Bergen County Anger Management Resources

NJAMGNJ ANGER MANAGEMENT GROUP
📞 201-205-3201

Anger Management Resources in Bergen County, NJ — The Complete Guide to Court-Approved Programs, Community Services & Private Options

Bergen County is the most populous county in New Jersey — 70 municipalities, over 950,000 residents, and a court system that processes anger management and domestic violence cases from communities as diverse as the affluent enclaves of Alpine and Saddle River, the dense urban corridors of Hackensack and Fort Lee, the Korean commercial center of Palisades Park, the Latino communities of Garfield and Lodi, and the suburban families of Paramus, Ridgewood, and Fair Lawn. If you have been ordered to complete anger management by a Bergen County court — or if you are proactively enrolling before your court date — finding the right program in a county this large can feel impossible. This page is the comprehensive resource guide that Bergen County residents have been searching for — an honest overview of every type of program available, what each costs, who each serves best, where the courts are, and how to make the right decision for your specific case, your specific municipality, and your specific life.

70
Bergen Municipalities
950K+
County Population
$375
NJAMG Starting At
72hr
To First Session

Are You Looking for a Program That Checks Every Box?

If you need court-approved anger management in Bergen County, court-ordered domestic violence classes, or a batterers intervention program that works for your Bergen County life:

Sessions 7 days a week?Including evenings, early mornings, Sundays — because Bergen County commuters need real flexibility.
Start within days, not weeks?Same-day enrollment. First session within 72 hours. Enrollment letter to your attorney immediately.
Court-approved at every Bergen court?Superior Court in Hackensack and all 70 municipal courts — Alpine to Woodcliff Lake.
Accelerated to meet your court date?Need to complete before a specific hearing? We build the schedule backward from YOUR deadline.
Under $1,000 for the entire program?$375–$750 total at NJAMG. One flat price. Not $200/hour that spirals to $2,400+.
100% remote telehealth sessions?Virtual from your Bergen County home. No driving to Hackensack. Nobody in the waiting room from your town.
Private 1-on-1 — not a group class?Bergen County is tight. Paramus, Ridgewood, Teaneck — someone in a group class might be your neighbor. Private only at NJAMG.
Documentation that actually helps your case?Attorney-designed progress reports for judges, prosecutors, probation, DCPP, and employers — not a generic certificate.

If you checked every box — NJAMG is the program for you.

📞 Call 201-205-3201 Now

Bergen County Courts That Order Anger Management — Complete Guide

🏛️ Bergen County Superior Court — Hackensack

Address: 10 Main Street, Hackensack, NJ 07601
Phone: 201-527-2700

The central courthouse for all of Bergen County — criminal division, family part, and civil division. This is where indictable offenses (felonies), contested divorces, custody disputes, final restraining orders (FROs), and complex DV cases are processed. The Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office operates from this complex, and the Family Part handles all DCPP/CPS matters, custody modifications, and family offense proceedings.

Bergen County Superior Court processes cases from all 70 municipalities. The judges here see an extraordinary volume and diversity of cases — from Fort Lee high-rise DV arrests to Saddle River estate disputes to Garfield working-class family conflicts. Documentation quality is what separates your case from the hundreds of others on the docket. NJAMG progress reports are designed specifically for the Superior Court environment — structured, specific, credentialed, and persuasive.

What Bergen County judges expect: Proof of enrollment (NJAMG provides same-day), progress updates (NJAMG provides mid-program reports on request), and a completion certificate with detailed progress notes (NJAMG provides a multi-page report, not a one-page certificate). Judges who see a detailed NJAMG report alongside a generic group class certificate notice the difference.

🏛️ Bergen County Municipal Courts — All 70 Municipalities

Bergen County has 70 municipalities — the most of any county in New Jersey — and nearly every one has its own municipal court handling disorderly persons offenses (misdemeanors), simple assault, harassment, criminal mischief, and other lower-level charges. Many DV-related charges begin at the municipal court level before potentially being elevated to Superior Court.

Major Bergen County municipal courts include:

Hackensack (65 Central Ave) · Fort Lee (309 Main St) · Englewood (73 S Van Brunt St) · Paramus (1 Jockish Square) · Teaneck (818 Teaneck Rd) · Bergenfield (198 N Washington Ave) · Fair Lawn (8-01 Fair Lawn Ave) · Garfield (111 Outwater Ln) · Lodi (1 Memorial Dr) · Ridgewood (131 N Maple Ave) · Palisades Park (275 Broad Ave) · Cliffside Park (525 Palisade Ave) · Lyndhurst (367 Valley Brook Ave) · Rutherford (176 Park Ave) · Dumont (50 Washington Ave) · New Milford (930 River Rd) · Elmwood Park (182 Market St)

NJAMG is accepted at every municipal court in Bergen County — all 70. Whether your case is in Alpine or Wood-Ridge, the enrollment letter and documentation are tailored for your specific court.

🏛️ Bergen County Family Part — Domestic Violence, Custody & DCPP

Location: Bergen County Justice Center, 10 Main Street, Hackensack, NJ 07601

The Family Part handles the most consequential cases in Bergen County: final restraining orders (FROs), temporary restraining orders (TROs), custody disputes, DCPP/CPS investigations, and family offense proceedings. Anger management is frequently ordered as a condition of FRO/TRO compliance, custody modification, DCPP case plans, and divorce proceedings.

Bergen County Family Part judges evaluate anger management documentation with particular scrutiny because the stakes are highest here — custody of children, restraining orders that determine where you can live and work, and DCPP investigations that can remove children from homes. A generic group class certificate does not provide the specificity these judges need. NJAMG reports address the specific behavioral changes relevant to the family court context — parenting awareness, de-escalation in the presence of children, communication strategies for co-parenting, and the specific triggers that produced the original incident.

“Bergen County has 70 municipalities — the most in New Jersey — and 70 different municipal courts with 70 different judges and 70 different expectations. A provider who does not understand this complexity cannot serve Bergen County residents. We have served clients from Hackensack to Ho-Ho-Kus, from Fort Lee to Franklin Lakes, from Garfield to Glen Rock — and we know that the Garfield judge and the Glen Rock judge have different expectations, different docket pressures, and different levels of patience for generic documentation.” — Santo Artusa Jr, Esq., NJAMG

Case Study: A Paramus Accountant Whose Road Rage Incident Became a Court-Ordered Program

Illustrative Composite — Based on Typical Cases

Michael, 44 — Simple Assault, Route 17 Road Rage, CPA License at Risk

Michael, a CPA living in Paramus, was driving home on Route 17 after a 12-hour tax season shift when another driver cut him off near the Garden State Plaza exit. Michael followed the driver into the parking lot, got out of his car, and punched the driver’s side mirror. The other driver’s dashcam captured everything. Michael was charged with Simple Assault and Criminal Mischief at the Paramus Municipal Court.

Michael’s CPA license required a clean record for annual renewal. His accounting firm served Bergen County businesses — many of whom were his neighbors in Paramus. The dashcam footage meant a trial defense was unlikely to succeed. His only path was proactive intervention: demonstrating to the municipal prosecutor that this was an isolated incident, not a pattern.

Michael enrolled at NJAMG. Program cost: $550 for 8 sessions. The work addressed the commuter exhaustion trigger (14-hour tax season days + Route 17 traffic = a nervous system in survival mode), the road rage escalation pattern (the decision to follow the other driver into the parking lot was the critical moment — once he got out of the car, the incident was inevitable), and the CPA license protection (documentation designed for both the municipal court and the NJ Board of Accountancy). Simple Assault downgraded to a municipal ordinance violation with anger management as a condition. No criminal record. CPA license preserved. Tax season completed without interruption.

Michael spent $550. His CPA practice generates $180K/year. A group class in Paramus: his clients might be in the room. A therapist at $200/hour: $1,600.

Bergen County Anger Management Options — Comprehensive Side-by-Side Comparison

This comparison covers every type of anger management program available to Bergen County residents. We include ourselves alongside the alternatives because an informed decision is the right decision — and for some Bergen County residents, a community-funded option may be the appropriate choice.

Feature Online Self-Paced Community / Medicaid Group Private Therapist NJAMG ★
FormatVideos + quizzes aloneGroup of 8-15 people1-on-1 office visits1-on-1 virtual telehealth
Total Cost$25–$150$0–$30/session (Medicaid)$1,200–$3,000 (8-12 sessions)$375–$750 flat
Bergen Court AcceptanceMany judges reject online-onlyGenerally acceptedGenerally acceptedEvery Bergen court — all 70 + Superior
Wait to StartImmediate (but may be rejected)2–6 week waitlist1–3 weeksSame-day enrollment
Time to First SessionImmediate (no live session)2–6 weeks1–3 weeksWithin 72 hours
Scheduling FlexibilitySelf-paced (anytime)Fixed weekly eveningBusiness hours only7 days/week — evenings, mornings, Sundays
Can Be Accelerated?Yes (but may be rejected)No — weekly meetingsLimitedYes — compressed to your court deadline
LanguageEnglish onlyEnglish (some Spanish groups)VariesEnglish & Spanish — full bilingual
Privacy LevelHigh (alone on computer)Low (group setting)Medium (office visits)Highest (virtual from home)
DocumentationGeneric certificateGroup completion letterClinical letterMulti-page attorney-designed progress report
PersonalizationZero — same for everyoneMinimal — group curriculumGoodExcellent — case-specific, culturally informed
Live Facilitator?NoYes (group leader)YesYes — certified specialist, 1-on-1
Can Address DV Specifically?No — general anger curriculumSome programsYesYes — DV intervention specialist
Employer/License Documentation?NoNoSometimesYes — designed for licensing boards
Best ForLow-risk, judge approves onlineBudget-first, Medicaid eligibleInsurance covers, flexible timelineCourt deadline, career at risk, need real results + documentation

Bergen County — 70 municipalities, one program accepted at every court.

$375–$750 · Private 1-on-1 · English & Spanish · Same-day enrollment · Every Bergen court

Community & Medicaid-Funded Anger Management Resources in Bergen County

The following providers serve Bergen County residents with community-based, Medicaid-funded, or sliding-scale mental health services that may include anger management components. We include them because this resource page exists to help every Bergen County resident find the right program — and for residents whose primary need is affordable, insurance-funded mental health treatment with a flexible court timeline, these providers may be the right fit.

Community Mental Health / Medicaid

CBH Care (Community-Based Health Care) — Bergen County

Locations: Multiple locations across Bergen County including Hackensack, Westwood, and Lyndhurst
Phone: 201-646-0333
Website: cbhcare.com
Services: Community-based mental health and behavioral health services for adults and youth. Outpatient counseling, group therapy, psychiatric services, case management, and substance abuse treatment. Anger management may be available as part of a broader mental health treatment plan.
Payment: Medicaid accepted. Medicare accepted. Most private insurance accepted. Sliding scale available for qualifying individuals.
Format: In-person. Individual and group options. Outpatient programs available for both Medicaid and non-Medicaid clients.
Wait time: Call for current availability — community mental health centers may have waitlists depending on demand and staffing.
Best for: Medicaid-eligible Bergen County residents seeking comprehensive mental health services that include anger management as a component of broader treatment. CBH Care is a well-established community health provider with deep Bergen County roots.

Community Mental Health / Medicaid

West Bergen Mental Healthcare — Ridgewood, Westwood & Garfield

Locations: Three Bergen County offices:
Ridgewood: 120 Chestnut St, Ridgewood, NJ 07450
Westwood: 528 Westwood Ave, Westwood, NJ 07675
Garfield: 130 Outwater Ln, Garfield, NJ 07026
Phone: 201-444-3550
Website: westbergen.org
Services: Full-range community mental health center offering individual counseling, group therapy, couples counseling, and family counseling. Specialties include anger management, anxiety, depression, trauma, ADHD, autism, divorce, and LGBTQ+ issues. In operation for decades with deep Bergen County community ties.
Payment: Medicare and Medicaid accepted. Most commercial insurance plans accepted. Reduced-fee sliding scale option available for qualifying individuals.
Format: In-person at three locations. Individual and group options.
Wait time: Call for current availability.
Best for: Bergen County residents — particularly those in the Ridgewood, Westwood, or Garfield areas — who need affordable, insurance-funded anger management within a broader mental health treatment context. West Bergen is a respected community provider with three convenient locations.

Community Mental Health / Medicaid

Vantage Health System — Dumont & Englewood

Locations:
Dumont: 2 Park Ave, Dumont, NJ 07628
Englewood: 300 Grand Ave, Englewood, NJ 07631
Phone: 201-385-4400
Website: vantagenj.org
Services: Non-profit community-based mental health, addiction services, and developmental disability services. In operation since 1957. Provides services to children, adolescents, adults, and elders with mental health, addiction, developmental, and eldercare challenges. Outpatient counseling that may include anger management components.
Payment: Medicaid accepted. Most insurance accepted. Sliding scale.
Format: In-person. Outpatient.
Best for: Dumont/Englewood-area Bergen County residents seeking non-profit community mental health services that may include anger management as a treatment component.

County Government Resource

Bergen County Division of Mental Health & Addiction Services

Phone: 201-634-2750
Website: bergencountynj.gov
Services: Bergen County government division that provides referrals to mental health agencies and addiction treatment programs throughout the county. This is not a direct treatment provider — it is a referral and navigation service that can connect you with appropriate programs based on your specific needs, insurance status, and location within Bergen County.
Cost: Free referral service.
Best for: Bergen County residents who are unsure where to start and need help navigating the system. Call 201-634-2750 and explain your situation — they will direct you to appropriate resources based on your needs and insurance.

Online Self-Paced Courses (Multiple National Providers)

Online Self-Paced Anger Management Courses

Several national online providers offer self-paced anger management courses ranging from $25 to $150. These include CourseForAnger.com, Adaptive Skills, AngerClassOnline.com, Baker Training Institute, AngerMasters, Schroeder Counseling, and others.
Format: Read-through material + quizzes on your computer. Some newer providers offer live Zoom sessions. No ongoing facilitator relationship.
Certificate: Generic completion certificate.
⚠️ Critical warning for Bergen County residents: Many Bergen County judges — particularly for DV-related charges and Family Part matters — do not accept online-only, self-paced courses that involve no live interaction with a certified facilitator. Before enrolling in any online program, confirm with your attorney or the court clerk that distance learning is permitted in your specific case. If your judge requires live sessions (which most Bergen County judges do for DV-related offenses), an online self-paced course will waste your money and your time — and may damage your credibility with the court if you present a certificate from a program the judge considers inadequate.

A note on “court-approved” claims: Many online providers claim to be “court-approved in New Jersey.” In reality, there is no statewide approval list for anger management providers in NJ. Each judge makes their own determination about which programs they accept. A provider that was accepted by one judge in one municipality may be rejected by another. The safest approach is to confirm with your specific judge or attorney before enrolling in any program — online or otherwise.

Why Bergen County Clients Choose NJAMG Over the Alternatives — A Detailed Analysis

Speed — When Your Court Date Is in Two Weeks

Bergen County courts move fast. A municipal court judge may give you 30 days to show proof of enrollment. A Family Part judge may require completion before the next hearing in 60 days. Community mental health centers have waitlists because they are underfunded and oversubscribed — calling CBH Care or West Bergen may result in a first appointment 4-6 weeks away. NJAMG enrolls same-day. Your enrollment letter — on NJAMG letterhead, signed by a certified anger management specialist — is in your attorney’s inbox within hours. Your first session is within 72 hours. If the court deadline is tight, NJAMG is the only option that guarantees you will not miss it.

Documentation Quality — The Difference Between a Certificate and a Progress Report

A community mental health group class produces a completion certificate: “John Smith attended 12 sessions of anger management group therapy.” An online self-paced course produces a certificate: “John Smith completed 8 hours of online anger management education.” Both are single-page documents that tell the judge nothing about what the person actually learned, what triggers were identified, or what behavioral changes were made.

An NJAMG progress report is a multi-page document that reads like a professional assessment: “This client identified the following specific triggers… demonstrated measurable progress in the following behavioral areas… developed the following de-escalation strategies applicable to their specific domestic context… and presents with the following risk reduction indicators…” Bergen County judges — particularly in the Family Part, where custody is at stake — notice the difference. Prosecutors notice the difference. DCPP caseworkers notice the difference. Your documentation is your voice when you are not in the room.

Privacy — Bergen County Is 70 Small Towns in a Trench Coat

Bergen County may have 950,000 people, but it is organized into 70 municipalities — many of which function as small towns where everyone knows everyone. In Ridgewood, you see the same parents at school drop-off, at the supermarket, and at the soccer field. In Paramus, the business community is tight. In Teaneck, the religious communities are interconnected. In Fort Lee, the Korean business network spans every block of Main Street. In a group anger management class anywhere in Bergen County, the odds of sitting next to someone who knows your spouse, your employer, or your children’s teacher are uncomfortably high. NJAMG’s virtual 1-on-1 format eliminates this risk entirely. Nobody in Bergen County knows you are in the program except you, your attorney, and the court.

Cultural Fluency — Bergen County’s Diversity Demands It

Bergen County is one of the most diverse counties in New Jersey — Korean families in Palisades Park and Fort Lee, Latino families in Garfield and Lodi, South Asian families in Hackensack and Englewood, Jewish communities in Teaneck and Fair Lawn, Italian American families in Lyndhurst and Rutherford, and African American families in Englewood and Teaneck. A generic English-only group class does not serve this population. NJAMG provides full bilingual (English/Spanish) services and culturally informed sessions that adapt to each client’s cultural framework — because “anger management” means different things in a Korean family, an Orthodox Jewish household, an Italian American multigenerational home, and a Colombian immigrant family. We learn your world before we address your behavior.

Case Study: A Fort Lee Korean Business Owner Navigating Municipal Court and Community Reputation

Illustrative Composite — Based on Typical Cases

Jin, 47 — Harassment 2nd, Fort Lee Municipal Court, Korean Business Community, Divorce Pending

Jin, the owner of a Fort Lee restaurant on Main Street, had been in a deteriorating marriage for years. His wife — also Korean-born — had filed for divorce and was seeking primary custody of their two children. During a custody exchange at the restaurant after hours, an argument about the division of business assets escalated when Jin grabbed his wife’s purse to prevent her from leaving with the restaurant’s business checkbook. She stumbled and fell against a table. A delivery driver who was still in the building called 911.

Jin was charged with Harassment 2nd at Fort Lee Municipal Court. The divorce proceeding was in Bergen County Superior Court, Family Part. His restaurant — where every customer was also a member of the Fort Lee Korean business community — was at the center of a rapidly spreading gossip cycle. His wife’s attorney was using the arrest to seek sole custody and a larger share of the business assets.

Jin enrolled at NJAMG. Program cost: $750 for 12 sessions. The work addressed the purse-grab as physical control (Jin was trying to protect the checkbook — the law saw it as assault on his wife), the Korean face dynamics (face loss in the Fort Lee Korean business community was threatening the restaurant’s survival — strategies for reputation management through visible accountability), the divorce as business division (the restaurant and the marriage were the same entity — their dissolution was financially and emotionally simultaneous), and the custody evaluator preparation (the Bergen County Family Part evaluator would receive a report that demonstrated genuine behavioral change and parenting awareness). Harassment resolved with conditional discharge. Custody evaluator recommended joint custody. Restaurant survived. Korean community standing recovered through visible change.

Jin spent $750. His restaurant generates $300K+/year. A group class in Fort Lee: the Korean restaurant network would know by morning. A therapist at $225/hour: $2,700.

Case Study: A Garfield Mother Navigating DCPP and a Language Barrier in Bergen County Family Court

Illustrative Composite — Based on Typical Cases

Maria, 32 — Family Offense, DCPP Investigation, Limited English, Garfield Walk-Up

Maria, a Colombian-born house cleaner living in a Garfield walk-up apartment, had been in a controlling relationship for three years. Her boyfriend used her immigration status as leverage: “If you leave, they will take the kids.” When Maria finally told him she was leaving, he blocked the door. Maria pushed past him, grabbed her 4-year-old daughter, and ran to the neighbor’s apartment. Her boyfriend called 911 and told the officers Maria had “attacked him in front of the child.”

Maria was now the accused aggressor. A family offense petition was filed in Bergen County Family Court. DCPP was notified because the child was present. Maria’s English was limited, and the legal aid attorney assigned to her case communicated primarily in English. Maria was terrified that court involvement would trigger immigration consequences — a fear her boyfriend had deliberately cultivated for three years.

Maria enrolled at NJAMG through a Bergen County legal aid referral. Program cost: $375 for 8 sessions, completely in Spanish. The work focused on identifying the coercive control pattern (Maria was the victim, not the aggressor — her physical reaction was an escape from control, not an initiation of violence), eliminating the immigration fear (anger management has no immigration reporting — Maria’s participation actually strengthened her position), the DCPP documentation (a bilingual report explaining the coercive dynamic to the caseworker, written in both English and Spanish), and building a custody narrative in Maria’s own voice and language. Family offense dismissed. DCPP closed. Full custody maintained. Maria’s boyfriend was the subject of a counter-petition for family offense based on the documented coercive control pattern. Immigration status unaffected.

Maria spent $375 — NJAMG’s lowest tier — with full Spanish sessions. A group class in English in Bergen County: useless for a Spanish-dominant speaker. A bilingual therapist at $200/hour: $1,600 — money Maria did not have. The NJAMG documentation did not just resolve her case — it reversed it.

🇪🇸 Programa Completo en Español — Condado de Bergen

Garfield, Lodi, Hackensack, Palisades Park, Fairview, y toda la comunidad latina del condado de Bergen — NJAMG ofrece sesiones privadas completamente en español. Documentación bilingüe para el tribunal. No afecta su estatus migratorio. $375–$750 por todo el programa.

📞 Llame ahora: 201-205-3201

Bergen County — the resource page you were looking for. The program your case needs.

NJAMG: $375–$750 · Private 1-on-1 · Same-day enrollment · English & Spanish · Every Bergen court

All 70 Bergen County Municipalities — NJAMG Serves Every One

Allendale

Alpine

Bergenfield

Bogota

Carlstadt

Cliffside Park

Closter

Cresskill

Demarest

Dumont

East Rutherford

Edgewater

Elmwood Park

Emerson

Englewood

Englewood Cliffs

Fair Lawn

Fairview

Fort Lee

Franklin Lakes

Garfield

Glen Rock

Hackensack

Harrington Park

Hasbrouck Heights

Haworth

Hillsdale

Ho-Ho-Kus

Leonia

Little Ferry

Lodi

Lyndhurst

Mahwah

Maywood

Midland Park

Montvale

Moonachie

New Milford

North Arlington

Northvale

Norwood

Oakland

Old Tappan

Oradell

Palisades Park

Paramus

Park Ridge

Ramsey

Ridgefield

Ridgefield Park

Ridgewood

River Edge

River Vale

Rochelle Park

Rockleigh

Rutherford

Saddle Brook

Saddle River

South Hackensack

Teaneck

Tenafly

Teterboro

Upper Saddle River

Waldwick

Wallington

Washington Township

Westwood

Wood-Ridge

Woodcliff Lake

Wyckoff

Frequently Asked Questions — Bergen County Anger Management

What is the cheapest anger management option in Bergen County?

Online self-paced courses start at $25 but many Bergen judges reject them. Community mental health centers like CBH Care, West Bergen Mental Healthcare, and Vantage Health System offer Medicaid-funded and sliding-scale services — free or low-cost for eligible residents, typically in a group format with possible waitlists. NJAMG starts at $375 for private 1-on-1 sessions accepted at every Bergen court.

Will my Bergen County judge accept an online anger management course?

It depends on the specific judge and the specific charge. Many Bergen County judges — especially for DV-related offenses and Family Part matters — require live sessions with a certified facilitator, not a self-paced video course. The safest approach is to confirm with your attorney before enrolling in any program. NJAMG’s live telehealth sessions satisfy the “live facilitator” requirement that most Bergen judges expect.

How long does anger management take in Bergen County?

Duration depends on your court order — typically 8, 12, 16, or 26 sessions. At NJAMG, sessions can be accelerated (multiple per week) to meet your court deadline. Community group programs meet weekly, so a 12-session requirement takes a minimum of 12 weeks. NJAMG can compress that significantly — some clients complete 12 sessions in 4-6 weeks.

Is NJAMG accepted at Bergen County Superior Court?

Yes. NJAMG is accepted at Bergen County Superior Court (criminal division, family part), every one of Bergen’s 70 municipal courts, and all 21 NJ county courts statewide. We offer a money-back guarantee — if for any reason your court does not accept the certificate, you receive a full refund.

Does anger management affect immigration status?

No. Anger management enrollment has no immigration reporting requirement. It does not affect green cards, visas, DACA, TPS, asylum applications, or any pending immigration matter. We address this concern directly and immediately because it prevents many Bergen County families — particularly in Garfield, Lodi, Hackensack, and Palisades Park — from seeking help.

Are there free anger management programs in Bergen County?

CBH Care, West Bergen Mental Healthcare, and Vantage Health System all offer Medicaid-funded and sliding-scale services. The Bergen County Division of Mental Health & Addiction Services (201-634-2750) can provide referrals. These are typically group format with waitlists. For immediate, private, court-deadline-ready enrollment, NJAMG starts at $375.

Can I do anger management in Spanish in Bergen County?

NJAMG offers a complete program in Spanish — sessions, documentation, and certificates. Some community agencies (West Bergen in Garfield, CBH Care) may have bilingual staff. For a full private Spanish-language program with bilingual court documentation, call NJAMG at 201-205-3201.

My professional license (CPA, nursing, teaching, law) is at risk. Can NJAMG help?

Yes. NJAMG serves CPAs, attorneys, nurses, teachers, physicians, finance professionals, and anyone whose professional licensing depends on the case outcome. Documentation is designed for both the court AND the relevant licensing board — NJ Board of Accountancy, NJ Board of Nursing, NJ State Bar Ethics Committee, etc.

DCPP/CPS is involved in my case. Can NJAMG help?

Yes. NJAMG provides documentation directly to DCPP caseworkers. Proactive enrollment in anger management is one of the strongest actions you can take to demonstrate good faith to DCPP — it accelerates case plan compliance and supports reunification or case closure.

How quickly can I start at NJAMG?

Same-day enrollment. Enrollment letter to your attorney within hours. First session within 72 hours. If you call on Monday morning, you can be in session by Wednesday. If your court date is this week, we can have an enrollment letter in your attorney’s hands today. 201-205-3201.

What payment methods does NJAMG accept?

Zelle, Apple Pay, Venmo, CashApp, and credit/debit cards (3% processing surcharge for cards). We do not accept insurance — which actually benefits clients: no insurance paperwork delays, no diagnostic codes on your medical record, no waiting for authorization, and complete confidentiality.

What should I bring to my first session?

Your court paperwork (complaint, order, conditions of release or probation), your attorney’s contact information, your next court date, and your availability for scheduling. At NJAMG, we handle the rest — enrollment letter, session scheduling, mid-program updates if needed, and the final progress report.

Explore NJAMG — All 21 NJ Counties + New York

NJAMG Home · 📞 201-205-3201
NJ Counties Served: Atlantic · Bergen · Burlington · Camden · Cape May · Cumberland · Essex · Gloucester · Hudson · Hunterdon · Mercer · Middlesex · Monmouth · Morris · Ocean · Passaic · Salem · Somerset · Sussex · Union · Warren
Also serving New York: NY Anger Management Group — Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Nassau County, Bronx, Staten Island

Bergen County — 70 Municipalities, 950,000 Residents, One Program Accepted at Every Court

NJAMG: $375–$750 total · Private 1-on-1 · Same-day enrollment · English & Spanish
Virtual telehealth · Attorney-designed documentation · Every Bergen court accepted
2,500+ clients since 2012 · Money-back guarantee

Disclaimer: This resource page is for informational purposes only. Inclusion of any provider does not constitute endorsement. Confirm with your attorney or the court that any program meets your specific court order requirements. NJAMG is not a law firm. Provider information was accurate as of March 2026 — contact providers directly to verify current services and availability. NJ DV Hotline: 1-800-572-7233. Bergen County 262-HELP Crisis Line: 201-262-4357.
NJAMGNJ ANGER MANAGEMENT GROUP
📞 201-205-3201