Free Guide

10 Things Every Therapist Website Needs

Free guide for therapists looking to build or improve their online presence.

What you'll learn

Why directories alone aren't enough -- and what to do about it
The one page element that makes clients actually contact you
How to write about yourself without feeling awkward
What makes therapy clients trust you before they've ever met you
The SEO basics that actually matter for therapists

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The 10 Things Your Website Needs

Practical, honest advice based on what we've seen working across hundreds of therapist websites. No jargon, no fluff.

1

A Clear, Specific Headline

"Welcome to my practice" tells a visitor nothing. Your headline is the first thing people read, and it needs to do real work. A good headline names who you help and what you help with -- something like "Anxiety therapy in Bristol" or "Helping couples reconnect." It should make the right person think "this is for me" within a few seconds of landing on your page.

2

Your Photo -- a Real One

Therapy is personal. People want to see who they'll be sitting with. A genuine photo of you -- not a stock image, not a logo, not a picture of a sunset -- builds immediate trust. It doesn't need to be a professional headshot, though that helps. A clear, friendly, well-lit photo where you look approachable is enough. This single element consistently makes the biggest difference in whether someone reaches out.

3

Your Fees, Clearly Stated

Hiding your fees behind "contact for pricing" creates a barrier that many potential clients won't push through. People who are already anxious about reaching out don't want the added stress of not knowing whether they can afford you. Being upfront about your session cost -- even if you also offer a sliding scale -- respects your visitors' time and filters for clients who are a genuine fit.

4

Your Specialisms, Not "I Work With Everyone"

When someone is searching for help with OCD, bereavement, or relationship breakdown, they want a therapist who understands their specific issue. Listing every condition under the sun actually undermines trust. Pick the areas where you have genuine experience and name them clearly. Specificity is what makes a potential client choose you over a generalist. You can still accept clients outside your listed specialisms -- but lead with your strengths.

5

A Clear Call to Action

Every page on your website should make it obvious what the visitor should do next. Whether that's calling you, emailing you, or booking through an online form, the action needs to be visible and easy to find -- not buried at the bottom of a long page. A prominent "Get in Touch" or "Book a Session" button that's always within reach is one of the simplest changes you can make, and one of the most effective.

6

Your Location or "Online" Clearly Stated

This sounds basic, but a surprising number of therapist websites make people hunt for it. If you work from a physical consulting room, state the area clearly -- not just the postcode, but the neighbourhood or town. If you offer online sessions, say so prominently. Many clients specifically search for one or the other, and making them guess means losing them to someone whose website answers the question immediately.

7

An "About Me" That Sounds Human

Your About page is almost always the most-visited page on a therapist website. People want to know who you are as a person, not just your theoretical orientation. Write it in first person. Mention why you became a therapist. Share a little of your personality. The goal isn't to be casual or unprofessional -- it's to sound like a real human being that someone would feel comfortable talking to about difficult things.

8

Your Qualifications and Registrations

This is a trust signal, plain and simple. Clients may not know the difference between BACP and UKCP, but seeing that you're registered with a recognised professional body reassures them that you're legitimate and accountable. Display your registration body logo, your membership number, and your core qualification. It takes up very little space and does a lot of heavy lifting for your credibility.

9

Mobile-Friendly Design

More than 60% of people searching for a therapist do so on their phone. If your website is hard to read, slow to load, or requires pinching and zooming on a mobile screen, you're losing the majority of your potential clients before they've even read a word. A mobile-responsive design isn't a nice-to-have anymore -- it's the baseline. Test your site on your own phone. If it's not easy to use, it needs fixing.

10

Basic SEO: Title Tags, Meta Descriptions, and Google Business Profile

SEO doesn't need to be complicated. For most therapists, three things matter. First, a clear title tag on every page that includes what you do and where -- like "CBT Therapist in Edinburgh." Second, a meta description that gives people a reason to click. Third, a Google Business Profile that matches your website details. These three steps alone can dramatically improve where you appear in local search results and bring in clients who are actively looking for someone exactly like you.

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