She had the diploma.
She had the KCPA registration. She had printed business cards, set up a small office in Westlands, and posted on her WhatsApp status that she was open for bookings.
Then she waited.
For three weeks, the chair opposite her desk stayed empty.
This is the part of becoming a therapist in Kenya that nobody talks about.
The courses prepare you to work with the client. They don’t prepare you for the silence before the client arrives — or for the business, marketing, pricing, and emotional resilience required to build a sustainable practice from scratch.
If you are considering a career in counseling psychology, or if you have recently graduated and are wondering what happens next, this article will tell you what the first year actually looks like. Not the brochure version. The real one.
Month 1–3: The Setup Nobody Warned You About
Before you see your first client, you need infrastructure. Here is what most new practitioners in Kenya have to sort out.
Registration
To practise legally, you need to be registered with the Kenya Counselling and Psychological Association (KCPA). This requires a recognised qualification — which is why accreditation matters.
Clarity’s Diploma in Counseling Psychology is KCPA-accredited (KCPA/INST/0147/019) and NITA-accredited (NITA/TRN/2202). Graduates meet the academic requirements for registration.
Space
You don’t need a fancy office.
Many new therapists in Nairobi start with shared consulting rooms, co-working spaces with private rooms, or home offices. What matters is privacy, quiet, and safety.
Online practice is also viable. It eliminates rent entirely and expands your reach beyond Nairobi — something we explored in our article on how Kenyan therapists support clients abroad through online therapy.
Pricing
This is where most new therapists agonise.
In Nairobi, individual sessions typically range from KES 3,000 to KES 8,000 depending on experience, location, and clientele. New practitioners often start at the lower end.
The discomfort of charging for emotional support is real. It is something your own therapy and supervision should help you process.
Systems
A booking system (even Google Calendar). A way to issue receipts. Informed consent forms. Confidentiality agreements. A referral network.
Our free Private Practice Setup Guide covers each of these in detail.
Months 3–6: The First Clients and the Imposter Syndrome
Your first clients will probably come through personal networks. A friend of a friend. A colleague’s sister. A pastor who heard you trained in counseling.
This is normal. It is how most practices in Kenya begin.
What nobody prepares you for is how it feels.
The weight of someone’s story landing in your lap for the first time outside of practicum. The moment of silence after a client says something devastating, and you aren’t sure what to say next. The drive home after a session, wondering if you said the right thing.
Supervision isn’t optional during this period. It is essential.
Regular clinical supervision gives you a space to process cases, check your blind spots, and build clinical confidence. Clarity offers ongoing supervision for graduates and early-career practitioners.
If you’re wondering what quality training looks like in practice, our article on what you actually learn in a Certificate in Counselling Psychology walks through the real-world application.
Month 6–12: Building Momentum
By the second half of your first year, patterns emerge. You start to understand your clinical strengths. Maybe you are particularly effective with grief. Or anxiety. Or couples.
You develop a rhythm. Your notes improve. Your confidence — slowly, steadily — grows.
This is also when the business side demands more attention.
Referral Networks
The therapists who build sustainable practices are the ones who build relationships with doctors, schools, churches, HR departments, and other therapists.
Referrals are the lifeblood of private practice. They come from trust, not advertising. Our guide to choosing therapists in Kenya explains how clients find practitioners — and how to make sure they find you.
Diversification
Individual therapy alone may not pay the bills in year one.
Many Kenyan practitioners supplement with workshop facilitation, EAP contracts, school counseling partnerships, or group therapy.
Whatever you did before counseling becomes an asset here. Your banking background. Your teaching experience. Your HR career. If you’re curious about how career changers make the transition, read Moses’s story of moving from corporate banking to counseling psychology.
The Money Conversation
Let us be honest.
Most new therapists in Kenya don’t earn what they earned in their previous careers during year one.
A realistic expectation: 10–15 clients per week at KES 3,500–5,000 per session gives a gross monthly income of approximately KES 140,000–300,000 before expenses. Some earn more through corporate contracts. Some earn less while building.
The trajectory matters more than the starting point.
What I Wish Someone Had Told Me
We asked Clarity graduates what they wish they had known before their first year. Here is what they said:
Is This Career For You?
Still reading? Good. Because that tells me something about you.
You’re not just curious. You’re restless. Something in your current career isn’t fitting anymore, and you can’t quite name what’s pulling you toward this work.
Here’s what I’ll say: this career isn’t for everyone. It demands emotional honesty. Willingness to be supervised. Tolerance for uncertainty. Capacity for deep, sustained empathy with strangers. And patience — with your clients, with the system, and with yourself.
But the demand for trained therapists in Kenya is growing. Fast.
Corporate organisations are investing in employee wellness. Schools are recognising the need. The mental health conversation has shifted dramatically in the last five years — and the basic counseling skills every Kenyan should have are more relevant than ever.
The infrastructure is being built. The Counsellors and Psychologists Registration Board now provides a formal regulatory framework, and organisations like KCPA continue to raise professional standards.
The question is whether you want to be part of building it.
Not sure where to begin? Our article on whether you can study psychology without a psychology background answers the most common questions career changers ask.
Grace started with the same questions you’re asking right now. And she’ll tell you: the only thing she regrets is not starting sooner.