Crisis Services
If you or someone you know is experiencing a mental health or drug- and/or alcohol-use related crisis, help is available for everyone in King County, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
How to get crisis care
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First, Call or Text for Help
988 or the Regional Crisis Line: 206-461-3222Trained volunteers and mental health professionals from Crisis Connections help people on the phone, connect people to services or can send mobile crisis teams to respond in-person.
Call 911 if the mental health crisis poses a threat to life or safety. In South King County, crisis counselors in 911 call centers support people who call related to a mental health or drug or alcohol use crisis.
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What's next
Get an appointment within 24 hours
You can get an appointment with a mental health or substance use provider for yourself or someone you’re helping. They can connect you to treatment and services you want.
For appointments related to substance use: Contact the Washington Recovery Line: 866-789-1511.
For appointments related to mental health: Contact 988 or the Regional Crisis Line: 206-461-3222.Teams can come to help you where you are
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Mobile Crisis Teams are groups of trained crisis workers who go anywhere in King County to help adults, families and children in moments of crisis. Call 988 to get their help.
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Outreach Teams work around King County to help people who might be experiencing a crisis, including at City Hall Park in Seattle and at Metro and Sound transit stations.
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Designated Crisis Responders (DCRs) assess a person's mental health and risk of harm to themselves or others in times of crisis. DCRs are trained to treat people in crisis with respect.
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Coming soon
Go to a Crisis Care Center
A "crisis care center” is a place to go 24-hours a day/7-days a week to get help for a wide range of crises related to mental health or drug and alcohol use issues. King County will open five crisis care centers across the county for anyone to walk-in anytime for help. The first center should open by 2025 and all five centers, including one for youth, will open by 2030.For more information visit: kingcounty.gov/crisis-care-centers
Connections' Crisis Center in Kirkland is Now Open
King County invested in Connections Health Solutions' crisis center that opened in summer 2024 in Kirkland. The center includes a behavioral health urgent care clinic that anyone can walk in to receive help in a crisis, plus a full range of mental health and substance use services and treatment onsite.
Visit: 405 Kirkland Corporate Center I connectionshs.com/nkc -
Help after a crisis
King County Client Services Line: 206-263-8997
People with Medicaid can call to receive care and support after a crisis,so they can recover and be healthy long term. Mobile crisis teams and the crisis care centers provide follow-up services for clients after a crisis.
Crisis and Commitment Services
King County Crisis and Commitment Services offers evaluation of people with behavioral health disorders for involuntary detention in psychiatric and secure withdrawal facilities according to the State of Washington law. The law for adults is RCW 71.05. For youth 13 through 17 years of age the law is RCW 71.34.
Crisis and Commitment staff who perform these duties are Designated Crisis Responders (DCRs). They are mental health professionals who are specially trained to conduct a holistic investigation of risk and to treat the person in need with dignity and respect during their time of crisis. Learn about Designated Crisis Responders in King County.
- Contact Crisis Connections at 988 or 866-427-4747. This is the centralized access point for all telephone crisis services in King County, including for children. A trained Crisis Connections volunteer will gather information about the recent behavior and assess what the appropriate next step is
If the situation needs an evaluation by the DCR your contact information will be forwarded to King County Crisis and Commitment Services. The DCR on duty will contact you and gather additional information.
Under state behavioral health laws (RCW 71.05 and RCW 71.34), there are the specific circumstances where a person can be detained for involuntary treatment:
Due to a behavioral health disorder:
- They are a danger to self
- They are a danger to others
- They are a danger to others' property
- They are gravely disabled
AND
- They are unable to engage in an appropriate less restrictive treatment option
FAQs: Implementation of Ricky's Law - Integrated Involuntary Treatment
FAQ: Joel’s Law - Filing a Petition for Initial Involuntary Detention of a Family Member