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Family Therapy

Promptd brings the quality and transparency that the mental health domain deserves.

Anas & Viktoriya

Co-founders of Promptd

Viktoriya
Anas

Find Family Therapy in Saint-Laurent

Family therapy looks different depending on what is going on at home: a teen struggling in school, stepfamily adjustment, co-parenting after separation, or a loved one in crisis each call for a different approach. Promptd lists family therapists and counsellors across Canada by training and specialty so you can find someone who works with situations like yours.

42 Family Therapy specialists in Saint-Laurent

Camila Acuna Fadul, Social worker - View listing
Camila Acuna Fadul
Social worker
available·Montréal, CA
In-PersonOnline
Therapy
CNESST, IVAC, Anxiety, Depression, Life transitions, Grief
Reduced rates from $94.5IVAC, CNESST
Jaye Miller, Clinical Counsellor - View listing
Jaye Miller
Clinical Counsellor, Co-founder, Guidance Counsellor
waitlist·Montréal, CA
In-PersonOnline
Therapy
Low income, Anxiety, Depression, Eating disorders, EMDR, CBT
Member of jadetherapy
Reduced rates from $140Low income
Stephanie Ditkofsky, Registered Social Worker - View listing
Stephanie Ditkofsky
Registered Social Worker, Clinical Social Worker, Family Therapist
available·Montréal, CA
OnlineIn-Person
Therapy
Anxiety, Depression, ADHD, Autism / ASD, Eating disorders, Codependency
Alia Raad, Clinical Psychologist - View listing
Alia Raad
Clinical Psychologist
waitlist·Montréal, CA
OnlineIn-Person
Therapy
Anxiety, Codependency, Depression, Grief, Infidelity, Life transitions
Jamie Libenstein, Clinical Psychologist - View listing
Jamie Libenstein
Clinical Psychologist
available·Westmount, CA
In-PersonOnline
Therapy, Assessment
ADHD, Anxiety, Depression, Life transitions, Anger, Grief
Member of d2psychology
Bianca David, MSW - View listing
Bianca David
MSW, Registered Clinical Social Worker
waitlist·Montreal, CA
In-PersonOnline
Therapy
Anxiety, Depression, Grief, Trauma, PTSD, EMDR
Lindsey Ackerman, Certified Canadian Counsellor - View listing
Lindsey Ackerman
Certified Canadian Counsellor, Drama Therapist, Naturopath
available·Montreal, CA
In-PersonOnline
Therapy
Low income, Anger, Anxiety, Autism / ASD, Trauma, Eating disorders
Member of MIT-Team
Reduced rates from $130Low income
Natasha Edwards, Canadian Certified Counsellor - View listing
Natasha Edwards
Canadian Certified Counsellor, Drama Therapist, Naturopath
available·Montreal, CA
In-PersonOnline
Therapy
Low income, Anxiety, Trauma, Anger, Immigration, Children
Member of MIT-Team
Reduced rates from $90Low income

Provider overview

42

Practitioners available

33

Accepting new clients

$174/h

Average session price

15h

Average response time

3

Specialties: Therapy, Assessment and Family mediation

11

Languages spoken

About Promptd

In 2025, a therapist and a software engineer set out to raise the bar for mental health marketplaces

We looked at how people search for mental health services and thought: this could be so much better.

We bring tech to mental health so that finding the right provider feels as intuitive and personal as the experience you get on your favourite apps. Today, we represent clinics and independent mental health professionals across Montreal and its surrounding cities, in-person and online.

And we're just getting started.

Anas Shakra - Co-founder of Promptd
Viktoriya Manova - Co-founder of Promptd
What our users say

Spent close to two years trying to find a therapist. Waitlists, no callbacks, people who weren't the right fit. Ended up finding someone through Promptd in like a week.

Nadia

I run a small law firm and needed a family mediator for a case. I did not find anyone in my network so I tried Promptd and found someone pretty quickly.

Catherine

Nice to actually see prices listed upfront. Saves you from having to call around just to figure out what you can afford.

Jordan

Your questions, answered

What is family therapy?

Family therapy is counselling that treats the family as a system rather than focusing on one person alone. A therapist works with parents, children, siblings, or other relatives together to improve communication, resolve conflict, and support a member who is struggling. Sessions can involve the whole family or subsets depending on the concern.

What is the difference between family therapy and family counselling?

In Canada, the terms are largely interchangeable. Some clinicians prefer family therapy for clinical, structured, theory-based work (Bowen, structural, narrative) and family counselling for shorter-term practical support around communication, parenting, or transitions. In practice, the qualifications and techniques often overlap, so ask each provider how they describe their approach.

What are the main types of family therapy?

Four widely taught models are structural (focuses on family roles and hierarchy), strategic (problem-focused with specific interventions), Bowen or intergenerational (patterns passed down across generations), and narrative (reshaping the stories a family tells about itself). Emotion-focused family therapy and solution-focused approaches are also common in Canada. Ask a therapist which model they draw from and why it fits your situation.

What issues can family therapy help with?

Common reasons families come in include communication breakdowns, parenting disagreements, blended-family adjustment, co-parenting after separation, and adolescent behaviour or school issues. If the core conflict is between partners, couples therapy is usually the better starting point, and child therapists or teen therapists therapists can support a younger family member individually alongside family work.

Can family therapy help when one member is dealing with addiction, grief, or trauma?

Yes. When a family is adjusting around someone in addiction counselling recovery, a recent loss, or a traumatic event, family sessions help members coordinate support without losing their own footing. In these situations, pairing family therapy with specialized individual work like grief counselling or trauma and PTSD therapists often produces better outcomes than family sessions alone.

Who needs to attend family therapy sessions?

That depends on the concern. Some sessions include the whole family, others focus on a single subsystem such as parents together, siblings together, or one parent with one child. The therapist will usually recommend a structure after the intake and may adjust who attends as goals evolve.

What if a family member does not want to come?

Therapy can often proceed without every member present. The therapist works with whoever is willing and uses system-focused techniques that can shift family patterns even when one person is absent. Some therapists do individual sessions with a reluctant member first, then invite the family in when they are ready.

What is the role of a family therapist?

A family therapist balances voices so no one dominates, helps each person hear the others, and identifies patterns the family is stuck in. Sessions usually combine structured exercises, between-session tasks, and explicit rules about safety and repair. The therapist acts as a neutral guide rather than a judge of who is right.

How many sessions will family therapy take?

Many families see meaningful change in 8 to 20 sessions with consistent practice between visits. Frequency usually starts weekly or biweekly and tapers as skills take hold. Some concerns like stepfamily adjustment or co-parenting after separation may need longer support, while targeted communication work can be shorter.

Should we start with family therapy, couples therapy, or individual support?

If the central tension is between partners, start with couples therapy and expand if needed. If one person is struggling and the household is otherwise stable, individual therapy is usually first. Family therapy fits best when patterns across the household are part of the problem, or when a member needs the family to change alongside their own work. A brief intake with either type of therapist can help clarify.