Help Us Remove the Financial Barriers to Healing and Justice
Navigating the immigration system is overwhelming—and expensive. From attorney fees and court costs to travel and translation services, the bills add up fast. Psychological evaluations and ongoing mental health care are often pivotal parts of these cases, but their high cost makes them out of reach for many.
That’s where Immigration Psychology Partnerships steps in.
We provide low-cost and no-cost psychological evaluations and psychotherapy services to immigrants who need them most—ensuring that finances don't stand in the way of justice, safety, healing, or family unity.
But we can’t do it without you.
A single immigration psychological evaluation averages $1,200, and ongoing therapy sessions can cost $150-200 each. Right now, hundreds of individuals are waiting for these critical services. We urgently need funding to train and hire more mental health professionals so we can reduce our waitlist and provide faster support.
These are real people—parents separated from their children, young adults who've never known another home, spouses clinging to family unity in the face of long legal delays, individuals carrying the trauma of persecution and violence who need therapeutic support to heal. People just like you and me, fighting for the chance to stay safe and whole and together.
Donate what you can—big or small. Every dollar makes a difference.
If just 24 people gave $50, we could fully fund one more evaluation. If 100 people gave $20, we could provide a month of weekly therapy for someone in need. Let's come together and help move families off the waitlist and one step closer to stability and healing.
Make a difference today.
Because financial barriers should never stand between a family and their future.
Immigration Psychology Partnerships is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Your contributions to our work are tax-deductible, allowing you to support our vital services while maximizing your impact.
With your support, we can lay a solid foundation for IPP and begin our vital work in empowering access to immigration evaluations.

