What Issues Does Relationship Counselling Address at Cadabam'S?
Relationship counselling at Cadabam's helps couples with a wide range of specific concerns. These include communication breakdown, infidelity and trust issues, intimacy problems, separation or divorce, and blended-family challenges. It also supports couples facing long-distance relationship stress, cultural and family pressure, and those seeking pre-marital counselling before marriage. Whatever the concern, the goal is the same — to help partners understand each other and rebuild a healthy, supportive relationship.
How Long Does Relationship Counselling Take? What Does It Cost?
Most couples engage in 10–12 sessions of relationship counselling, though some benefit from as few as 6 and others from 20 or more. The first session is an assessment that shapes the treatment plan. Research indicates that couples therapy lasting 8–15 sessions tends to produce meaningful improvement.
On cost, a psychiatric consultation at Cadabam's starts from around ₹1,200, and the cost of a full therapy programme varies with its length and intensity. Because pricing depends on the plan, we encourage couples to talk to a psychiatrist for current figures and guidance.
Online vs in-Person Relationship Counselling: Which Is Right for You?
Cadabam's offers both formats, so couples can choose what fits. In-person sessions at our Bangalore and Hyderabad centres are well suited to severe trauma, a concurrent psychiatric diagnosis, or family sessions that need everyone in one room. Online relationship counselling suits long-distance couples, those with scheduling constraints, and early-stage issues. Both formats are delivered with the same clinical supervision, so the choice is about practicality rather than quality of care.
When Should a Couple Seek Professional Relationship Counselling?
Couples often wait too long. Early warning signs that counselling could help include repeated arguments about the same issue, emotional disconnection, loss of intimacy, constant criticism, stonewalling, or one partner consistently withdrawing. Studies suggest couples wait an average of around six years after problems begin before seeking therapy — and earlier help leads to better outcomes. Seeking counselling early is a sign of commitment to the relationship, not a sign of failure.