If you have been searching for counselling courses, you have probably come across free options alongside programmes that cost several hundred pounds. It is a fair question to ask: what is the difference, and does it matter?
This post is an honest answer to that question.
Free counselling courses — whether offered by local colleges, online platforms, or distance learning providers — can be a useful introduction to the subject. They are low risk, accessible, and a reasonable way to explore whether counselling interests you before committing time and money to something more substantial.
There is nothing wrong with starting there.
The limitations become significant the moment you start thinking about counselling as a profession.
Most free counselling courses are delivered via distance learning - pre-recorded content you work through at your own pace, without live interaction with a tutor or peers. This is where the problem starts.
CPCAB - the UK's only awarding body dedicated solely to counselling - is clear that distance and asynchronous learning is not an appropriate replacement for Guided Learning Hours in core counselling training. In practical terms, this means that a free distance learning course, however well produced, cannot count toward the qualifications you need to practise professionally as a counsellor.
This is why CPCAB requires that counselling training happens live - whether in person or online sessions - where tutor and students are present together in real time. It is also why approved Level 4 centres, including those offering BACP-approved Diploma programmes, will not accept distance learning qualifications as entry onto a Level 4 programme. A free course completed at your own pace, however thorough its content, does not meet this requirement - and will not get you onto a professional training pathway.
Counselling is a relational discipline. You learn it by doing it - in real time, with real people, receiving real feedback. Skills practice, group dynamics, peer challenge, and the experience of being genuinely seen and heard by others in a learning environment are not incidental to counselling training. They are central to it.
A distance learning course, however thorough its written content, cannot replicate this.
A CPCAB-awarded qualification, such as the Level 2 Certificate in Counselling Skills, gives you:
It is also worth knowing that the Level 4 Diploma in Therapeutic Counselling — the qualification that leads to professional registration — requires a minimum of 75% face-to-face delivery. A training pathway built on distance learning cannot meet this requirement.
Yes, in the right context. If you are genuinely unsure whether counselling is for you and want a low-cost way to explore the subject, a free introductory course can be a useful first step.
But if you are serious about becoming a counsellor - if you want to sit with clients, gain professional registration, and build a practice - you might be wise to follow a training pathway that is built on nationally recognised, live qualifications from the start.
The Level 2 Certificate in Counselling Skills at The Counsellor's Path is delivered by a CPCAB-approved centre, taught in small groups by practising counsellors, and is the beginning of a clear route to professional qualification.
If you would like to talk through whether it is the right fit for you, we would be glad to hear from you.