Most therapist websites are designed by people who have never sat in a waiting room. You can tell. The hero image is a beach at sunset, the CTA says “Book Now”, and the contact form asks for your postcode before your name.
Therapist website design is a different design problem from almost any other sector. The visitor is not a customer. They are a person who has finally worked up the nerve to type something into Google, and your design has about five seconds to convince them to stay.
This is a straight-talking guide from a studio that thinks about these things more than is probably healthy. It covers the design principles that move the needle, the mistakes everyone keeps making, and the realistic cost of getting it right in Ireland in 2026.
What Makes a Therapist’s Website Different From Every Other Small Business Site
A plumber’s website exists to get the phone to ring. A restaurant website exists to get bums on seats. A therapist’s website exists to do something much harder — make a stranger in emotional distress feel safe enough to make contact with another human being.
That single fact changes the entire design brief. Everything a normal business site is supposed to do — grab attention, create urgency, drive the click — is precisely the wrong instinct for a therapist.
If your website is shouting, the visitor is already gone. If your CTA is aggressive, you look desperate. If your hero is clever instead of calming, you feel untrustworthy. The design needs to be almost suspiciously quiet.
| Standard small business site | Therapist website |
|---|---|
| Sell the thing, fast | Earn trust, slowly |
| Urgent CTAs | Permission-based CTAs |
| Features and benefits | Reassurance and credentials |
| Stock photography is fine | Stock photography is fatal |
| Testimonials front and centre | Testimonials used carefully or not at all |
| Multi-step funnel | One quiet enquiry |
The First Five Seconds: What Your Visitor Actually Wants
People do not read websites. They scan them. Therapy visitors scan especially fast because they are usually a bit anxious before they even arrive on the page. If the right signals are not there, they bounce, and they almost never come back.
Here is what they are actually looking for, in roughly this order:
- A real photo of a real human being — ideally the therapist, ideally not smiling in a meadow.
- A one-line answer to “what do you help with?”
- Proof of qualifications — IACP, IAHIP, PSI, BACP or equivalent.
- Location, or confirmation that online sessions are an option.
- A next step that does not require them to pick up the phone.
Miss two of these above the fold and you are bleeding visitors before they have read a single sentence. A good therapist website design puts all five in the first viewport, without making a big song and dance about any of them.
Colour, Typography, and the Art of Calm Design
Calm is a design skill. It is not a vibe you summon with a lavender swirl behind a hero image. It comes from deliberate choices about palette, type, contrast, and whitespace, all pulling in the same direction.
Warm, muted palettes almost always win. Dusty blues, sage greens, oatmeal, warm stone. They feel like a well-lit therapy room, not a dental clinic. Bright red panic buttons and high-saturation gradients are out. So is the all-black moody redesign that keeps appearing in agency portfolios — it looks great on Awwwards and terrible when someone arrives at 2am in tears.
Typography matters just as much. Humanist sans-serifs or softly weighted serifs at a generous size — 18 to 20 pixels for body text, with a line height around 1.6 — read as considered and human. Condensed, corporate, or overly geometric type reads as cold.
| Design element | What works | What doesn’t |
|---|---|---|
| Palette | Muted greens, blues, stone, terracotta | High-saturation brand colours, pure black backgrounds |
| Body type | 18-20px, line height 1.6, humanist sans or soft serif | 14px small text, ultra-thin weights, condensed display faces |
| Headings | Friendly weight contrast, restrained sizes | Huge display type, uppercase shouting, italicised scripts |
| Whitespace | Generous, breathing, asymmetric | Edge-to-edge content, cramped columns |
| Contrast | WCAG AA (4.5:1 minimum) | Grey text on grey backgrounds “because it’s modern” |
Photography: Why Stock Photos Kill Therapist Websites
This is the hill we will die on. Stock photography is the single worst decision most therapist websites make, and it is also the easiest one to reverse. The hands-holding-hands on a wooden table. The silhouette staring out of a rainy window. The beaming family in a field. Every one of them says “this could be anyone” at the moment the visitor wants to feel “this is specifically that person”.
A proper photography day in Ireland costs €400-€800. It pays for itself within weeks in higher enquiry rates. It is the best-value line item in any therapist’s website budget, and most therapists skip it because they feel awkward being photographed, which is fair, but the alternative is worse.
What actually works:
- A warm portrait of the therapist — eye contact, natural light, no awkward clipboard prop.
- Photos of the real consulting room — the chairs, the window view, the bookshelf, the tissues on the side table.
- Environmental shots — the front of the building, the street, a recognisable corner of the town.
- Subtle illustration where photography doesn’t fit — abstract, warm, understated textures rather than cartoon people with ambiguous emotions.
If the budget really cannot stretch to a photographer, a well-set-up phone shoot on a bright day near a north-facing window will still beat any stock library in the world.
Designing for Neurodivergent Visitors
A sizeable chunk of therapy visitors are neurodivergent. ADHD, autism, dyslexia, anxiety disorders — these are precisely the conditions that bring people to therapy in the first place, and precisely the conditions that make a cluttered website exhausting to use.
A therapist’s website should be designed as if every visitor were mid-overwhelm. Because many of them are. A site for a clinic focused on the effects of ADHD, for example, cannot afford flashing banners, endless carousels, or forms that reset when you tab away. The design is part of the service.
Neurodivergent-friendly design overlaps almost perfectly with plain good design:
- One focal point per screen — no competing hero elements, no “where do I look” confusion.
- Predictable navigation — five items or fewer, no clever hidden menus.
- No auto-playing anything — video, audio, carousels, pop-ups, any of it.
- Clear headings and chunks — short paragraphs, proper H2/H3 hierarchy, lists where they help.
- Forms that forgive — visible labels, sensible validation, no “please fix 7 errors” at the end.
- Reduced motion options — respect the prefers-reduced-motion setting, don’t force animations on.
This is not a niche audience to accommodate. It is a substantial share of the actual paying clientele. Design for them and everyone else benefits too.
Layout and Hierarchy: Less Really Is More
Therapist website layouts fail in two predictable directions. Either they try to do everything at once — services, testimonials, blog, booking widget, Instagram feed, all stacked on a single hero — or they go so minimal that the visitor cannot find basic information like fees or location.
The sweet spot is hierarchy that respects the visitor’s actual questions, in the order they ask them:
- Who are you, and can I trust you?
- What do you help with?
- Where are you, or can we meet online?
- What does it cost?
- How do I get in touch, with the minimum possible drama?
Design the homepage to answer those five, in that order, and you have done most of the job. Everything else — the services pages, the FAQs, the About page, the blog — is supporting evidence. The good work we’ve written about on why cutting corners on design costs more long-term applies here with knobs on. A therapist site done on the cheap looks like a therapist done on the cheap.
The Booking Experience: Where Most Designs Fall Apart
The booking flow is the single most important screen on the entire website, and it is usually the part designers care least about. Which is mad, because every design decision elsewhere is ultimately in service of making this one moment easy.
The worst booking forms ask for name, email, phone, address, date of birth, preferred session type, referral source, emergency contact, insurance details, and a two-hundred-word description of your presenting issue. All before a single human has said hello.
A better booking flow, designed with any empathy at all:
- One screen. No multi-step wizard.
- Three required fields. Name, email, one optional text box.
- Clear response commitment. “I reply within one working day.” That one line earns more enquiries than any trust badge on the market.
- Human confirmation page. A real sentence, signed with the therapist’s actual name, explaining what happens next.
- Optional online calendar. Cliniko, Jane, or Acuity for visitors who want to self-serve, without forcing it on the ones who don’t.
Copy and Tone: A Design Problem Disguised as a Writing Problem
Design and copy are the same problem in different outfits. If the copy sounds like a textbook, no amount of soft palette will save it. If the copy is warm and specific, a plain design still works. Most therapist websites fail the copy test harder than the design test, and designers need to care.
The fix is not complicated. It just requires someone to write like a human being.
| Textbook tone | Human tone |
|---|---|
| Evidence-based interventions for anxiety presentations | If you’ve been feeling anxious and it isn’t lifting, we can work through it together |
| A psychodynamic psychotherapeutic modality | A talking therapy that looks at patterns from your past — I’ll explain what that means in our first session |
| Clients present with a range of psychosocial difficulties | People come to me for all sorts of reasons — stress, relationships, grief, or just feeling stuck |
The human version is not dumbed down. It is the same information, chosen carefully, with the reader in mind. Design the layout to make that kind of writing breathe — short lines, generous spacing, pull quotes, no walls of text. The writing and the design should feel like they were made by the same person.
Mobile First, Because That’s Where People Actually Visit
Between 60% and 75% of therapist website traffic in Ireland lands on mobile. A good chunk of it late at night, often in bed, often during or after a difficult moment. If the mobile experience is an afterthought, so is the visitor.
Mobile design for therapist websites is not about shrinking the desktop site. It is about redesigning for a different context entirely — smaller screen, patchier connection, one-handed use, often through tears.
The practical checks:
- Page loads in under three seconds on a mid-range Android over 4G.
- Primary CTA is reachable with a thumb, not a stretched finger.
- Navigation opens in one tap, not a cascading menu of doom.
- No pop-ups, overlays, or chat bubbles blocking content.
- Forms use proper mobile input types — tel, email, date — so the right keyboard appears.
- Tap targets are at least 44×44 pixels, with enough space between them.
Tools and Platforms: What to Use and What to Avoid
The platform decision is where therapist websites are usually won or lost, long before a designer touches a Figma file. Pick badly and you inherit limitations for years.
Our honest take for 2026, across the platforms we see most:
| Platform | Best for | Avoid when |
|---|---|---|
| WordPress | Most Irish solo and group practices | No one is willing to maintain updates and plugins |
| Squarespace | One therapist, simple needs, tight budget | You need serious SEO, accessibility, or custom flows |
| Webflow | Design-led builds with in-house maintenance | Budget is under €5k or the team changes often |
| Wix | Honestly, almost never | Always. Performance, SEO, and portability are all weak |
| Canva Websites | A holding page while the real site is built | Anything that needs to last more than six months |
Canva is brilliant for social graphics, printables, and quick mockups. It is not a serious website platform, and pretending otherwise is how people end up rebuilding eighteen months later. A good designer will tell you which platform fits your budget and ambition honestly, and will not default to whichever one they personally find easiest. The same principle we argued in our piece on why design matters more than most people realise applies at the platform level too — boring, considered choices beat flashy ones.
What a Therapist Website Should Cost in Ireland
There is no honest answer to “how much should a therapist website cost” without some context, so here is a realistic 2026 picture for Ireland. These are the ranges that hold up in production, not the ones quoted in pitch decks.
| Tier | Typical price (Ireland, 2026) | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| DIY Squarespace | €300-€800 plus monthly | A template, your own copy, variable results |
| Freelance WordPress | €1,500-€3,500 | Light customisation, basic SEO, mixed accessibility |
| Studio WordPress build | €4,000-€8,000 | Custom design, proper performance and accessibility, SEO foundations |
| Full bespoke build | €10,000-€20,000+ | Custom design system, photography, content strategy, full SEO |
Most Irish therapists land comfortably in the €3,000-€7,000 range. Anything below that is cutting something — usually accessibility, performance, or photography — and the cost surfaces later in poor enquiry rates. The Local Enterprise Office Trading Online Voucher can match-fund up to €2,500 and is routinely overlooked by sole practitioners who assume they don’t qualify. Most do.
A Designer’s Checklist for Therapist Websites
Run your site against this list. Most therapist sites land at 8-14 out of 20 before any intervention. Twenty out of twenty is achievable without a full rebuild.
- Real photo of the therapist in the first viewport.
- One-line answer to “what do you help with?”
- Accreditation visible on the homepage.
- Warm, muted colour palette.
- Body text at 18px or larger with line height around 1.6.
- Mobile page loads in under three seconds on 4G.
- Navigation has five items or fewer.
- Fees clearly stated.
- Online session option offered where relevant.
- Booking form with fewer than six fields.
- CTAs phrased gently, not aggressively.
- WCAG 2.2 AA contrast on all text.
- Keyboard-only navigation works.
- All images have meaningful alt text.
- No autoplay video, audio, or carousels.
- Privacy statement written in plain English.
- No aggressive popups or exit-intent overlays.
- About page says something specific, not generic.
- Confirmation message after booking feels human.
- Contact response time stated and honoured.
Final Thoughts
Therapist website design sits in an unusual intersection. It has to be visually calm, technically sharp, and emotionally intelligent all at once. Most design agencies can do one of those three. A good one does all three without making a big creative song and dance about any of them.
The measure of a great therapist website is that the visitor never really notices the design. They just feel, somehow, that this person might be able to help. Everything else — the typography, the palette, the booking flow, the clever little micro-interactions — exists to serve that one outcome.
Design for it honestly, and the site will do its job quietly for years. Design for awards or portfolio pieces, and it will look beautiful and convert nothing. That is the entire trade-off, and it is worth making the right one.