RolesCounsellor

Counsellor jobs in Australia

20 current roles available

About Counsellor roles

Counselling in Australia is a broad field practiced by professionals from a range of backgrounds. Counsellors use therapeutic approaches such as person-centred therapy, solution-focused brief therapy, narrative therapy, and CBT to support clients through emotional difficulties. While counselling is not a protected title in Australia, professional membership through PACFA or the Australian Counselling Association (ACA) is expected by most employers.

Counsellors work in community health centres, employee assistance programs (EAPs), schools, GP clinics, headspace centres, family services, and private practice. EAP counselling roles are particularly common and often involve short-term, solution-focused work.

The sector distinguishes counsellors from psychotherapists largely by the depth and duration of work — counsellors typically address current life issues and symptoms, while psychotherapists engage with deeper, longer-term therapeutic processes. Many practitioners hold qualifications in both.

Typical salary

$65k – $95k AUD

EAP and community roles are typically salaried. Private practice earnings vary considerably based on client load and fees charged.

Registration

No statutory registration required. PACFA or ACA professional membership expected by most employers.

Qualifications typically required

  • Diploma or Bachelor of Counselling, or equivalent
  • PACFA or ACA professional membership
  • Working with Children Check (for roles involving minors)
  • NDIS Worker Screening Check for disability sector roles

Career pathway

Counsellors often begin in community or EAP roles and develop a specialisation — trauma, AOD, relationships, or grief. Private practice is a common goal. Further study in psychotherapy, social work, or psychology can expand clinical scope and Medicare billing eligibility.