Couples therapy is one of the most commonly sought forms of treatment — and one of the most commonly practiced by therapists who were never specifically trained in it. Most graduate programs in clinical psychology, social work, and counseling devote minimal coursework to relational dynamics, systemic theory, or the structured treatment models that research has identified as most effective for couples. The result is a large number of licensed clinicians who accept couples into their practice based on general therapeutic skill rather than demonstrated relational expertise.
This gap matters. Couples therapy is not individual therapy conducted with two people in the room. It requires a fundamentally different clinical orientation: managing competing narratives simultaneously, maintaining balanced alliances, intervening at the system level rather than the individual level, and navigating high emotional reactivity without taking sides. Without specific training in these competencies, even skilled individual therapists can inadvertently escalate conflict, form coalitions with one partner, or fail to create the structural safety that effective couples work demands.
A comprehensive review by Lebow, Chambers, Christensen, and Johnson (2012) in the Journal of Marital and Family Therapy found that couple therapy positively impacts roughly 70% of couples treated, with the strongest controlled-trial evidence supporting structured, couples-specific models — particularly Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT) and behavioral approaches such as Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT). Research on therapist development (Goldberg et al., 2016) also shows that general clinical experience alone does not reliably improve outcomes — one more reason to look for model-specific couples training rather than years in practice alone.
Why couples therapy requires a different skill set
Individual therapy is primarily dyadic: one therapist, one client. The therapist builds rapport with that person, attends to that person's internal experience, and works from that person's perspective. Couples therapy is triadic in nature. The therapist must attend to each partner's experience and to the relational pattern between them — the dynamic that often exists independent of either partner's conscious intent.
Research by Sue Johnson, the developer of Emotionally Focused Therapy, has demonstrated that attachment patterns between partners create self-reinforcing cycles that perpetuate distress. A pursue-withdraw dynamic, for example, is not simply one partner being demanding and the other being avoidant. It is an interactional loop driven by underlying attachment needs that both partners typically misread. Identifying and interrupting these cycles requires training in systemic observation that most individual therapy orientations do not provide.
The infidelity question
No area of couples work illustrates the specialization gap more clearly than infidelity recovery. Affair disclosure introduces a unique set of clinical demands: acute traumatic response in the betrayed partner, shame and defensiveness in the involved partner, the need for structured accountability, and a phased approach to disclosure and trust repair that cannot be improvised.
Research by Baucom, Snyder, and Gordon has produced the most widely studied structured approach to affair recovery, which involves three distinct phases: dealing with the impact of the affair, developing a shared understanding of the context, and making informed decisions about moving forward. Therapists untrained in this or similar models often default to premature forgiveness work, avoidance of affair details, or individual blame assignment — all of which research associates with poorer outcomes and higher rates of treatment dropout.
Atkins, Baucom, and Christensen (2005) found in the Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology that couples in which an affair had been disclosed began therapy significantly more distressed than other couples — yet improved at a faster rate, ending treatment with satisfaction levels comparable to couples who sought help for other reasons. Couples who kept an affair secret during therapy, by contrast, showed little benefit. A five-year follow-up (Marín, Christensen, & Atkins, 2014) reinforced the pattern: 43% of couples with a revealed affair had divorced, versus roughly 80% of couples in which the affair remained secret.
What to look for in a couples specialist
Training in a recognized couples model
The most well-evidenced models for couples therapy include Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT), the Gottman Method, and Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT). Each has a formal training pathway. EFT certification through ICEEFT requires a four-day externship, advanced Core Skills training completed over roughly a year, and supervised clinical work with a certified EFT supervisor, culminating in review of recorded sessions. Gottman Level 1–3 training involves structured workshops with practicum components. A therapist who cannot name their primary couples model — or who describes their approach as simply "eclectic" — likely lacks formal couples training.
A majority-couples caseload
A therapist who sees one or two couples per week alongside a broader individual caseload has less concentrated relational experience than one whose practice centers on couples work. Deliberate practice research suggests that concentrated exposure to a specific clinical population is essential for developing the pattern recognition and in-session responsiveness that complex relational work demands. Ask what percentage of their caseload involves couples.
Specific infidelity training (if applicable)
If you are seeking help after an affair, ask directly whether the therapist has completed training in structured affair recovery. Look for familiarity with the Baucom-Snyder-Gordon model, the Gottman Trust Revival Method, or Esther Perel's approach to relational repair. General couples training, while valuable, does not adequately prepare therapists for the specific clinical demands of infidelity recovery.
Comfort with high-conflict dynamics
Couples in distress often present with intense affect — anger, blame, contempt, withdrawal. A specialized couples therapist has developed the capacity to remain regulated, maintain balance, and intervene structurally during highly reactive moments. This is a skill built through supervised practice, not through reading. Ask about their experience with high-conflict couples and how they manage sessions where emotions escalate.
Questions to ask a prospective couples therapist
- "What couples therapy model do you primarily use, and what is your training in that model?"
- "What percentage of your weekly caseload is couples versus individuals?"
- "Have you completed any specific training in affair recovery?" (if applicable)
- "How do you handle it when partners have very different goals for therapy?"
- "What does a typical course of treatment look like — how many sessions, and what structure do you follow?"
- "Do you participate in ongoing consultation or supervision specific to couples work?"
A note on individual therapy during couples work
It is not uncommon for one or both partners to also be in individual therapy. This can be beneficial, but it introduces clinical complexity that a specialized couples therapist understands how to manage. They will have clear policies about communication between providers, understand the risks of triangulation, and be transparent about how individual disclosures (such as ongoing affairs) are handled within the couples treatment.
A therapist who has not thought carefully about these boundaries is unlikely to have the couples-specific training necessary to navigate them. Their response to questions about concurrent individual therapy is often a useful proxy for their overall level of relational specialization.
The cost of getting this wrong
Couples often wait years before seeking help. The Gottman Institute has long cited an average delay of six years from the onset of significant problems — a figure that traces to an early, unpublished study — while the first large published study on the question (Doherty et al., 2021) found an average delay of about two and a half years, with a substantial minority waiting far longer. By the time most couples arrive, the patterns are entrenched and the margin for error is thin. Working with a therapist who lacks the specific competencies to address these patterns does not just delay progress. In many cases, it depletes the couple's remaining motivation to try again with someone more qualified.
This is not to say that only certified couples specialists can help. But the evidence is clear: structured, model-driven couples therapy delivered by a therapist with specific relational training produces meaningfully better outcomes than general therapy applied to couples. When the relationship itself is the patient, the therapist's relationship expertise matters.
References
- Johnson, S. M. (2004). The Practice of Emotionally Focused Couple Therapy (2nd ed.). Brunner-Routledge.
- Gottman, J. M., & Silver, N. (2015). The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work (revised ed.). Harmony Books.
- Baucom, D. H., Snyder, D. K., & Gordon, K. C. (2009). Helping Couples Get Past the Affair. Guilford Press.
- Atkins, D. C., Eldridge, K. A., Baucom, D. H., & Christensen, A. (2005). Infidelity and behavioral couple therapy: Optimism in the face of betrayal. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 73(1), 144–150.
- Marín, R. A., Christensen, A., & Atkins, D. C. (2014). Infidelity and behavioral couple therapy: Relationship outcomes over 5 years following therapy. Couple and Family Psychology: Research and Practice, 3(1), 1–12.
- Doherty, W. J., Harris, S. M., Hall, E. L., & Hubbard, A. K. (2021). How long do people wait before seeking couples therapy? A research note. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 47(4), 882–890.
- Goldberg, S. B., Rousmaniere, T., Miller, S. D., Whipple, J., Nielsen, S. L., Hoyt, W. T., & Wampold, B. E. (2016). Do psychotherapists improve with time and experience? A longitudinal analysis of outcomes in a clinical setting. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 63(1), 1–11.
- Lebow, J. L., Chambers, A. L., Christensen, A., & Johnson, S. M. (2012). Research on the treatment of couple distress. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 38(1), 145–168.
- Christensen, A., Atkins, D. C., Baucom, B., & Yi, J. (2010). Marital status and satisfaction five years following a randomized clinical trial comparing traditional versus integrative behavioral couple therapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 78(2), 225–235.