Podcasting is one of those things every therapist asks me about. Should I start one? My honest take: it can work incredibly well, but most therapists overestimate how much time it takes and underestimate what it requires to actually drive clients. For therapists, a podcast offers a unique opportunity: it lets potential clients hear your voice, understand your perspective, and develop a sense of familiarity before ever scheduling a session. This pre-built rapport can shorten the time from inquiry to booked client.
But podcasting also requires significant time investment. Recording, editing, publishing, and promoting a podcast takes 4-8 hours per episode. Before starting a podcast, you need to evaluate whether that time investment aligns with your practice goals or whether your time would be better spent on other marketing channels.
This guide evaluates podcasting for therapists from a practical perspective. It covers what it takes to start, what content works, and how to decide if podcasting is right for your practice.
Should Therapists Start a Podcast? The Honest Assessment
Podcasting works best for therapists who meet one or more of these criteria: you have an existing audience, you enjoy long-form conversation, you have a specific niche audience, or you can leverage guest appearances to cross-promote with other professionals.
For most therapists in private practice, podcasting is not the highest-return use of marketing time. The same 8 hours spent on podcast production could produce multiple blog posts, several social media videos, or significant directory optimization work. These activities typically generate more direct client inquiries than a podcast.
However, podcasting can be valuable for therapists who want to build a broader brand, publish a book, or establish themselves as a thought leader in a specific niche. If your goals extend beyond filling your private practice caseload, podcasting may be worth the investment.
| Factor | Podcast | Blog | YouTube Video |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time per episode/post | 4-8 hours | 1-3 hours | 1-2 hours |
| SEO value | Low-Medium | Very High | High |
| Client inquiries generated | Low-Medium | High | Medium-High |
| Authority building | High | High | High |
| Barrier to entry | Medium | Low | Low |
| Preferred by audience | Commuters, multitaskers | Readers, searchers | Visual learners |
If You Start a Podcast: What Format Works Best
The solo podcast format works best for therapists. You do not need to coordinate guest schedules, and you can record when your calendar allows. Solo episodes also give you complete control over the content, which is important when discussing therapeutic concepts that require careful framing.
Each episode should answer one question or cover one topic. The ideal episode length is 20-30 minutes. This is long enough to provide meaningful depth but short enough that busy professionals can listen during a commute or walk.
Start your episodes with a brief personal connection to the topic. Share why this subject matters to you or what you have observed in your practice. This personal framing differentiates your podcast from generic mental health content.
Episode Topic Ideas for Therapist Podcasters
- What actually happens in a first therapy session
- Common misconceptions about anxiety and how to recognize it
- How to know if your relationship is worth saving
- The difference between a therapist and a coach
- Signs of burnout that professionals miss
- How to talk to your partner about going to therapy
- Why some people benefit from therapy and others do not
- What trauma-informed care actually means
Podcast Equipment and Setup
Starting a podcast requires minimal equipment. A decent USB microphone is the only essential purchase. The Blue Yeti, Audio-Technica ATR2100x, or Rode NT-USB are reliable options in the $100-150 range. Do not use your laptop’s built-in microphone. Poor audio quality is the most common reason listeners stop listening.
Record in a quiet room with soft surfaces to reduce echo. A carpeted room with curtains, a couch, and bookshelves naturally dampens sound. If your room is echoey, hang a blanket behind your recording position.
Use free recording software like Audacity or GarageBand. Edit out long pauses, ums, and mistakes. Keep the editing simple. Over-editing removes the natural conversational quality that makes podcasts engaging.
Podcast Publishing and Distribution
You need a podcast hosting platform to distribute your episodes to Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other directories. Buzzsprout (free tier with limited hours, paid from $12/month), RedCircle (free), and Podbean (free tier available) are popular options for beginners. (Anchor/Spotify for Podcasters was discontinued in June 2024 — current alternatives have replaced it.) These platforms handle the technical aspects of RSS feed generation and distribution.
Publish episodes weekly or bi-weekly. Consistency matters more than frequency. A bi-weekly podcast that reliably publishes every two weeks outperforms a weekly podcast that frequently misses its schedule.
Write a show notes page for each episode. The show notes should include a summary of the episode, key takeaways, and links to resources mentioned. This show notes page becomes a blog post on your website, which contributes to your content strategy and provides SEO value.
Promoting Your Podcast
Podcast discovery is difficult. Most podcast growth comes from cross-promotion and existing audiences, not from organic discovery within podcast directories. Your existing clients, website visitors, and social media followers are your primary audience.
Share each episode on all your social media platforms. Create audiogram clips (short video snippets of your audio) for Instagram and LinkedIn. Transcribe episodes and post excerpts as social media content. Include a link to your podcast in your email signature and newsletter.
If you can consistently book guests, their audiences become your audience. Each guest will share the episode with their followers. Guest-based episodes also reduce your content creation burden because the guest does half the talking.
Podcast SEO: Getting Found in Search
Podcasts have limited SEO value compared to written content. However, the show notes page on your website can rank in Google. Optimize your show notes with a keyword-rich title, a 200-word summary using your target keyword, and clear headings.
Transcribe each episode and publish the full transcript on your website. The transcript adds significant keyword-rich text that Google can index. Some podcast hosting platforms offer automatic transcription for a fee.
Your podcast title and episode titles should include keywords your ideal clients search for. A podcast titled “The Anxiety Therapist” with episodes like “How to Stop Panic Attacks: A Therapist Explains” has better SEO potential than “The Mental Health Hour” with vague episode titles.
| Podcast Element | SEO Optimization |
|---|---|
| Podcast title | Include your niche keyword and format |
| Episode title | Use the exact question or topic someone would search for |
| Show notes | 200+ words with keyword in first sentence and headings |
| Full transcript | Publish on website for full keyword indexing |
| Backlinks | Submit to podcast directories and guest on other shows |
Podcasting vs. YouTube: Which Should You Choose?
Many therapists debate whether to start a podcast or a YouTube channel. The decision depends on your content style and audience preferences.
Choose YouTube if: you are comfortable on camera, you want SEO value from video, you can repurpose content into short-form clips, or your ideal clients are under 40.
Choose a podcast if: you prefer audio-only content, you are not comfortable on camera, your ideal clients are commuters or multitaskers, or you want to establish yourself as an expert in a specific niche.
If you cannot decide, film your podcast episodes as video and publish both the audio version on podcast platforms and the video version on YouTube. Many successful podcasters do this, maximizing their reach with a single content creation session.
Being a Podcast Guest Instead of Hosting Your Own
If the time commitment of hosting your own podcast feels overwhelming, consider being a guest on other podcasts. This approach requires less time, gives you access to existing audiences, and builds your authority without ongoing production work.
Identify podcasts that serve your ideal clients. If you specialize in couples therapy, find relationship podcasts. If you work with anxious professionals, find career or productivity podcasts. Pitch yourself as a guest with specific episode topics that serve the host’s audience.
One podcast guest appearance can generate client inquiries for months if the episode remains in the host’s catalog. Prepare a strong bio and talking points. Offer listeners a free consultation or resource. Track which guest appearances drive website traffic and inquiries.
For guidance on positioning yourself as an expert, see the guide on E-E-A-T for therapists. Podcast guest appearances are a powerful way to demonstrate Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness, the qualities Google uses to evaluate content creators.
Making the Decision: Should You Start a Podcast?
Answer these three questions honestly before starting a podcast. If you answer yes to at least two, a podcast may be right for you.
- Can you commit 4-8 hours per week to podcast production for at least six months?
- Do you have a clear niche topic that an audience would seek out?
- Are you willing to promote your podcast consistently across multiple channels?
If you answered no to two or more of these questions, focus your marketing energy on written content, directory optimization, and short-form video instead. These channels will generate more client inquiries for less time investment.
Remember that your primary goal as a private practice therapist is to fill your caseload, not to build a media brand. Choose marketing activities that directly connect with potential clients in your area. For most therapists, that means prioritising SEO, directories, and social media over podcasting.