Find a Polyamory Therapist Serving Perth
Explore online therapists serving people in Perth who have experience supporting polyamory and ethical non-monogamy. Use the listing filters to compare therapeutic approaches, areas of focus and session formats. Contact therapists directly to ask about suitability, availability and fees.
Tracey Wisdom
AASW
Australia - 7yrs exp
How therapy can support people practicing polyamory
If you are exploring polyamory or managing established non-monogamous relationships, therapy can offer a focused space to unpack relationship agreements, communication patterns and emotional responses. You can bring questions about jealousy, compersion, time management and parenting arrangements to sessions, and work with a therapist or counsellor to develop strategies that fit your values and lifestyle. Therapy is also a place to reflect on how cultural expectations and past experiences shape your needs and boundaries, helping you negotiate relationships with more clarity and mutual respect.
Therapeutic work may involve skill building in areas such as assertive communication, conflict resolution and negotiating consent. You might explore attachment patterns and how they influence behaviour in multiple relationships, or address practical issues like managing calendars, disclosures and health conversations. While therapy does not prescribe a single model of relationship, it can help you identify what feels sustainable and meaningful, and support you in making adjustments when circumstances or priorities change.
What to look for when comparing therapists
When you compare therapists serving people in Perth, consider the kinds of experience and training that matter to you. Some practitioners explicitly specialise in consensual non-monogamy, queer and kink-affirming practice, or relationship counselling, while others integrate an open-minded approach across broader specialties. Look for language in profiles that indicates familiarity with polyamory, an interest in ethical non-monogamy and a willingness to work with diverse relationship configurations. That language can be a helpful signal that a therapist has spent time learning about the specific dynamics you are likely to discuss.
Approach matters as much as credentials. You may prefer someone who works from an attachment-informed lens, systemic family therapy, cognitive behavioural methods, emotion-focused therapy or somatic approaches. Think about whether you want structured skill-based work or exploratory, insight-oriented sessions. Consider also practical factors such as session length, whether joint sessions with multiple partners are offered, and how the therapist handles cancellations and fees. Choosing a therapist is a personal process, and the right match often reflects both shared values and a sense of being heard in early conversations.
Questions to ask and topics to clarify in early conversations
Before you commit to ongoing sessions, it can be useful to ask specific questions so you know how a therapist might support your situation. You might enquire about their experience with polyamory, how they understand consent and agreements, and whether they have worked with relationship structures that include multiple partners or changing boundaries. Ask how they approach sessions involving more than one person, and what they recommend if partners want separate and joint work. These conversations can give you a clearer sense of whether the therapist's style matches your needs.
Also discuss practical and ethical considerations such as how the therapist manages information-sharing boundaries expectations within multi-partner sessions, how they handle referrals if specialised sexual health or legal advice is needed, and what their policy is on appointment cancellations. You can ask for examples of interventions they commonly use when working through jealousy, boundary setting or communication breakdowns. Early exchanges set the tone for collaborative work, and you should feel comfortable raising any concerns about fit or approach before proceeding.
What to expect from online therapy and practical considerations
Online therapy can be a flexible way to access practitioners who serve people in Perth without relying on physical proximity. You can choose video, phone or text-based sessions depending on what helps you participate most fully. When preparing for online sessions, make sure you have a reliable internet connection and a place where you can talk openly in a safe setting. If you are joining with one or more partners, discuss in advance how you will manage interruptions, turn-taking and technical issues to keep the session productive.
Think about time zones, scheduling and the technology platform that the therapist uses. Clarify paperwork, invoicing and cancellation policies before your first appointment so there are no surprises if plans change. If you are seeking support for issues that intersect with legal, medical or urgent safety concerns, your therapist can advise on appropriate local resources and referrals. Online therapy can be as focused and practical as face-to-face work when you and the therapist agree on goals, feedback mechanisms and what success will look like for your relationships.
Finding ongoing support and building community resources
Therapeutic support is one part of a broader network that can help you thrive in polyamorous relationships. You may find additional benefit from peer-led groups, relationship education workshops and reputable reading or podcast recommendations that normalise the learning curve of non-monogamy. When you look for ongoing support, consider how a therapist collaborates with other services, whether they provide referrals to allied practitioners and how they support your access to community resources tailored to ethical non-monogamy.
As your relationships evolve, your needs may change - from short-term coaching around a particular event to longer-term counselling for deeper patterns. You can use the first few sessions to set clear goals and review progress periodically. If you change therapists, transferring care is a normal part of the process; good continuity comes from clear communication about objectives and any agreed-upon next steps. Remember that finding the right therapeutic fit can take time, and the directory is a tool to help you compare options and begin conversations with professionals who serve people in Perth and beyond.