Key Takeaways
- Confidentiality is crucial in therapy, ensuring what you share remains private between you and your counsellor.
- It fosters a safe environment, builds trust, supports honest exploration, and protects your autonomy.
- Counsellors might break confidentiality if there’s a risk of serious harm to you or others, safeguarding concerns, or legal obligations.
- Ethical counsellors clearly communicate the limits of confidentiality and handle any breaches with care and respect for your dignity.
- Online counselling also emphasizes confidentiality through secure platforms and adherence to data protection regulations.
Estimated reading time: 6 minutes
If you’re thinking about starting therapy, one of the most common — and understandable — questions is:
“Will what I say stay private?”
Confidentiality sits at the heart of counselling. It’s not just a professional rule — it’s what makes therapy feel safe enough for people to speak honestly, especially about things they may never have shared before.
At Affordable Counselling Network (ACN), we often hear clients worry about being judged, exposed, or not fully understood. Confidentiality is one of the key foundations that helps reduce that fear.
What Is Confidentiality in Counselling?
Confidentiality means that what you share in therapy stays between you and your counsellor.
This includes:
- What you talk about in sessions
- Personal information about your life
- Your identity as a client
Counsellors are ethically required to protect this information and not share it without your permission.
In the UK, confidentiality is guided by professional bodies such as:
- BACP (https://www.bacp.co.uk/about-therapy/)
- UKCP (https://www.psychotherapy.org.uk/)
- NCPS (https://ncps.com/)
These organisations provide ethical frameworks that emphasise privacy, safety, and client wellbeing.
Why Confidentiality Is So Important
1. It Creates Safety
Many people come to therapy holding things they’ve never said out loud.
Confidentiality helps create a space where you can:
- Speak openly without fear of consequences
- Explore difficult or painful experiences
- Be honest about thoughts and feelings
Without that sense of safety, therapy can feel limited or surface-level.
2. It Builds Trust
The relationship between you and your counsellor is central to therapy.
Trust develops when you feel:
- Your privacy is respected
- Your information is handled carefully
- Your story is not being shared elsewhere
In practice, we often see that when clients feel confident in confidentiality, they are able to go deeper more quickly in their work.
3. It Supports Honest Exploration
Confidentiality allows you to bring parts of yourself that might feel:
- Shameful
- Confusing
- Contradictory
Therapy isn’t about being “good” — it’s about being real.
Knowing your words won’t leave the room makes that possible.
4. It Protects Your Autonomy
Confidentiality means you stay in control of your story.
You decide:
- What to share
- When to share it
- Who else (if anyone) knows
This is especially important if you’re navigating complex relationships or sensitive situations.
When Can Confidentiality Be Broken? (Ethical Limits Explained)
Confidentiality is a core principle in counselling — but it is not absolute.
Ethically, counsellors may need to break confidentiality in specific situations where safety overrides privacy.
These include:
1. Risk of Serious Harm to You
If a counsellor believes you are at immediate or serious risk of harm, they may need to share information to help keep you safe.
This might include:
- Suicidal intent with a clear plan
- Immediate risk to your physical safety
Where possible, this would be discussed with you first.
2. Risk of Harm to Others
If there is a credible risk that someone else may be harmed, a counsellor has an ethical duty to act.
For example:
- Threats of serious violence
- Risk to identifiable individuals
Again, the aim is always to prevent harm — not to punish or expose.
3. Safeguarding Concerns
Counsellors have a legal and ethical responsibility to protect:
- Children
- Vulnerable adults
If there are concerns about abuse, neglect, or exploitation, information may need to be shared with appropriate services.
4. Legal Requirements
In rare cases, counsellors may be required by law to disclose information, such as:
- Court orders
- Legal investigations
These situations are uncommon, but they are part of the wider legal framework counsellors work within.
How Ethical Counsellors Handle Breaking Confidentiality
Breaking confidentiality is never taken lightly.
Ethically, a counsellor should:
- Explain the limits of confidentiality clearly at the start
- Only share the minimum necessary information
- Involve you in the process wherever possible
- Prioritise your safety and dignity throughout
At ACN, we emphasise transparency — you should never feel that confidentiality is unclear or unpredictable.
Confidentiality and Supervision
All ethical counsellors work with a supervisor.
This means they may discuss their work, but:
- Your identity is protected (anonymised)
- The focus is on improving care
- Confidentiality is still maintained
Supervision is a key part of safe and ethical practice.
Confidentiality in Online Counselling
With more therapy happening online, confidentiality also includes:
- Secure platforms for sessions
- Private, quiet environments
- Safe storage of notes and records
At ACN, counsellors are expected to follow good practice around data protection and GDPR.
Our Approach at Affordable Counselling Network
Because therapy involves vulnerability, we believe confidentiality should be clear, consistent, and ethically grounded.
All ACN counsellors:
- Work within recognised ethical frameworks
- Receive regular supervision
- Are trained in managing confidentiality and safeguarding
- Are transparent about when confidentiality may need to be broken
We also encourage clients to ask questions — because understanding these boundaries is part of feeling safe.
Yes, counselling is confidential in the UK in most situations. What you share in therapy is usually kept private between you and your counsellor, unless there is a serious risk of harm, a safeguarding concern, or a legal reason that requires information to be shared.
Confidentiality in counselling means that your personal information and what you talk about in sessions are kept private. This helps create a safe space where you can speak honestly and explore difficult thoughts, feelings, and experiences.
A counsellor may need to break confidentiality if there is a serious risk of harm to you or someone else, if there are safeguarding concerns involving a child or vulnerable adult, or if they are legally required to disclose information. Counsellors should explain these limits clearly during your first meeting.
No, a counsellor cannot usually tell your family what you said without your permission. Confidentiality means your sessions are private, unless there is an ethical or legal reason to share information for safety reasons.
No, counsellors do not report everything. Counselling is designed to be a confidential space. Information is only shared in limited situations where there is serious concern about safety, safeguarding, or legal obligations.
Counsellors may discuss their client work in supervision, but this is done professionally and with care. Identifying details are usually limited or removed, and the purpose is to support safe, ethical, and effective therapy. These sessions are also confidential.
Confidentiality is important because it helps people feel safe enough to speak openly. It builds trust, protects privacy, and makes it easier to explore sensitive, painful, or complex issues honestly.

