Is it weird to Google your therapist?
Daniel Martin
Published Jan 16, 2026
There are a number of reasons why you may Google a therapist – it may be as part of a screening process as you are selecting a therapist, it may be out of curiosity about your counsellor, or it might be part of a desire for connection between sessions, especially where attachment is a consideration.
Do clients Google their therapist?
Do therapists Google their patients? Short answer: yes. A new study published on January 15 in the Journal of Clinical Psychology finds that 86% of the therapists interviewed by the study's authors say they sometimes do look up their patients on the Internet.Is it unethical for a therapist to Google a client?
Most therapists agree that Googling a patient before an appointment is discouraged and could constitute an ethical violation, but safety concerns can lead some to take pre-emptive measures.Do people look up their therapist?
Regarding TTG, previous research shows that 54.6% of therapists were aware of being researched online or were content with the notion of TTG [7]. This study supports this result with similar findings; 44% of patients researched their therapists, 80.2% of these searches were conducted online.Is it normal to text your therapist?
“Texting isn't treatment; it's an accessory to it. When therapists start to engage in anything resembling therapy or treatment via text, they're violating a client's boundaries.”Should You Google Your Therapist?
Do therapists think about clients between sessions?
She thinks of you between sessionsThe time between therapy sessions is often marked by thoughtful reflection and feelings about the work, for both you and your therapist. You continue to process your work long after the session ends, taking the work outside of the office to your very real world.
Can you keep in touch with your therapist?
There aren't official guidelines about this for therapists.You might be wondering if your former therapist would even be allowed to be your friend, given how ethically rigorous the mental health field is. The answer is technically yes, but it's generally inadvisable.