Financial therapy sits at the intersection of financial planning and mental health counselling. It recognises that money problems are rarely just about money — they're intertwined with emotions, relationships, childhood experiences, trauma, and deep-seated beliefs about self-worth.
Is financial therapy different from financial advice?+
Yes. Financial advice tells you what to do with your money (invest here, save this much, pay off that debt). Financial therapy explores why you do what you do with money and helps you change the emotional and psychological patterns that prevent you from following good financial advice.
Can financial therapy help with debt?+
Yes, particularly if debt is driven by emotional spending, avoidance, or compulsive behaviour. Financial therapy addresses the root causes while practical debt advice (from organisations like StepChange) handles the mechanics. Many people benefit from both simultaneously.
Do I need to be in financial crisis to seek financial therapy?+
Not at all. Financial therapy benefits anyone who wants a healthier relationship with money — from high earners who can't stop spending to careful savers who can't enjoy their money. Like physical therapy, you don't need to be injured to benefit from improved function.
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