Couples Counseling: What to Know Before You Start

Learn what couples counseling involves, when to seek help, what to expect in sessions, and how to get the most out of therapy for your relationship.

Every relationship hits rough patches. Arguments that go in circles. Feeling disconnected from your partner. The same issues coming up again and again. At some point, you might wonder: Should we try couples counseling?

For many couples, therapy can be transformative—helping them break destructive patterns, communicate more effectively, and rebuild connection. But there’s often hesitation. What actually happens in couples counseling? When is it time to go? Can it really help?

If you’re considering couples therapy, here’s what you need to know.

What Is Couples Counseling?

Couples counseling (also called couples therapy or marriage counseling) is psychotherapy focused on the relationship between two people. A trained therapist works with both partners to:

  • Improve communication
  • Resolve conflicts
  • Understand relationship patterns
  • Address specific issues
  • Deepen emotional connection
  • Decide the future of the relationship

Couples counseling isn’t just for married couples. It can help dating couples, engaged couples, cohabitating partners, and LGBTQ+ couples at any stage of relationship.

When to Consider Couples Counseling

Common reasons couples seek therapy

Communication problems

  • Arguments escalate quickly
  • You feel like you’re speaking different languages
  • One or both partners shut down during conflict
  • Important topics are avoided
  • Conversations turn into blame and defensiveness

Loss of connection

  • You feel more like roommates than partners
  • Emotional intimacy has faded
  • You don’t talk about meaningful things
  • Quality time has disappeared
  • You feel lonely in the relationship

Recurring conflicts

  • The same arguments happen repeatedly
  • Nothing gets resolved
  • You know each other’s “scripts” by heart
  • Old wounds keep getting reopened

Trust issues

  • Infidelity or emotional affairs
  • Broken promises
  • Secrecy or lying
  • Difficulty trusting after betrayal

Life transitions

  • Becoming parents
  • Job changes or financial stress
  • Moving
  • Blending families
  • Empty nest
  • Retirement

Different visions for the future

  • Disagreements about children, career, where to live
  • Growing apart in values or goals
  • Feeling like you want different things

Intimacy issues

  • Decreased physical affection
  • Sexual difficulties
  • Mismatched desires
  • Emotional walls during intimate moments

Considering separation

  • Unsure whether to stay or leave
  • Want to make sure you’ve tried everything
  • Need help deciding the future

When to go: Sooner rather than later

Many couples wait too long before seeking help. Research suggests the average couple waits six years after problems begin before trying therapy. By then, negative patterns are deeply entrenched and resentment has accumulated.

Earlier intervention typically leads to better outcomes. Consider couples counseling when:

  • You notice patterns that aren’t improving on your own
  • Conflicts are more frequent or intense
  • You feel disconnected and efforts to reconnect haven’t worked
  • A significant event (affair, trauma, major disagreement) has occurred
  • You want to strengthen a good relationship

You don’t have to wait until things are terrible. Couples counseling can be preventive, not just remedial.

What to Expect

Finding a therapist

Look for a therapist who:

  • Has specific training in couples therapy (not all therapists do)
  • Uses evidence-based approaches (Gottman Method, Emotionally Focused Therapy, etc.)
  • Makes both partners feel comfortable
  • Doesn’t take sides

Many couples try a few therapists before finding the right fit.

The first session

The initial session typically includes:

  • Each partner sharing their perspective on the relationship
  • Discussing what brought you to therapy
  • Learning about each other’s background and relationship history
  • Setting initial goals
  • Understanding how therapy will work

Some therapists also meet with each partner individually early in treatment to get a fuller picture.

Assessment phase

Many couples therapists begin with an assessment period—several sessions to understand:

  • The relationship history
  • Patterns of interaction
  • Each partner’s individual history
  • Strengths of the relationship
  • Primary issues to address

This helps the therapist develop a treatment plan tailored to your relationship.

Ongoing sessions

Sessions are typically 50-90 minutes, often weekly or every other week. Sessions might include:

  • Discussing recent conflicts or situations
  • Practicing new communication skills
  • Exploring underlying emotions and needs
  • Understanding patterns and cycles
  • Processing past hurts
  • Working on specific issues

The therapist guides conversation, provides feedback, teaches skills, and helps you understand each other better.

The therapist’s role

A couples therapist:

  • Creates a safe environment for difficult conversations
  • Helps both partners feel heard
  • Identifies patterns you might not see
  • Teaches skills for communication and conflict
  • Maintains neutrality (not taking sides)
  • Provides expert perspective on relationship dynamics
  • Holds hope when couples feel hopeless

The therapist is not a judge, referee, or advice-giver. They facilitate your process of understanding and changing your relationship.

Approaches to Couples Therapy

Several evidence-based approaches have shown effectiveness:

Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)

Developed by Sue Johnson, EFT focuses on emotional bonds and attachment. It helps couples:

  • Identify negative interaction cycles
  • Access underlying emotions and needs
  • Create new patterns of emotional engagement
  • Build secure attachment bonds

EFT has strong research support and is particularly effective for couples dealing with emotional disconnection.

Gottman Method

Developed by John and Julie Gottman based on decades of research, this approach focuses on:

  • Building friendship and fondness
  • Managing conflict constructively
  • Creating shared meaning
  • Turning toward each other’s bids for connection

The Gottmans identified patterns that predict divorce and developed interventions to address them.

Imago Relationship Therapy

Developed by Harville Hendrix, Imago explores how childhood experiences affect adult relationships. It uses structured dialogue to help partners understand each other and heal old wounds.

Cognitive Behavioral Couples Therapy

Applies CBT principles to relationships, focusing on changing unhelpful thought patterns and behaviors that contribute to conflict.

What Makes Couples Therapy Work

Research identifies factors that predict success:

Commitment to the process

Both partners need to be engaged. If one person is just going through the motions, progress is limited.

Willingness to look at yourself

It’s tempting to focus on changing your partner. Real progress requires each person to examine their own contributions to problems.

Doing the work between sessions

Therapy isn’t just the sessions—it’s applying what you learn in daily life. Couples who do homework and practice skills see better results.

Emotional safety

Both partners need to feel safe enough to be vulnerable. The therapist works to create this, but couples also need to commit to treating each other with respect during and after sessions.

A good therapeutic fit

The right therapist matters. If it doesn’t feel right, try someone else.

Starting before it’s too late

Couples with less accumulated resentment and still some positive sentiment have better outcomes.

Common Misconceptions

“Therapy means our relationship is failing”

Seeking help is a sign of commitment, not failure. Strong couples invest in their relationship.

“The therapist will take sides”

A good couples therapist remains neutral and helps both partners feel heard.

“Therapy will fix my partner”

The goal isn’t to fix anyone. It’s to improve the relationship system that you’re both part of.

“We should be able to work this out ourselves”

Maybe, but sometimes an outside perspective and professional skills make a real difference. You wouldn’t hesitate to see a doctor for a physical ailment.

“Couples therapy is just airing grievances”

Good couples therapy is structured and skill-focused, not just venting. It should lead to understanding and change, not just complaint sessions.

“If we need therapy, we’re not compatible”

Compatibility isn’t fixed—it’s built through understanding, communication, and mutual effort. Therapy helps build it.

Making the Most of Couples Counseling

Be honest

Therapy only works with honesty—about your feelings, your behaviors, and your commitment to the relationship.

Stay open

Be willing to see things differently, try new approaches, and consider that you might be wrong about some things.

Do the homework

Practice what you learn between sessions. Skills develop through repetition.

Be patient

Change takes time. Patterns developed over years won’t transform in weeks.

Bring your best effort

Don’t save all your energy for sessions and then revert to old patterns at home.

Focus on yourself

Instead of cataloging your partner’s faults, examine your own contributions and what you can change.

Stay committed to the process

There will be hard sessions and setbacks. Stick with it.

When Couples Counseling Isn’t Enough

Couples counseling may not be appropriate when:

Active abuse is occurring

Couples therapy can be dangerous when there’s domestic violence. The abusive partner may use what’s shared in therapy to further control or harm. Individual therapy and safety planning should come first.

Active addiction is untreated

When one partner has an active, untreated addiction, couples therapy is unlikely to be effective until the addiction is addressed.

One partner has already decided to leave

If someone has firmly decided to end the relationship but hasn’t told their partner, therapy can become misleading.

Individual mental health issues need attention first

Sometimes individual therapy is needed before or alongside couples work.

A Note on Discernment Counseling

If you’re unsure whether to stay or leave, discernment counseling is a specific approach for this situation. Unlike traditional couples therapy, it helps couples in different places (one wanting out, one wanting to work on it) decide whether to commit to therapy, separate, or maintain the status quo.

The Possibility of Change

Relationships can change. Patterns that seem fixed can shift. Connection that seems lost can be rebuilt. It requires effort, vulnerability, and often professional help—but it’s possible.

If you’re struggling in your relationship, couples counseling offers a path forward. Whether that path leads to a renewed partnership or a respectful separation, therapy can help you navigate it with greater clarity and skill.

Your relationship is worth investing in. Whatever brought you to consider counseling, taking that step shows courage and commitment to something that matters to you.


This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re experiencing domestic violence, please contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233.

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