MyStreetHealth is in the process of expanding to North Carolina. 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 North Carolina waitlist
We can notify waitlist patients when MyStreetHealth is ready to begin seeing patients in North Carolina, after licensing and operational requirements are complete.
Call or text to join waitlistWhy we're expanding to North Carolina
North Carolina has had a significant opioid and fentanyl overdose burden, including in some rural and western counties. Even with Medicaid expansion and major academic medical systems, in-person buprenorphine access can remain uneven in parts of the state.
MyStreetHealth is working through North Carolina state licensure; launch timing depends on approval and operational readiness.
What MyStreetHealth will offer in North Carolina
The same care model we provide in our current states:
- Real medical visits with a licensed physician
- Self-pay (insurance not required); HSA/FSA accepted
- Same-day visits often available, subject to appointment availability and clinical appropriateness
- Prescription sent to your local North Carolina pharmacy
- Buprenorphine for opioid use disorder; buprenorphine has been used off-label in selected patients with kratom or 7-OH dependence based on published case reports and case series — the decision is individualized by a clinician
Major North Carolina metros we'll serve
- Charlotte / Mecklenburg County
- Raleigh / Wake County
- Greensboro / Guilford County
- Winston-Salem / Forsyth County
- Durham / Durham County
- Fayetteville
- Cary
- Wilmington
- High Point
- Asheville (Western NC mountains)
- Greenville (ECU region)
- Hickory
The planned model is statewide telehealth: once MyStreetHealth is licensed and open in North Carolina, patients physically located in North Carolina 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 North Carolina launch:
- SAMHSA findtreatment.gov — the official federal directory of buprenorphine providers, FQHCs, and OTPs. Searchable by ZIP code, insurance, and treatment type.
- SAMHSA helpline: 1-800-662-HELP (4357) — 24/7, free, confidential.
- Local emergency department: Some emergency departments can initiate buprenorphine. Ask about it specifically.
- If you're using opioids in the current fentanyl-dominant drug supply, carry naloxone. Naloxone may be available over the counter at many pharmacies or through local community programs.
Frequently asked questions
When will MyStreetHealth open in North Carolina?
State licensing is in progress. Join the waitlist for the launch notification.
Can I get Suboxone in western NC (Asheville area) right now?
Not yet through MyStreetHealth — we're finalizing NC licensure. Join our North Carolina waitlist and we can notify you when MyStreetHealth opens in North Carolina. If you need care immediately, SAMHSA's national helpline is 1-800-662-HELP (24/7, free, confidential).
Will you serve the Outer Banks and rural eastern NC?
The planned model is statewide telehealth once licensing and operational requirements are complete — including the Sandhills, eastern coastal plain, and Outer Banks.
How will pricing work in NC?
Self-pay flat fee for the first visit; ongoing fees depend on your plan.
