01/06/2026
AI in Counselling: Opportunity, Tool, or Threat?
Artificial Intelligence is rapidly changing how we work, communicate, and access information. It was only a matter of time before it entered the counselling room.
The question isn't whether AI will become part of counselling.
The question is: how should we use it?
There is no doubt that AI offers some significant benefits. It can help people access mental health information, learn communication techniques, identify patterns in their thinking, and even prepare for difficult conversations.
For some men, AI can provide a private and non-judgemental space to begin exploring issues they may never have discussed with another person.
That's a positive development.
However, we should be cautious about confusing information with understanding.
AI can process vast amounts of data, but it cannot truly understand what it means to lose a marriage, struggle with purpose, carry shame, experience grief, or sit with uncertainty. It does not feel empathy. It does not experience life. It does not understand the meaning behind silence, body language, or emotion.
Counselling is not simply the transfer of information.
It is a human relationship.
Research consistently shows that one of the strongest predictors of positive counselling outcomes is the quality of the therapeutic relationship itself. The trust, safety, understanding, and connection between counsellor and client often matter more than the specific techniques being used.
That is something AI cannot replicate.
Where I see the future is not AI replacing counsellors, but AI becoming a valuable tool that supports both counsellors and clients.
Used well, AI can help people organise their thoughts, improve mental health literacy, and prepare for counselling sessions. It can enhance the therapeutic process.
Used poorly, it risks becoming a substitute for the very human connection many people need.
The future of counselling is unlikely to be human or artificial.
It will be human and artificial working together.
The challenge for our profession is to ensure that technology enhances humanity rather than replaces it.
What are your thoughts? Could AI ever replace the therapeutic relationship?