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What is parenting therapy? Healing family conflict

Parenting therapy can help ease family conflict. Learn what it is, who it helps, what sessions are like, and how to find a therapist covered by insurance.

April 17, 2026

By Dr. Juli Fraga, Psy.DClinically reviewed by Michael Heckendorn, LPC, NCC

8 min read

By Dr. Juli Fraga, Psy.DClinically reviewed by Michael Heckendorn, LPC, NCC

Parenting is an emotional roller coaster. Whether your child is three or thirteen, raising kids brings stress at every age. Tense moments like arguments and power struggles can feel overwhelming, but you’re not alone. Research shows that over 30% of parents experience high levels of stress. 

Parent counseling — which may encompass both parent-child interaction therapy, and therapy for parents — can help you navigate these emotions and experiences. This type of therapy helps parents troubleshoot concerns like discipline and setting boundaries. Parenting counseling can also help families move toward calmer communication and healthier dynamics. 

Read on to learn more about the nuts and bolts of parenting counseling, including what sessions look like, and how to find a therapist who’s right for you.

What is parenting counseling?

A parent therapist is a licensed mental health professional who helps you navigate the stressors and challenges that come with raising kids, such as lack of sleep, constantly caring for young children, and balancing the emotional and mental load. 

In addition, your own childhood experiences can influence the way you approach parenting. Parenting therapists work to help you identify how your past affects the way you raise your kids. For example, parents who were brought up in homes where conflict was swept under the rug may feel unprepared when their kids argue or talk back. 

It’s important to note that parenting can lead to mental health conditions or be tied to an adjustment disorder or post-partum depression, but parenting on its own is not a diagnosis or billable condition.

That said, parenting therapy provides you with the necessary tools, guidance, and support to drive change in your family. Therapists also help you work through emotions like parental guilt, mom rage, and sadness. In a non-judgmental and supportive space, parenting counselors help you take active steps toward change. 

Benefits of parenting therapy

Parenting counseling can bring many benefits for caregivers and their children. Here are a few common benefits of seeing a therapist

  • Improved parent/child communication: Communication breakdowns, such as avoiding a thorny issue or losing it when your teen rolls their eyes, can make problem-solving and conflict resolution challenging. Parenting therapists (also referred to as parent counselors) help you resolve these setbacks. They teach you how to approach communication in ways that help you and your child feel less defensive and more open to each other’s perspectives. 
  • Better behavior management and discipline strategies: If your child’s behavior is challenging, parenting therapy can teach you different discipline strategies. Parents learn how to set consistent boundaries without being punitive, and how to use positive reinforcement in empowering ways. 
  • Improved parent-child relationship: Your therapist or psychologist can help you and your child repair any ruptures or misunderstandings in your relationship, which can help strengthen your emotional connection. 
  • Improved emotional regulation: Parents are affected by their children’s emotions. You may feel enraged when your kid yells at you, or sad when they face setbacks. Parenting therapy teaches you how to identify your triggers, so you can regulate overwhelming emotions when they arise. 

What should you expect from parenting counseling?

Therapy can be helpful for parents who are going through a divorce or trying to navigate relationships with their children at any age. While each therapist differs, here are some common components of parent counseling:

  • Investigating family dynamics: Family dynamics can affect your parent style or the way you raise your child. Divorced parents may need support with co-parenting, while larger families may need help troubleshooting conflicts between their kids. Your early childhood experiences can shape your current family dynamic. Your therapist or psychologist will help you identify how your past influences your current family relationships.
  • Goal setting: Goal-setting is an important part of any type of therapy. Once the therapist learns about your concerns, they’ll ask about your goals. Goals may be interpersonal, such as improving communication or reducing family conflict. Or they can be related to an aspect of your child’s development, such as taming tantrums or navigating puberty. 
  • Skill-building for parenting challenges: Whether it’s a different approach to discipline or responding to your child’s emotions differently, parenting therapy provides new skills so that you can reach your goals. 
  • Coaching on conversations and conflicts: Conflicts are impasses that can make you and your child feel stuck or discouraged. Your therapist will help you navigate conversations with communication strategies, such as using “I” statements and not overreacting when tension mounts. 
  • Practice between sessions: Parent therapists will give you “homework,” which helps you practice your new skills between sessions. This can include discipline strategies, communication tools, or emotional regulation strategies. 
  • Review and adjustment: Your therapist will revisit your goals and adjust your treatment plan as needed. 

Who needs parenting therapy?

Parenting counseling can help both families in crisis and families who simply want stronger communication skills and healthier relationships. Here are five situations where parenting therapy may help.

  • Marital concerns or divorce: Marital concerns and divorce can leave children feeling anxious and worried — and parents often feel guilty when their kids struggle. Therapy can help the family unit work through this stressful time.
  • Ongoing tantrums, defiant behavior, or emotional outbursts: Ongoing outbursts like meltdowns before school or defiant behavior can be challenging to handle. When these stressors escalate, it may be time to find support.
  • Parent burnout: Research shows that over 60% of parents feel burnt out. Financial stress and balancing work and home life can all contribute. Parenting therapy provides support where you can learn ways to cope with stress and turn down the volume on your mental load. 
  • School problems tied to behavior or emotions: When learning challenges or problems at school affect your child’s behavior or emotional well-being, therapy might be able to help. 
  • Major family transitions: Getting through transitions like job loss, moving, and illness are challenging for many families. When things feel uncertain and out-of-control, finding additional support can be anchoring. 
  • Parents with childhood trauma: Surviving past abuse or neglect can influence the way you raise your kids. You may struggle with conflict or fear that you’ll treat your kids similarly. Parenting therapy can help you heal past wounds so that they don’t affect the present moment with your kids. 

What should you expect in terms of duration, cost and results?

Change doesn’t happen overnight. As with learning any new skill, therapy is a process. While many parenting counseling programs are “structured” and provide tools and resources, meeting your goals requires time. 

  • Typical duration: Most short-term counseling models include six to 12 sessions. However, each family’s challenges are different, and therapy may last longer depending on your concern. For example, prolonged stressors like grief or divorce may require more ongoing support. 
  • Typical cost expectations: “Parenting” on its own is not a billable condition, therefore “parenting therapy,” isn’t something that’s covered by insurance. However, Headway providers treat diagnosable mental health conditions — including many that result from parenting — with evidence-based practices. At Headway, you can find a provider who accepts your insurance, which makes out-of-pocket costs more affordable. 
  • What results can realistically look like: While some families feel better after a few sessions, change often occurs over a number of weeks. Your therapist will teach you new skills and provide new tools that you can implement after each session. 

FAQs

What happens in co-parenting counseling — and how is it similar to parenting therapy?

Co-parenting is a type of parenting therapy, but it’s specific to parents who are separated, divorced, or were never partnered to begin with. It helps parents align on their goals, communication, and approach to parenting. Co-parenting therapy helps parents work together more effectively. 

What are the different styles of parenting?

  • Authoritarian parenting: These parents like to take charge, often dismissing their child’s input when making decisions. For authoritarian parents, “no means no.” While boundary-setting may not be challenging, finding flexibility may not come naturally. 
  • Authoritative parenting: Known as "democratic parenting,” authoritative parents convey empathy, understanding, and acceptance. These parents view their child’s mistakes or hardships as opportunities for growth and take their child’s needs and feelings into account. This is the recommended parenting style. 
  • Permissive parenting: Permissive parents are often empathetic and loving, but struggle to set boundaries and enforce rules. This parenting style can make a child feel overwhelmed or anxious, as boundaries help kids feel safe. Parenting therapy can help permissive parents become more authoritative. 
  • Uninvolved parenting: Uninvolved parents meet their child’s basic needs but keep an arm's length when it comes to their lives. They don’t provide punishment or praise. Parenting counseling can help uninvolved parents become more engaged in loving, supportive ways. 

What are some common parenting hardships?

Parenting is hard — and one of the biggest challenges is just how much mental and emotional energy it takes. Interestingly, today's parents actually spend more time with their kids than previous generations did, yet they also report feeling more stressed.

Then there's the financial pressure, the emotional weight, the loss of any real "me time," and the constant low-grade worry about your child's future. It adds up fast.

But struggle doesn't mean you're failing. Hardships are just part of the deal when you're raising a child. If anything, feeling overwhelmed is less a sign that something's wrong with you and more a signal that a little extra support could go a long way.

Find the right therapist for you with Headway

Parenting therapy can help families move towards healthier communication and deeper harmony. It can also reduce day-to-day conflict and improve family relationships. 

At Headway, we help you find an in-network therapist who fits your needs. You’ll receive an estimated cost with insurance, choose a provider based on fit, and book an appointment without having to navigate insurance logistics on your own. You’ll find a therapist you love at a price you can afford.

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.

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