Therapist Website Without Coding
Create a therapist website without coding
A therapist website does not need to be complicated.
It needs to feel calm, trustworthy, and easy to act on.
Most visitors are not comparing layout ideas. They are asking quieter questions:
- Can this person help me?
- Do I feel safe here?
- How do I take the next step?
What people look for on a therapist website
When a prospective client lands on your site, they usually want four things quickly:
- who you help
- how you work
- practical details
- a clear next step
If those are obvious, the structure is working.
A trust-first structure that works
For most therapists, this structure is more than enough:
- Home
- Approach
- Services
- FAQ
- Contact
Home
Briefly state:
- who you work with
- what you help with
- the main outcome
- one clear action such as "Book an intro call"
Approach
Explain your modality in accessible language. Avoid long academic explanations. Focus on how sessions feel and what clients can expect.
Services
List:
- session format
- duration
- pricing or "contact for details"
- availability notes
FAQ
Answer common concerns:
- "What if I have never done therapy before?"
- "How do online sessions work?"
- "Do you work with specific conditions?"
Contact
One clear path. Email, booking link, or WhatsApp. Not five competing options.
A simpler way to launch and update
You do not need to manage templates or plugins to create a therapist website without coding.
With Publio, you can:
- Describe your modality and client profile.
- Review the generated structure and draft copy.
- Adjust tone and practical details in plain language.
- Publish.
A realistic starting brief might look like this:
I am a CBT therapist for adults with anxiety.
Offer in-person sessions in Stockholm and online.
Tone should feel calm and practical.
Primary action: book an intro call.
You can then request changes such as:
- "Make the homepage shorter."
- "Add a section about social anxiety."
- "Clarify that I work with young professionals."
No technical panel. Just content adjustments.
Common mistakes to avoid
- writing a theory-heavy homepage before explaining who you help
- hiding the contact path at the bottom
- leaving availability or pricing unclear
- giving too many CTA choices
- letting outdated information sit for months
If you are still at the launch stage, start with Create a website without coding.
If frequent updates feel like the blocker, continue with How to update your website without a developer.
FAQ
Should therapists list prices?
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. The key is to remove unnecessary uncertainty. If you do not want full pricing on-page, make the next step clear.
How much text is enough?
Usually less than you think. Clarity matters more than volume.
Do I need multiple pages?
Not always. A strong one-page site can be enough if it covers trust, services, and contact clearly.
Final thought
A therapist website does not need to impress. It needs to feel safe, clear, and current.
If you can update it easily, you are more likely to keep it aligned with your real work.