Couple and family therapists help people manage and overcome problems with family and relationships. They work with individuals, couples, and families. Unlike other types of mental health professionals, they bring a family-centered perspective to treatment, even when treating individuals. They evaluate family roles and development, to understand how clients’ families affect their mental health. They treat the clients’ relationships, not just the clients themselves. They address such issues as low self-esteem, stress, addiction, and substance abuse.
Education and Certification Requirements
Couple and family therapists typically need a master’s degree in psychology, social work, counseling, couple and family therapy, or a related mental health field. A bachelor’s degree in most fields is acceptable to enter a master’s-level program. Couple and family therapy programs teach students about how marriages, families, and relationships function and how they affect mental and emotional disorders. In most cases, couple and family therapists must be licensed. Licensure requires a master’s degree and 2,000 to 4,000 hours of post-degree supervised clinical experience, and therapists must pass a state-recognized exam and complete annual continuing education classes.
Pay
The median annual wage for couple and family therapists was $63,780 in 2024. The lowest 10 percent earned less than $42,610, and the highest 10 percent earned more than $111,610.
Job Outlook
Employment of marriage and family therapists is projected to grow 16 percent from 2023 to 2033, much faster than the average for all occupations.
Growth is expected due to the increasing use of integrated care, which is a treatment of multiple problems at one time by a group of specialists. In providing integrated care, marriage and family therapists are working with counselors such as substance abuse, behavior disorder, and mental health counselors to address clients' issues as a team.