Waitlist open

Georgia · Expansion

Suboxone treatment in Georgia — coming soon.

MyStreetHealth is expanding to Georgia. Join the waitlist for online buprenorphine treatment with a licensed physician.

The short answer

MyStreetHealth is in the process of expanding to Georgia. We are not yet seeing patients there. Join the waitlist and we can notify you when MyStreetHealth is open in your state. In the meantime, this page explains what we'll offer and points to SAMHSA resources for immediate care. MyStreetHealth is LegitScript verified, self-pay, and physician-led; prescriptions are sent to licensed pharmacies when treatment is clinically appropriate.

Join the Georgia waitlist

We can notify waitlist patients when MyStreetHealth is ready to begin seeing patients in Georgia, after licensing and operational requirements are complete.

Call or text to join waitlist

Why we're expanding to Georgia

Georgia has had a significant opioid and fentanyl overdose burden. Metro Atlanta has more in-person treatment capacity than many rural regions, but access can be uneven outside major metros, including parts of South Georgia, Middle Georgia, and rural northern counties.

MyStreetHealth is working through Georgia state licensure; launch timing depends on approval and operational readiness.

What MyStreetHealth will offer in Georgia

The same care model we provide in our current states:

Major Georgia metros we'll serve

The planned model is statewide telehealth: once MyStreetHealth is licensed and open in Georgia, patients physically located in Georgia at the time of the visit may be evaluated by telehealth, subject to clinical appropriateness, pharmacy access, and applicable law.

What to do while you wait

If you need treatment right away and can't wait for our Georgia launch:

Frequently asked questions

When will MyStreetHealth open in Georgia?

Licensing is in progress. Join the waitlist for the launch notification.

Will you serve rural South Georgia?

The planned model is statewide telehealth once licensing and operational requirements are complete — including South Georgia and Middle Georgia counties where in-person access may be limited.

How will pricing work in Georgia?

Self-pay flat fee for the first visit; ongoing fees depend on your plan.

Medical sources
Medical note. This article is for education only and is not a substitute for medical advice. Medication choice, timing, dose changes, and stopping treatment should be handled with a licensed clinician. If you may be overdosing or having severe withdrawal, call 911 or seek emergency care.

See important safety information before use.

Questions about treatment?

Same-day visits often available. No insurance required.

Call or text Book online LegitScript verified