Counsel.day and couples therapy are not the same thing.
Counsel.day is a data tool for one specific decision. Couples therapy is a guided conversation with a trained third party. Neither replaces the other. Many couples who need one will benefit from both, in sequence: the verdict surfaces what the decision really sits on; the therapist holds the room while you talk about it. This page is the honest comparison.
If your relationship needs the room held while you speak, a therapist holds rooms. If your decision needs the data captured before you speak, Counsel.day captures the data. The verdict is an input to the conversation, not a substitute for it. The two work in sequence, not in opposition.
A short job description for each.
The two tools are often grouped together because they both involve couples and feelings. They sit in different categories. The clearest way to see the difference is to read what each one does, plainly, without the comparison.
Each participant votes privately each evening on the same question, for a duration set at composition. Votes are sealed in the database until the final day. The verdict ships with a five-layer analysis: agreement rate, conviction trajectory, themes from notes, a synthesis paragraph, and one conversation prompt.
Unit of value: the verdict on the final day. Price: $14 USD Solo, $25 USD Couple, $49 USD Family per decision. Cadence: evening · five seconds to two minutes.
A trained clinician holds a regular session (usually weekly, sometimes fortnightly) in which both partners speak about the relationship. The clinician brings a model of how couples work (Gottman, EFT, IFS, psychodynamic, integrative) and uses it to reflect, reframe, and intervene in patterns as they surface in the room.
Unit of value: the session, and the shift between sessions. Price: typically $100 to $300 USD per session, weekly, often for months. Cadence: 50 to 80 minutes, scheduled.
The line at which each tool stops.
The other way to see the difference is to read what each one is not built to do. The honest list is short on both sides.
Counsel.day will not be in the room when you talk. It will not interrupt a familiar argument as it begins. It will not reflect a feeling back to you in a way that lets you hear it differently. It cannot read the body language. It cannot ask a follow-up question. It cannot make space for the partner who is quieter in the room.
Not built by clinicians. Counsel.day is a data tool, built by a data professional with no clinical training. It is not validated, endorsed, or tested by any therapeutic body. It is not a therapeutic intervention.
Therapy will not give you a thirty-day record of where each of you privately stood, day by day, on one specific question. It will not produce a 600-to-1200-word synthesis that names the axis underneath the surface disagreement. It depends on what surfaces in the room, on the day, with both of you present and willing.
The data gap is real. Many sessions begin with a partner reconstructing what they thought about the question two weeks ago. The reconstruction is often shaped by what has happened since.
Where each tool belongs, by the shape of the question.
If you are not sure which you need, the shape of what you are carrying usually tells you. A few honest tests, in plain prose:
The verdict as input to the next session.
The most common path through Counsel.day for couples already in therapy is the same one, in order. Compose the decision with your therapist's knowledge, frame it cleanly, set a duration that matches the weight of the question. Run the period through the next four-to-eight sessions; do not discuss the votes themselves with each other or with the therapist, because the votes are sealed and the therapy session will read the surface argument either way. Open the verdict in private first, read your own analysis, then read it together, then bring the printed PDF to the next session.
What the therapist gets, on the day the verdict arrives, is a clean read of where each partner has privately stood for the last month, the themes in their own words, and one specific opening question. The session that follows is no longer trying to reconstruct what either of you thought; the reconstruction is already on paper. The room is now free to do the work it does best.
The honest one-line summary.
Counsel.day is not a substitute for therapy and therapy is not a substitute for Counsel.day. They are different categories of tool for different categories of problem. If you have one specific decision and the relationship is broadly working, start with Counsel.day. If the pattern is the problem rather than the decision, start with a therapist. If you have both at once, run them in sequence and let the verdict feed the room.
If your search began with one of these words and you are not yet sure which you need, that is a useful answer in itself: read this page once more, and write to hello@counsel.day if you want a second opinion. We will not push you toward Counsel.day if therapy is what your question wants.