Can a Life Coach treat clients for mental health issues?

In recent years, life coaching has become a popular avenue for personal growth, self-awareness, and success. But a crucial question often arises can a life coach treat clients for mental health issues? To answer this, it’s essential to understand the distinction between personal development and clinical mental health treatment, as well as how coaching and therapy can complement one another.

Defining mental health issues vs mental health illness

Mental health issues refer to a broad spectrum of emotional, psychological, and social challenges that affect how we think, feel, and behave. These may include struggles with confidence, stress, anxiety, or self-esteem, common areas life coaches work with. Mental health issues can impact daily functioning, relationships, and overall well-being, but do not always meet the criteria for a clinical diagnosis.

Mental health illness, on the other hand, is a diagnosable condition defined by specific symptoms and patterns that meet criteria set out by medical standards such as the DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders). Examples include Generalised Anxiety Disorder, Major Depressive Disorder, Bipolar Disorder, PTSD, and OCD.

Understanding this distinction is crucial. While life coaches can support clients experiencing mental health issues, they are not qualified to diagnose or treat mental health illnesses, unless they hold additional therapeutic or clinical qualifications.

What can a Life Coach help with?

Life coaching is primarily future-focused, empowering clients to achieve personal or professional goals, overcome limiting beliefs, build confidence, and create positive lifestyle changes. Many coaches, especially Transformation Coaches, are also trained in techniques that delve into subconscious blocks or past traumas  provided they are qualified to do so and work within ethical boundaries.

In my experience as a Transformation Coach, many clients present with challenges rooted in stress, anxiety, or low self-worth. Issues that can significantly affect mental well-being but may not constitute a mental health illness requiring medical intervention.

For example, coaching can help with:

  • Managing stress and overwhelm
  • Overcoming self-doubt and imposter syndrome
  • Building confidence and resilience
  • Improving relationships and communication
  • Setting boundaries and prioritising self-care
  • Clarifying life purpose and career direction

Where past trauma or deep-rooted limiting beliefs are present, some life coaches (including myself) integrate therapeutic approaches such as HypnotherapyEMDR, or EFT (Tapping), provided they hold the appropriate training.

When is it not appropriate for a Life Coach to work with a client?

A life coach should never work outside their scope of practice. If a client presents with symptoms of a mental health illness such as:

  • Suicidal ideation or self-harm
  • Severe anxiety or panic attacks
  • Clinical depression
  • PTSD with severe flashbacks
  • Psychosis or hallucinations
  • Substance dependency requiring medical detox

…then ethical practice demands that the client be referred to a qualified mental health professional such as a psychologist, psychotherapist, psychiatrist, or GP.

In the UK, services such as the NHS Talking Therapy Service, private therapists, or trauma-informed clinics are equipped to provide clinical support.

Mental health illnesses sometimes require medication

It’s also important to acknowledge that in many cases, mental health illnesses require more than therapy or coaching   they require medical treatment, which may include prescribed medication. This is not a sign of weakness or failure but a medically recognised, evidence-based approach to restoring mental and emotional balance.

For conditions such as:

  • Major Depressive Disorder
  • Bipolar Disorder
  • Severe Anxiety Disorders
  • Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
  • Schizophrenia
  • PTSD with debilitating symptoms

…medication can play a vital role in managing symptoms, stabilising mood, and enabling individuals to engage more effectively in therapy, coaching, or daily life.

Medication options may include:

  • Antidepressants (e.g., SSRIs or SNRIs)
  • Anti-anxiety medications
  • Mood stabilisers
  • Antipsychotic medications

These treatments are prescribed and monitored by qualified medical professionals, such as GPs, psychiatrists, or specialist mental health teams.

As a life coach, it is not within my scope to advise on medication, but I fully support clients who are taking, considering, or adjusting medication as part of their wider mental health care. In fact, when medication helps regulate mood and reduce acute symptoms, it often enhances the client’s ability to benefit from coaching.

How do therapeutic approaches compliment Life Coaching?

Many clients benefit most from a hybrid approach combining the practical, goal-oriented strategies of coaching with therapeutic techniques to process past experiences and unhelpful thought patterns.

Here are some therapeutic approaches often integrated within coaching frameworks (with the right qualifications):

  1. Hypnotherapy

Hypnotherapy accesses the subconscious mind to shift limiting beliefs, reduce anxiety, and build new positive behaviours. It can be particularly powerful in managing stress, phobias, low self-esteem, and trauma-related issues.

  1. EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing)

EMDR is an evidence-based trauma treatment that helps reprocess distressing memories. It’s widely used for PTSD but also for anxiety, confidence issues, and even ADHD when symptoms are compounded by unresolved trauma.

  1. EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique)

Also known as “tapping”, EFT combines elements of cognitive therapy and acupressure to reduce the emotional intensity of negative thoughts, fears, and trauma. It’s an empowering self-regulation tool I often teach clients.

  1. Trauma-Informed Coaching

Coaches trained in trauma-informed practices can hold space for clients to explore emotional blocks without re-traumatising them, providing validation, education, and gentle support while referring to therapists when necessary.

Can Coaching replace Therapy?

No. Coaching is not a replacement for therapy. While it can be deeply transformative, especially for issues like stress management, confidence, or life direction, therapy remains the gold standard for treating diagnosed mental health illnesses, particularly when:

  • Past trauma is unprocessed
  • Emotional dysregulation is severe
  • Mental health symptoms interfere significantly with daily functioning (mental illness)

The most responsible and effective coaches understand this distinction and work collaboratively with therapists, referring clients as needed.

An empowered perspective on healing and growth

Many of my clients come to coaching after or alongside therapy. Once their mental health is stabilised, coaching offers a practical, empowering space to:

  • Rebuild self-belief
  • Set inspiring life goals
  • Develop confidence and resilience
  • Embrace their empowered identity

For others, coaching is the first step toward recognising patterns that may need deeper therapeutic work.

There’s no one-size-fits-all approach. The most important thing is that clients feel safe, seen, and supported whether that’s with a life coach, a therapist, or both.

Final thoughts

Life coaching is a powerful tool for personal growth and overcoming mental health issues, but it is not a treatment for mental health illness. Ethical coaches are trained to recognise this boundary and work alongside, not instead of, qualified mental health professionals.

If you’re unsure which path is right for you, that’s okay. Start by having an honest conversation with a professional you trust.

Hi! I’m Roksana. I’m a life coach for women in St Albans, Hertfordshire. I run face to face and online sessions via Zoom. I also specialise in trauma healing. I’m always happy to answer your questions around any of my methods or approaches. Long term changes begin with a guide who has walked a similar path, has a blueprint, will give you support and accountability every step of the way. If you’re interested to know more then please book a FREE call with me.

Ready for a chat?

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