Table of Contents
If you’re a therapist, you already know the “extra work” never really ends. Scheduling, notes, session summaries, progress tracking… it adds up fast. That’s why I was curious about Therapartners. In this Therapartners review, I’m going to walk through what it actually does, what stood out to me, and where I think you should be a little cautious before you rely on it in your day-to-day practice.

Therapartners Review: what it’s like in real practice
Therapartners is positioned as an AI-assisted therapist training and workflow tool. The big promise is simple: it helps with the “behind the scenes” stuff—especially transcription, session reporting, and analysis—so you can spend more time actually being present with your client.
Here’s what I noticed when I looked closely at the platform’s workflow (and what you should expect if you try it):
- Session transcripts are generated to reduce manual note-taking. That’s the first time-saver most clinicians will care about.
- Session reports are created to help you track what happened, what themes came up, and where things are headed.
- Session analysis is meant to give you feedback and insights—basically nudges about therapeutic responses and strategies.
- An “AI Partner” provides real-time support, which sounds small until you realize how often you’re thinking, “What should I do next?” mid-session or right after.
Now, I’ll be honest: AI can be helpful, but it’s not a substitute for clinical judgment. If you use it, you’ll want to review outputs the same way you’d proofread anything important—especially when it touches client records.
Key Features (and how they help day-to-day)
- AI Session Transcript for efficient recording management
This is the core feature. Instead of spending your evening re-listening to recordings or typing everything manually, the platform generates transcripts. In practice, this can cut down the “notes backlog” pretty quickly—especially if you see multiple clients per week.
Tip I’d use: Treat the transcript like a first draft. Check speaker labels, make sure key quotes/themes are captured correctly, and don’t assume every word is perfect.
- AI Session Reports for tracking client progress
After a session, you want something that’s readable and useful later. Therapartners’ session reports are designed to summarize what happened and support progress tracking.
What I like about this idea: Progress notes are easier when you’re not starting from scratch every time. If the report is structured well, it can help you spot patterns—like recurring triggers, coping skills that actually “stuck,” or topics that keep resurfacing.
- AI Session Analysis for insightful feedback
This part is aimed at training and skill-building. The platform analyzes sessions and provides insights about therapeutic responses and strategies. If you’re newer to certain modalities, I can see this being genuinely useful as a learning tool.
But here’s my caution: Analysis is only as good as the input and the model’s understanding. You’ll still want to compare it against your own clinical understanding. If the suggestions feel off, that’s not a “you’re wrong” moment—it’s a “the tool might be guessing” moment.
- AI Partner for real-time therapeutic support
The AI Partner feature is meant to provide support when you need it. In a real workflow, that could mean getting prompts for what to ask next, helping you organize reflections, or getting quick guidance for follow-ups.
What I’d personally watch for: whether it keeps your tone consistent and whether it encourages thoughtful questions rather than generic advice. You want support that feels like a clinician’s assistant, not a chat bot that rambles.
Pros and Cons (what’s great, what to watch out for)
Pros
- Time-saving is the headline benefit—automatic transcription and reports can seriously reduce after-session admin.
- Multi-language support is included (English and Chinese are specifically mentioned). If you work across languages, that matters more than most people expect.
- Structured insights can support better therapeutic practice—especially if you’re trying to be more consistent with reflections and follow-up plans.
- Helpful for early-career therapists: the “analysis” and AI Partner angle could make training feel less overwhelming.
Cons
- Over-reliance risk: it’s tempting to accept outputs too quickly. Don’t. Always review and apply clinical judgment.
- Learning curve: any tool like this takes a bit of getting used to—how you feed it sessions, how you interpret outputs, and what you still need to write yourself.
Pricing Plans (what you should check before committing)
Therapartners doesn’t clearly list pricing in the information I reviewed. So I can’t give you exact numbers here without guessing—and I don’t want to do that to you.
What I recommend instead: check the Therapartners website for the current plans, or contact their support team to ask:
- Whether there’s a free trial or demo
- How transcription/reporting is priced (per session, per minute, or subscription)
- What features are included at each tier (especially analysis and AI Partner)
- Any limits on languages, session length, or storage
Wrap up
Therapartners looks like a practical tool for therapists who want help with transcription, reporting, and session analysis—without spending hours on admin. If you’re the type who values structured notes, consistent progress tracking, and a bit of coaching support, it could fit your workflow.
Just remember: the AI can speed things up, but it can’t replace your judgment. If you try it, use it like an assistant—review the outputs, adjust anything that feels off, and keep your clinical standards front and center.


