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Therapy

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

Anas & Viktoriya

Co-founders of Promptd

Viktoriya
Anas

Find Therapy in Montreal

Therapy and counselling come in many forms: structured skills work, open-ended talk sessions, trauma-focused care, and body-based approaches. Promptd shows therapy and counselling providers across Canada with their modality, format, fees, and insurance, so you can compare approaches, specializations, and availability at a glance.

150 Therapy specialists in Montreal

Irina Iacob, Social worker - View listing
Irina Iacob
Social worker, Psychotherapist
Montreal
In-PersonOnline

Burnout, Anxiety, Life transitions, Bipolar, ADHD, Addiction
IVAC
Zeina Tall, Social worker - View listing
Zeina Tall
Social worker
Montreal
In-PersonOnline

Anxiety, Depression, Burnout, Life transitions, Emotion regulation, Divorce
IVAC
Caroline Collins, Psychology intern - View listing
Caroline Collins
Psychology intern, Registered nurse, Naturopath
Montreal
Online

Anxiety, Burnout, OCD, Eating disorders, Addiction, CBT
IVAC
Camila Acuna Fadul, Social worker - View listing
Camila Acuna Fadul
Social worker
5 to 10 km from Montreal
In-PersonOnline

Anxiety, Depression, Life transitions, Grief, Immigration, Teens
Reduced rates from $94.5IVAC, CNESST
Coralie Cressent, Hypnotherapist - View listing
Coralie Cressent
Hypnotherapist, Mental performance coach
5 to 10 km from Montreal
OnlineIn-Person

Burnout, Addiction, Anxiety, Performance anxiety, Children, Teens
Carolina Lopez-Vasquez, Sexologist - View listing
Carolina Lopez-Vasquez
Sexologist, Relational helping practitioner
Montreal
In-PersonOnline

Gender identity, Grief, Emotion regulation, Divorce, Addiction, Anxiety
IVAC
Lindsey Ackerman, Certified Canadian Counsellor - View listing
Lindsey Ackerman
Certified Canadian Counsellor, Drama Therapist, Naturopath
Montreal
In-PersonOnline

Anger, Anxiety, Autism / ASD, Trauma, Eating disorders, Depression
Member of MIT-Team
Reduced rates from $130Low income
Natasha Edwards, Canadian Certified Counsellor - View listing
Natasha Edwards
Canadian Certified Counsellor, Drama Therapist, Naturopath
Montreal
In-PersonOnline

Anxiety, Trauma, Anger, Immigration, Children, Teens
Member of MIT-Team
Reduced rates from $90Low income

Provider overview

150

Practitioners available

123

Accepting new clients

$166/h

Average session price

17h

Average response time

4

Specialties: Therapy, Assessment, Family mediation and Speech therapy

13

Languages spoken

Looking for therapy in Montreal?

Chat with us and we'll personally match you with a therapy provider serving Montreal.

Person reflecting on therapy options

Therapy pricing in Montreal by professional title

ProfessionAvg. hourly rate
Social Worker$150/hr
Psychologist$199/hr
Sexologist$120/hr
Psychotherapist$158/hr
Counsellor$164/hr

Therapy pricing near Montreal compared to nearby cities

CityAvg. hourly rate
Montreal$151/hr
Westmount$154/hr
Outremont$154/hr
Mont-Royal$154/hr
LaSalle$153/hr
Longueuil$151/hr

Therapy provider breakdown by gender in Montreal

Female (80%)
Male (14%)
Other (6%)

Therapy provider breakdown by service mode in Montreal

In-person and online (83%)
Online only (14%)
In-person only (3%)

Your questions, answered

What is the difference between counselling and therapy?

In Canada the two terms are often used interchangeably. Counselling tends to describe shorter, goal-focused work on situations like grief, a life transition, or workplace stress. Therapy or psychotherapy may involve longer work on recurring patterns, trauma, or diagnosed mental health conditions. The training and regulated title of the provider shape what they can offer more than the label on the service.

What are the main types of therapy or approaches?

Most approaches fall into a few families. CBT targets the link between thoughts, feelings, and behaviour and is well studied for anxiety and depression. DBT adds emotion regulation and distress tolerance skills, often for intense emotions and relationship difficulties. ACT uses acceptance and values work to build psychological flexibility. EMDR uses bilateral stimulation to reprocess distressing memories. somatic therapy works through the body when trauma or stress shows up physically. Psychodynamic and humanistic approaches focus on insight, meaning, and the therapeutic relationship over structured techniques.

What happens in a first therapy session?

The first session is usually an intake. Your therapist will ask about what brings you in, relevant history, current supports, and what you want to get out of therapy. You will review confidentiality, fees, and cancellation policies. Many people leave feeling they talked more than they did therapy, and that is expected. The working sessions build on what the first hour maps out, and it is normal to reassess fit after two or three visits.

What should I discuss in therapy?

Start with what matters most right now: the symptoms, stressors, or relationship patterns you want to change. Together with your therapist you will set goals, choose methods, and review progress. Skills might include emotion regulation, communication, or values-based action. Approaches range from the structured, symptom-focused work of CBT therapy to the skills-based framework of DBT therapy and the acceptance-oriented strategies of ACT therapy, depending on your goals.

How long does therapy take?

It varies by goal and approach. Short-term, problem-focused work such as CBT for a specific phobia may take 8 to 20 sessions. Ongoing support for complex trauma, personality patterns, or long-standing mental health conditions can span a year or more. Many people reassess after 4 to 6 sessions to check whether the work is producing change. Progress is not always linear, and some people taper to monthly maintenance visits rather than ending outright.

Does therapy work?

For many people, yes, particularly when there is a good fit with the provider, clear goals, and practice between sessions. Decades of research show that evidence-based approaches such as CBT, DBT, and EMDR produce measurable improvements for anxiety, depression, and trauma. The fit between you and the provider predicts outcomes more consistently than the specific modality, so the first few sessions are a reasonable window to evaluate whether the match is working.

How much does therapy cost in Canada?

Session fees vary by region, credentials, and format. Most private visits range from $100 to $220 per session, with package rates and sliding-scale options available at some clinics. Telehealth can reduce travel time and improve access while keeping outcomes comparable. If you have extended benefits, ask what documentation your insurer needs for reimbursement. You can compare in-person therapy options with online therapy to match your schedule and budget.

What is a sliding scale?

A sliding scale adjusts session fees based on income or financial circumstances, expanding access while keeping care consistent. Availability is limited and eligibility criteria vary by clinic and provider. Ask about documentation requirements, whether brief check-ins are offered at a reduced rate, and whether group programs can stretch your budget further.

Can I get free or low-cost counselling in Canada?

Several options exist. Employee and Family Assistance Programs through your workplace typically cover a limited number of sessions at no cost. Community clinics, university training clinics, and non-profit agencies frequently offer sliding-scale or student-intern rates starting around $40 to $60 per session. For immediate support, Talk Suicide Canada (1-833-456-4566) and Kids Help Phone (1-800-668-6868 for youth) provide free counselling by phone or text.

Is therapy helpful for relationship or communication issues?

Yes. When difficulties involve communication, trust, intimacy, conflict patterns, or a major life transition, relational work is often more effective than individual sessions alone. relationship counselling focuses on the patterns and communication habits that shape a relationship. couples therapy is structured around two partners working toward shared goals, often using methods like the Gottman approach or emotionally focused therapy. Online formats are available when scheduling or distance makes in-person sessions difficult.

When should I consider therapy for a child or teen?

Persistent sadness, anxiety, school avoidance, family conflict, anger outbursts, or marked behaviour changes are all reasons to bring in specialized support. child therapists use developmentally appropriate methods, often including play-based work for younger kids. teen therapists focus on the identity, independence, and peer dynamics that shape adolescence. A clinician will help match the approach to age, situation, and family dynamics.