military veterans and family members
Call 24/7 at 1-800-273-8255 and Press 1
Send a text message to 838255 to receive confidential support (available 24/7)
Chat online by Clicking here (available 24/7)
This website offers help and information specifically geared towards the LGBTQ community.
Call 24/7 at 1-866-488-7386
Trevor chat by Clicking here (Available 7 days a week 3:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. ET / 12:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. PT)
Trevor Text: Available on Fridays (4:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. ET / 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. PT). Text the word “Trevor” to 1-202-304-1200. Standard text messaging rates apply.
The Kristin Brooks Hope Center was created to help those in crisis find help and hope immediately.
The site and her story give you a raw, personal glimpse into depression, and how it affects those around you.
In addition, you will find the only clear, step-by-step path for you to follow out of the darkness.
Veterans peer support line
Spanish speaking suicide hotline
Teen to teen peer counseling hotline
Postpartum depression hotline
These apps are all free-of-charge
Developed by Mental Health America of Texas, this App outlines information such as Warning Signs and advice for how to proceed in a crisis, as well as links to suicide prevention hotlines, for individuals and family/friends of people at risk of suicide.
This App allows users to plan ahead by listing 3 personal contacts who can be called in times of crisis and creating their own safety plan where they can detail their own warning signs, coping strategies, and ideas to keep themselves safe. Also provides an easy link to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline phone number.
Another App that integrates safety plans with warning signs and easy links to find appropriate crisis resources.
Literally a lifesaving app, this free intervention tool helps people who are having suicidal thoughts to reassess their thinking and get help. Created by the military but useful for all.
State-specific standards for emergency hospitalization and for who can initiate treatment; inpatient and outpatient commitment criteria by state; tips on navigating the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA); and information on responding to specific kinds of psychiatric emergencies such as suicide or assault danger.
Anonymously report someone as suicidal on Facebook and a member of the Facebook’s Safety Team will send the user an e-mail with the Lifeline number and possibly a link to chat with a Lifeline Counselor
Select “Self-Harm” to send an e-mail to Twitter reporting a suicidal user. Twitter will send the user a direct message with the Lifeline number
To report suicidal content, click on the flag icon under a video, and select “Harmful Dangerous Acts” and then “Suicide or Self-Injury.” YouTube will then review the video and may send a message to the user with the Lifeline Number.