Clarity Wellbeing Clinic
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Relationships

Does Couples Counselling Actually Work?

Yes, for most couples who fully engage with it. Around seven in ten move from distress into a better place.

2 June 2026 · Clarity Wellbeing Clinic

Yes, for most couples who fully engage with it, couples counselling works. Research on well established, evidence based approaches such as Emotionally Focused Therapy shows that around seven in ten couples move from distress into a better place, with improvements in communication, closeness, and how they handle conflict. It is not magic, and it is not a guarantee, but the evidence is genuinely encouraging.

If you are wondering whether it is worth it, or whether your relationship is "bad enough" to need it, here is an honest look.

So does it actually work?

The honest answer is that it works well for many couples, particularly with approaches like Emotionally Focused Therapy and the Gottman Method, which have strong research behind them. Success does not only mean staying together. It means better communication, deeper understanding, and healthier ways of handling conflict. Outcomes are strongest when both partners attend consistently and engage openly, rather than one being dragged along.

Signs your relationship could use support

You do not need to be in crisis. Common signs it might help include having the same argument over and over without resolution, feeling more like flatmates than partners, struggling to communicate without it escalating, drifting apart after a major life change, rebuilding after a betrayal or breach of trust, or simply sensing distance you cannot quite close on your own.

What couples counselling actually does

A good couples counsellor does not take sides or hand out blame. They help you both understand the patterns you keep falling into, slow down the conflict so you can actually hear each other, and rebuild the emotional connection underneath. The aim is not to decide who is right. It is to help you both feel understood and find a better way forward together.

When it works best

Couples counselling tends to work best when you go earlier rather than treating it as a last resort, and when both partners are at least willing to try. Many couples wait until things feel close to breaking, and while help is still very possible then, sooner is easier.

An honest and important caveat

Couples counselling is not appropriate in every situation. Where there is domestic abuse or violence in a relationship, joint counselling is not recommended and can be unsafe. In those circumstances, individual and specialist support is the right route. If this applies to you, please reach out to a domestic abuse service rather than couples counselling.

How we can help at Clarity Wellbeing Clinic

At Clarity Wellbeing Clinic in Nuneaton, we help couples reconnect, communicate, and work through difficulty in a calm, balanced space, in person and online. You can read more on our couples counselling page.

Frequently asked questions

Does couples counselling really work?

For most couples who engage with it, yes. Evidence based approaches like Emotionally Focused Therapy show around seven in ten couples improve. It works best when both partners participate openly.

How do I know if we need couples counselling?

Common signs include repeated unresolved arguments, feeling disconnected, communication that keeps escalating, drifting apart, or rebuilding after a betrayal. You do not need to be in crisis to benefit.

Does the counsellor take sides?

No. A good couples counsellor stays neutral, helping you both understand your patterns and reconnect rather than assigning blame.

Is couples counselling ever not appropriate?

Yes. Where there is abuse or violence in a relationship, joint counselling is not recommended. Individual and specialist support is the safer and more appropriate route.

If something in your relationship feels stuck or distant, Get in touch when you're ready.

If you need help now

Clarity is not an emergency or crisis service, and our inbox is not monitored around the clock. If you are in distress or struggling to cope right now, please reach out straight away. You deserve support, and it is always okay to ask for it.

SamaritansCall 116 123, free, any time, day or night.

SHOUTText the word SHOUT to 85258 for free, confidential text support.

NHS 111Call 111 and choose the mental health option.

EmergencyIf life is at risk, call 999 or go to your nearest A&E.