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Telehealth vs In-Person Visits: When to Choose Which

A practical guide to choosing between a video visit and an in-person appointment — when each is appropriate, and what insurers cover.

By Daniel OkaforHealth 2 min read 383 wordsFact-checked March 31, 2026
A patient on a video call with a clinician on a laptop, with notes on a nearby table.
A patient on a video call with a clinician on a laptop, with notes on a nearby table.

Originally published . Last reviewed and updated .

Contents(4 sections)
  1. 1. What telehealth does well
  2. 2. Where in-person care is still better
  3. 3. Coverage and licensing
  4. 4. Privacy considerations

Telehealth has settled into US healthcare as a normal option, not a pandemic-era workaround. For some visits it works at least as well as in-person care. For others it is clearly inferior. Choosing well is mostly about matching the visit type to the format.

This article covers the visits where the choice is most consequential and points to the rules that govern coverage and licensing.

What telehealth does well

Visits that depend primarily on conversation — medication management, follow-ups, mental health, many chronic-disease check-ins — translate to video without meaningful loss of quality. The visit is often shorter, costs less, and reduces logistical friction.

Asynchronous messaging-based care is a related option that works particularly well for prescription refills and simple questions, when the clinician already knows the patient.

Where in-person care is still better

Anything that requires a physical exam — palpation, listening to lung sounds, evaluating a skin lesion that needs touch — is meaningfully better in person. Procedures, imaging, and acute injuries belong in a clinical setting.

First visits to a new clinician are often more efficient in person, even when subsequent visits move to video.

Coverage and licensing

Most US insurers, including Medicare, now cover telehealth at parity or near-parity with in-person visits for many services. Coverage details vary by plan and by state, and some flexibilities introduced during the public-health emergency have since changed.

Clinicians must be licensed in the state where the patient is located at the time of the visit. Cross-state visits, including for travelers, are subject to state medical board rules.

Privacy considerations

HIPAA applies to telehealth conducted by covered entities. Patients should connect from a private location and use the platform the clinician's office provides rather than ad-hoc video calls.

Direct-to-consumer telehealth services have their own privacy policies in addition to HIPAA obligations. Read them before sharing sensitive information.

Visit typeBest format
Medication follow-upTelehealth
Mental-health therapyTelehealth, often equivalent
New skin concernIn-person preferred
Acute injuryIn-person or urgent care
Annual physicalIn-person
Chronic-condition check-inTelehealth often appropriate
Choosing between telehealth and in-person care

Frequently asked questions

Is telehealth as effective as in-person care?
For many visit types, yes. For exams and procedures, no. The right answer depends on the specific visit.
Does insurance cover telehealth?
Most plans do, but specifics vary. Check with your insurer or the clinician's office before the visit.
Can I see an out-of-state doctor by video?
Generally only if the clinician is licensed in the state where you are physically located during the visit.
Is telehealth private?
When provided by HIPAA-covered entities, yes. Connect from a private location and use the office's platform.

How we researched this

We reviewed primary sources, official guidance, and reporting from established outlets. Where data shifts quickly, we date each claim. ClearBrief editors fact-check every article before publication.

Sources

  1. Telehealth.HHS.gov HHS
  2. Medicare Telehealth Services CMS
  3. Federation of State Medical Boards: Telemedicine FSMB

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This article is informational and not a substitute for professional advice. ClearBrief does not provide medical, legal, or financial services.