Compare 84 speech-language pathologists in Bend, OR. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
84
Speech-Language Pathologists
100%
Accepting patients
31%
Most common: CCC-SLP
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Bend is a one-hospital town that punches above its weight. St. Charles Health System handles everything from ski injuries to cardiac surgery for a region that stretches across three counties. The outdoor recreation culture here shapes both the patient population and the providers who choose to practice in Central Oregon.
Bend has 84 speech-language pathologists. The most common credential is CCC-SLP (31%). 100% are currently accepting new patients.
St. Charles Bend sits on the east side of town along NE Neff Road, and nearly all specialty care runs through or adjacent to that campus. Primary care and dental practices are spread across the Old Mill District, NorthWest Crossing, and the 27th Street medical corridor. There is no meaningful public transit, so a car is essential. For services St. Charles does not offer, patients drive roughly three hours to Portland.
Providers practice throughout Bend. Old Mill District is a commercial hub along the Deschutes River with medical offices and proximity to St. Charles Bend hospital. NorthWest Crossing is a newer mixed-use neighborhood on Bend's west side with growing primary care and dental options. Downtown Bend is the walkable core of the city with established practices and easy access to St. Charles. Awbrey Butte is a hillside residential area on the west side, a short drive from St. Charles and specialty clinics along NE Neff Road.
St. Charles Bend is a major hospital in the area. Oregon State University-Cascades trains practitioners locally. St. Charles Health System is the largest employer in Central Oregon and the only hospital system serving a region the size of some East Coast states.
An initial evaluation lasts 60 to 90 minutes. The SLP will assess speech, language, voice, fluency, and/or swallowing through standardized tests, conversation samples, and observation. For children, play-based assessment is common. The SLP will explain the results and recommend a treatment plan with specific goals and session frequency. Therapy sessions typically last 30 to 60 minutes, one to three times per week. Sessions involve structured activities designed to build specific skills, with home practice assignments between sessions.
For children: see an SLP if your child is not babbling by 12 months, not using single words by 18 months, not combining words by age two, is difficult to understand compared to peers, stutters, has difficulty following directions, or shows limited social communication skills. For adults: see an SLP after a stroke affecting speech or language, after brain injury, for voice changes lasting more than two weeks, for difficulty swallowing (coughing or choking during meals), or for cognitive changes affecting communication. Your doctor, teacher, or pediatrician may recommend an evaluation.
Evaluation: $200-500 · Therapy session copay: $20-60 with insurance · Self-pay session: $100-250 · School-based therapy: free through IEP
Late talking, difficulty forming words, and limited vocabulary may indicate a speech or language delay. Early intervention from a speech therapist can make a significant difference in a child development.
Stuttering affects fluency and can impact confidence and daily communication. Speech therapists use evidence-based fluency techniques that help both children and adults speak more smoothly.
Difficulty swallowing after stroke, surgery, or neurological conditions is both uncomfortable and dangerous. Speech therapists evaluate swallowing function and recommend exercises and diet modifications.
Hoarseness, vocal fatigue, and voice loss from overuse, nodules, or other causes benefit from voice therapy. Speech therapists teach techniques to use your voice more efficiently and heal damaged vocal tissue.
Speech therapists help children and adults on the autism spectrum develop communication skills, including both verbal language and augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) strategies.
Bend, OR has 84 licensed speech-language pathologists. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of speech-language pathologists in Bend, OR are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
PacificSource and Moda are the most common carriers in the Bend market. Oregon Health Plan is accepted at St. Charles and most primary care offices. Kaiser Permanente does not have a presence in Central Oregon, so Kaiser members traveling to Bend should plan accordingly.
An evaluation costs $200 to $500. A session copay is $20 to $60 with insurance. A self-pay session costs $100 to $250. School-based therapy is free through an IEP. Actual costs in Bend, OR depend on the provider and your insurance plan. If your child qualifies for school-based speech therapy, it is free. Private therapy can run concurrently for faster progress. Ask your plan about visit limits and whether prior authorization is needed.
With only one hospital system in town, most specialists are affiliated with St. Charles. Primary care options include St. Charles Medical Group, Bend Memorial Clinic, and a handful of independent practices. If your insurance network excludes St. Charles, your local options narrow considerably.
Some speech-language pathologists in Bend, OR accept Oregon Health Plan, the state's Medicaid program. Medicaid covers speech therapy for children under EPSDT with no visit limit. Adult coverage varies by state. School-based therapy through an IEP is provided at no cost. Contact the provider's office directly to confirm Oregon Health Plan participation before scheduling.
Typically one to three sessions per week, each 30 to 60 minutes. Frequency depends on the condition: articulation disorders may need weekly sessions for three to six months; stroke rehabilitation may require two to three sessions per week for months. School-based therapy follows the IEP schedule. With 84 speech-language pathologists in Bend, OR, you can search on FindClarity to find a provider who fits your schedule.
St. Charles maintains referral relationships with OHSU in Portland and other specialty centers in the Willamette Valley. For non-emergency specialty care, expect a roughly three-hour drive to Portland. Telehealth consultations with Portland-based specialists are increasingly common.
Yes. Bend has experienced rapid population growth, and many primary care panels are closed to new patients. St. Charles operates a provider referral service, and Bend Memorial Clinic maintains a waitlist. New residents should begin looking within their first week.
Top accepted carriers in Bend, OR include qhp-23603, qhp-10091, qhp-63474, qhp-73836, and qhp-56707.
Most insurance plans cover speech therapy with a prescription or referral. Coverage is typically subject to visit limits (20-60 sessions per year) or dollar caps. Medicare covers outpatient speech therapy without a hard cap. Medicaid covers speech therapy for children under EPSDT with no visit limit. School-based speech therapy through an IEP is provided at no cost to families. For private therapy, verify your plan's visit limits, pre-authorization requirements, and whether the SLP is in-network.