What the patient must agree to before a telehealth visit.
⚖️ Reference information — not legal advice. Always confirm current requirements with your compliance officer, state licensing board, or a telehealth attorney before relying on this for clinical or business decisions.
Massachusetts accepts written or verbal informed consent for telehealth, documented in the medical record. Two-party consent for any recording. Audio-only telehealth generally accepted, including for behavioral-health visits.
What providers can and cannot prescribe via telehealth, including DEA-restricted substances.
⚖️ Reference information — not legal advice. Always confirm current requirements with your compliance officer, state licensing board, or a telehealth attorney before relying on this for clinical or business decisions.
Massachusetts is comparatively permissive on telehealth prescribing, including for some controlled substances, subject to standard DEA registration and clinical judgment standards.
State-board-specific standard-of-care, recordkeeping, and technology requirements per credential.
⚖️ Reference information — not legal advice. Always confirm current requirements with your compliance officer, state licensing board, or a telehealth attorney before relying on this for clinical or business decisions.
MD / DO
Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine enforces equivalent standard of care. Permissive on audio-only and remote practice within standard guardrails.
HIPAA, BAA, audio-only acceptance, and session-recording rules.
⚖️ Reference information — not legal advice. Always confirm current requirements with your compliance officer, state licensing board, or a telehealth attorney before relying on this for clinical or business decisions.
Federal baseline: HIPAA-compliant platform with a signed Business Associate Agreement is required for telehealth. As of February 2026, CMS requires providers to re-verify patient location at every visit. Audio-only telehealth is broadly accepted under federal rules but some states impose stricter requirements (see Consent section for Massachusetts-specific rules).
What Happens If You Practice Without Authorization
Licensing board action
Treating a patient in Massachusetts without proper authorization can result in a complaint to your licensing board — in your home state, Massachusetts, or both. Outcomes range from a warning letter to license suspension.
Insurance claim denial
Payers may deny or claw back reimbursement for sessions where the provider lacked authorization in the patient’s state at the time of service. A signed compliance record gives you a clear answer if a claim is reviewed.
Malpractice coverage gap
Your malpractice policy may exclude coverage for care delivered in a state where you weren’t authorized to practice. If something goes wrong in that session, you could be uninsured.
Know exactly when you can treat a Massachusetts patient — in real time, every session.
Your license covers where you are. It doesn't cover where your patient is. TeleVerify verifies your provider-to-patient state match before every telehealth session and produces a cryptographically signed compliance record you can show an auditor, insurer, or state board.
✓ Works with Zoom, Doxy.me, SimplePractice, TherapyNotes, Jane App — or any other telehealth platform (video or phone)
✓ Tracks all interstate compacts and state-specific registration pathways — auto-updates when rules change
✓ Signed, tamper-evident compliance record for every visit
Frequently asked: telehealth compliance in Massachusetts
Can I practice telehealth in Massachusetts without a Massachusetts license?
In Massachusetts, providers must hold a valid license in the state where the patient is physically located during the session. Holding a license in another state does not authorize you to treat patients located in Massachusetts unless you qualify under an interstate compact or a state-specific telehealth registration pathway.
What interstate compacts does Massachusetts participate in?
Massachusetts is not currently a member of any major interstate licensure compact tracked by TeleVerify. Providers must obtain a direct Massachusetts license to treat patients physically located in the state.
What are the patient consent requirements for telehealth in Massachusetts?
Massachusetts accepts written or verbal informed consent for telehealth, documented in the medical record. Two-party consent for any recording. Audio-only telehealth generally accepted, including for behavioral-health visits.
Can I prescribe controlled substances via telehealth in Massachusetts?
Massachusetts is comparatively permissive on telehealth prescribing, including for some controlled substances, subject to standard DEA registration and clinical judgment standards.
What are the professional board standards for telehealth in Massachusetts?
For MD/DO: Massachusetts Board of Registration in Medicine enforces equivalent standard of care. Permissive on audio-only and remote practice within standard guardrails. For PsyD/PhD: MA Board of Registration of Psychologists allows telepsychology with standard guardrails. For LCSW/LMFT/LPCC: MA Board of Registration of Social Workers and Allied Mental Health and Human Services Professions oversee behavioral-health telehealth practice.
What technology and privacy requirements apply to telehealth sessions in Massachusetts?
Telehealth sessions in Massachusetts must use HIPAA-compliant video or audio platforms with a signed Business Associate Agreement. Patient location must be verified at the time of each session, since licensure compliance depends on it. Session recording and audio-only acceptability follow state-specific rules (Massachusetts recording rule: two party consent).