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Mental health & therapy · Updated May 2026

Mentalyc for psychologists, therapists & behavioral health

Whether Mentalyc is the right ambient AI scribe for psychologists, therapists & behavioral health, based on our independent review and what Mentalyc publishes about itself.

Mentalyc logo
MentalycProvisional

AI note-taker for therapists — progress notes, treatment plans and session insights.

5.0/ 10

Why Mentalyc for psychologists, therapists & behavioral health

Mentalyc is the focused, affordable therapy-notes tool — from $14.99/mo with a 14-day full-Pro trial (no card required), supporting individual, couples, family, group, child and supervisee session formats. The compliance posture is broader than most US-based mental-health tools: HIPAA + SOC 2 Type II + PHIPA + PIPEDA + PIPA + PHIA + Australian Privacy Principles, with US-based data residency confirmed and an explicit "your data is never used to train AI models" position. 30,000+ mental health professionals cited. Provisional until hands-on tested. Trade-offs: EHR integration is export-based via SimplePractice, TherapyNotes and Jane App rather than deep embed; language support isn't publicly quantified; behavioral-health only by design.

Mentalyc lists Behavioral Health, Counseling, Solo Practice, Group practice, Psychiatry, Social work among its supported specialties — which is why this page exists, and the basis for placing Mentalyc on /specialty/mental-health.

What to weigh in mental health & therapy

These are the things that actually differ between an ambient scribe that fits psychologists, therapists & behavioral healthand one that doesn’t. Read the full Mentalyc review for the hands-on take on each.

  • Native DAP / BIRP / GIRP / PIRP and treatment-plan templates
  • An explicit, written 'we do not train on your data' clause
  • Audio-retention behaviour (deleted post-transcription is the floor)
  • Therapy-modality fit — CBT note structure differs from psychodynamic

Sourced posture

HIPAA
Yes
SOC 2
Yes
GDPR
Not disclosed
Trains on your data?
No (states it does not)