Marcia Lang, LCSW-C in Baltimore: Individual Therapy for Adults in Federal Hill
Marcia Lang is a licensed clinical social worker in private practice offering individual psychotherapy to adults in Federal Hill, focusing on depression, anxiety, life transitions, and relationship patterns through a relational, insight-oriented approach.
What she actually does
Lang holds the credential LCSW-C (Licensed Clinical Social Worker in Maryland with Clinical designation), meaning she completed a master's in social work, logged clinical hours under supervision, and passed Maryland's clinical licensing exam. She works as a solo practitioner, not as part of a clinic or hospital system, which shapes how appointments are scheduled and billed. Her practice is in Federal Hill, on the southwest side of Baltimore's inner harbor neighborhood. She conducts individual psychotherapy with adults; she does not prescribe medication, run group sessions, or provide couples or family therapy. Her training emphasizes understanding how past relationships shape present behavior and emotional patterns.
Therapy focus and approach
Lang's practice centers on depression, anxiety, grief following loss, career and life transitions, and relationship patterns. She works within a relational psychotherapy framework, meaning she attends to how the therapy relationship itself becomes data for understanding how you relate to others. This approach is distinct from cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), which targets specific thoughts and behaviors, or psychodynamic therapy focused narrowly on unconscious drives. Sessions are 50 minutes, conducted in person in her Federal Hill office.
Pricing and insurance
Private practice psychotherapists in Baltimore charge between $120 and $200 per session for out-of-pocket rates, depending on experience and location. Lang's exact fee is not public; you confirm pricing during an initial phone consultation. She accepts some insurance plans; many patients pay out-of-pocket. Unlike therapists at hospital-affiliated clinics, she does not have automated insurance verification on a website. If you use insurance, ask during scheduling whether your plan covers LCSW services, what your copay or deductible is, and whether a referral from your primary care doctor is required (some plans do not require it for mental health; others do).
How to choose between Baltimore therapists
Baltimore has three broad categories of mental health providers: therapists in private practice (like Lang), therapists and counselors at nonprofit mental health centers such as Crisis Response Inc. or Baltimore Mental Health Systems, and psychiatrists or therapists at hospitals like Johns Hopkins. Private practice offers more scheduling flexibility and continuity with one provider, but requires you to manage insurance paperwork yourself. Community mental health centers often have sliding-scale fees and shorter wait times but less choice in provider. Hospital-based clinics integrate medical care but may require navigating larger appointment systems.
If you want a relational, insight-focused approach and can afford out-of-pocket or have insurance that covers private practitioners, a solo therapist like Lang fits. If cost is the primary concern or you want faster access to medication evaluation, a nonprofit mental health center is more practical. If you have multiple medical conditions and want psychiatric evaluation alongside therapy, a hospital system makes sense.
Who this suits and who it does not
This practice suits adults seeking ongoing individual therapy (not couples or family work) who either pay out-of-pocket or have insurance that covers private LCSW services, and who value a long-term therapeutic relationship with one clinician. It suits people interested in understanding how past patterns affect current struggles. It does not suit people seeking couples or family therapy, children or adolescents, crisis intervention, or psychiatric medication management. It does not suit people unable to pay out-of-pocket and without insurance coverage for private practitioners.
First visit and scheduling
During an initial phone call, you describe your reason for seeking therapy. Lang will outline her approach, confirm fees and insurance details, and determine whether her practice is a fit. If you move forward, the first in-person session usually happens within 2 to 4 weeks, depending on her availability; solo practitioners often have longer waits than clinics. Bring your insurance card if you are using coverage. Come prepared to discuss your current situation, what prompted you to seek help now, and relevant history. Therapy typically begins with listening rather than immediate homework or problem-solving.
Hours and access
Lang's office is in Federal Hill; she works by appointment, not walk-in. Evening and weekend slots exist but are limited; daytime availability depends on the season. Confirm hours during scheduling. Parking in Federal Hill is street-based, not dedicated office parking. Public transit to Federal Hill includes the #10 and #27 bus lines. She does not offer telehealth as standard, but clarify your preference during intake.
Why this matters in Baltimore
Individual psychotherapy in a private practice offers the continuity and personalized attention that many people find necessary for meaningful change, though it requires financial capacity or insurance coverage that community clinics do not always demand. Lang's presence in Federal Hill expands access to relational therapy south of downtown.

