Why you are never too old for therapy

We assume therapy belongs to youth, yet older people may be particularly likely to benefit from psychological support.
Maurizio is 70. He recently began therapy in the hope of better understanding a physical pain he had carried since childhood. He has suffered migraines since the age of seven and wanted to explore what might lie behind them.
Over the years, he had consulted different doctors and sought multiple opinions – therapy was another attempt to trace the origins of the problem. But he continued even after realising he might never find a single cause. “The process itself became something meaningful, a space for introspection that helped me understand my life more clearly,” Mauizio says. (We have omitted the surnames of the therapy clients quoted within this piece to preserve their privacy.)
Antonio, 73, and his wife Gigliola, 68, turned to therapy hoping to save their relationship after years marked by disappointments and unspoken tensions. “After some time, I realised I felt lighter, more open,” Antonio says.
“Looking within ourselves and bringing out what we could never say before, perhaps helped us,” Gigliola adds.
Their stories challenge a common assumption: that therapy is only for the young. And a growing body of evidence suggests that many older people could benefit from the same kind of help.
Therapy in later life
The potential for therapy to treat mental illness and enhance our overall well-being is now well-established, yet it is relatively rare for older people to access these services.
According to the World Health Organisation, around 14 per cent of people over 70 live with a mental health disorder, most commonly anxiety and depression, and 17 per cent of all suicides occur in people in this age range. A study published in 2024, however, found that only around 4 per cent of US adults aged 65 and over received psychological therapy, compared with 12 per cent of those aged 18-24 and 8 per cent among those aged 35-64.
This is despite there being no evidence that therapy is any less effective or useful as we get older, according to Pim Cuijpers, professor of clinical psychology at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam in the Netherlands. “Therapies work across the whole adult age,” he says.
Cuijpers recently published a review on psychotherapy for depression across different age groups. “What surprised me is that there is quite a lot of research in older people who are above 75, and we didn’t find any indication that psychotherapies differ in that age group either,” he says.
Older people may find that therapy helps to target some of the specific concerns that come with ageing, including social isolation and chronic illness, with widespread benefits. Many report improvements in overall well-being, renewed motivation and increased social participation. In this way, therapy can function as a bridge: helping older adults reconnect with themselves and the wider world. The strongest responses, according to a 2025 review, may be found in group-based interventions, which makes sense, since they offer a structured means of relating with others.
And despite lower levels of initial access, completion rates among older participants can reach up to 54%, often surpassing those of younger adults. This demonstrates that older patients are frequently highly committed to therapy and capable of sustaining the work required for meaningful change.
“We don’t know the reasons, but we could imagine that when older adults are willing to seek help, they are also more motivated to do that,” says Cuijpers.
Barriers to care
Financial difficulties help explain part of the gap in older people beginning therapy in the first place: their health insurance may not cover therapy, and they may not be able to afford to pay for it independently.
But another barrier can arise within the healthcare system itself. The therapy journey often depends on a referral from a primary care physician. Yet, some research suggests that older adults are referred to psychological treatments less frequently, even when they present with symptoms of anxiety or depression. Their distress may be seen as a natural response to ageing or physical decline, rather than as a mental health condition that warrants treatment.
But that is “absolutely not true”, says De Beni. In fact, “studies show the opposite”.
Clinicians need to see the older person for who they truly are, De Beni points out, not simply as “an old person”, but as a multi-faceted individual. Unfortunately, our ageist prejudices are often “deeply entrenched”, she says.
The potential patients themselves may internalise some of the ageism. Beliefs such as the idea that mental health problems are simply a normal part of ageing are among the most frequently cited obstacles to accessing care. This is especially problematic, since ageism can itself predispose someone to greater anxiety and depression.









