Confidentiality Clauses That Build Client Trust
Trust Is the Product
Coaching only works when clients feel safe enough to be honest — about what's really going on, what they're avoiding, what they're afraid of. That safety is partly about the relationship. But it's also about knowing, in practical terms, that what they share won't go further.
A clear confidentiality clause in your agreement isn't just legal housekeeping. It's part of how you create the conditions for the work to happen.
What Coaching Confidentiality Usually Covers
Your side of the agreement: what you do with what clients share in sessions. The standard position is that session content stays between you and the client. You don't share details with third parties — not their employer, not a referring manager, not even a mutual contact.
Their side: your proprietary materials, frameworks, and methods. If you've developed a signature process or worksheets, those belong to you.
Exceptions — and there are always exceptions — should be named explicitly:
- If you work with a supervisor (standard coaching practice), note that you discuss cases in anonymised form
- If you're required to disclose under law (risk of harm to self or others), this overrides confidentiality
- If you're coaching within an organisation and have agreed reporting to a sponsor, this needs its own clear section
The Nuance That Gets Missed
If you're offering organisational coaching — where a company is paying for their employee's coaching — confidentiality becomes more layered. What does the sponsor know? Typically: that sessions are happening, and whether attendance is consistent. Not: what's discussed.
This triangular relationship needs its own section. What's shared with the commissioning organisation, and what isn't, should be explicit in writing — ideally before the coaching starts and confirmed by all parties.
Keeping It Human
Confidentiality clauses don't need to read like legal boilerplate. A short paragraph in plain English — "what you share in our sessions stays between us, with the exceptions noted below" — does the job and is more likely to actually be read.
The goal is that your client finishes reading it feeling safer, not more anxious. If your clause reads like a liability disclaimer, revisit the language.
Coaching agreements with clear, plain-English confidentiality terms — from £29/yr.
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Get your agreements — £29/yr →These articles are general guidance for UK coaching practitioners, not legal advice. Our agreements are editable templates — adapt them to your coaching modality and any regulatory requirements for your specialism.