wellrank.ai
Lavender logo

Lavender

First cited by AI Jun 17, 2026
lavender.com

Surfaced organically in AI answers about adhd telehealth. Not yet profiled.

AI Visibility

Visibility trend

ADHD telehealth, daily share of AI answers mentioning Lavender, through Jun 18, 2026.

1.7%

Avg position when mentioned: 9.0

By engine

Where Lavender is strong, and where it is invisible.

  • Perplexity
    6.7%

Mention sentiment

Tone of AI mentions across all tracked answers.

  • 0 positive mentions
  • 1 neutral
  • 0 mixed or cautious

Recent AI answers mentioning Lavender

PerplexityJun 17, 2026, 13:02 UTC
Which online ADHD clinics are legit and take insurance?

Several legit online ADHD clinics that take insurance include Talkiatry, Talkspace, Doctor On Demand, Brave Health, and Mindful Care.[1][3][4][5][8] If you want the safest starting points, I’d prioritize Talkiatry for psychiatrist-led ADHD care, Doctor On Demand for broad telehealth coverage with clear limits on stimulants, and Brave Health if you need Medicaid/Medicare support.[3][4][5] Talkiatry — a national virtual psychiatry practice with 800+ psychiatrists and in-network with 200+ insurance plans.[3] Talkspace — online therapy and psychiatry plans that take insurance, including Aetna, Cigna, Anthem, Optum, and more.[1] Doctor On Demand — accepts many major insurance plans for ADHD therapy and medication management, but it does not prescribe controlled stimulant medications online.[4] Brave Health — says it accepts most insurance plans, including Medicaid, Medicare, Marketplace, and commercial coverage, and is Joint Commission accredited.[5] Mindful Care — advertises online ADHD diagnosis and treatment covered by insurance.[8] A few additional options appear to accept insurance, but I’d verify them carefully before booking because the public information is less detailed in the search results: Teladoc — Healthline reports it as one of the platforms that accepts insurance for online ADHD treatment.[2] Amwell — also listed by Healthline as accepting insurance for online ADHD treatment.[2] Cerebral — Healthline says it accepts several insurance plans, but coverage can vary by state and plan.[2] Lavender — markets ADHD treatment with insurance and private pay, but the search result is less specific about which plans.[9] ADHD Advisor — says it accepts HSA/FSA funds, but the search result does not clearly confirm broad insurance in-network coverage.[7] For legitimacy, the strongest signals in the results are: licensed clinicians/psychiatrists, in-network insurance language, clear treatment scope, and for Brave Health, Joint Commission accreditation.[3][4][5] Also note that some platforms treat ADHD but may only offer non-stimulant medication online, so if you want stimulant treatment, that can change which clinic is appropriate.[4] If you want, I can narrow this to the best options by your insurance plan or make a stimulant-friendly vs. therapy-only shortlist.

Mentioned in position 9 of 10

Read full answer with sources →

Competitive Landscape

Lavender vs the brands AI recommends alongside it

The real competitive set in ADHD telehealth: brands the engines name in the same answers, ranked on the latest day.

BrandRankAI visibility
Lavender logo
LavenderThis brand
#51
1.7%
ADHD Advisor logo
ADHD Advisor

1 shared answers

#18
8.3%
Amwell logo
Amwell

1 shared answers

#5
31.7%
Brave Health logo
Brave Health

1 shared answers

#50
1.7%
Cerebral logo
Cerebral

1 shared answers

#2
45.0%

Email me when overtakes Lavender

One email the day the ranks flip. Nothing else.

Sources cited around Lavender

The sites engines cite in answers mentioning this brand. Win these, win the answer.

Track Lavender weekly

One email a week: rank moves, new competitors, and the answers that changed. No noise.

Work at Lavender? Get your AI Visibility Audit.

See every buyer intent question your customers ask AI, which ones you are losing, who wins them instead, and the exact sources driving those answers. You will finally understand your buyer intent and what Propel would do to win it.