• Contact us: 9am-9pm
  • Appointment times: Monday - Sunday: 8 AM-10 PM.
IE Flag IE
United Arab Emirates - AE
United Kingdom - UK
Ireland - IE
PTC Ireland HighRes
  • Home
  • About
    • About us
    • Fees
    • FAQ’s
    • Media
    • Reviews
  • what we do
    • All Services
    • Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
    • Adult Psychiatry
    • Applied Behaviour Analysis (ABA)
    • Art Therapy
    • Assessment for ADHD/ADD
    • Assessment for ASD
    • Assessment for Dyslexia
    • Assessment for Dysgraphia
    • Assessment for Dyscalculia
    • Asylum and Immigration medico legal cases
    • Autism Support Group
    • Child Psychiatry
    • Child Psychologists and Psychotherapists
    • Clinical Supervision
    • Cognitive Analytic Therapy (CAT)
    • Cognitive assessment
    • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
    • Cognitive Rehabilitation
    • Compassion Focused Therapy (CFT)
    • Corporate Wellbeing
    • Counselling
    • Couples Therapy
    • DBT Crisis Service
    • Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)
    • Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)
    • Dynamic Interpersonal Therapy (DIT)
    • Educational Psychology
    • Emotion focused therapy
    • Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT)
    • Executive Coaching
    • Eye Movement Desensitisation Reprocessing (EMDR)
    • Family Therapy
    • Gestalt Therapy
    • Home Tuition Psychological Report
    • Hypnotherapy
    • Integrative Therapy
    • Jungian Therapy
    • Medico Legal Reports
    • Mental Health Coaching Course
    • Mindfulness
    • Motivational Interviewing
    • Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP)
    • Neuropsychology
    • Occupational Psychology
    • Person-Centred Therapy
    • Pets for Therapy & Emotional Support Animals
    • Play Therapy
    • Psychoanalytic Therapy
    • Psychodrama
    • Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
    • Psychological Testing & Reports
    • Psychologist
    • Psychotherapist
    • QbCheck
    • Schema Therapy
    • Short-term Dynamic Psychotherapy (ISTDP)
    • Solution-focused Therapy
    • Systemic Therapy
    • Workshop
  • I want help with
    • All Issues
    • Academic and Student Support
      • Reports for Students with Mental Health Difficulties
      • Home Tuition Psychological Report
    • Addictions and Compulsive Behaviours
      • Addictions
      • Alcohol Dependence
      • Binge Drinking
      • Gambling Addiction
      • Porn Addiction
      • Sex Addiction
      • Smoking cessation
      • Substance Abuse
    • Anger, Impulse and Behavioural Disorders
      • Anger Management
      • Impulse control disorders
      • Limerence
      • Trichotillomania Treatment
    • Anxiety and Stress-Related Conditions
      • Anxiety Treatment
      • Depersonalisation and Derealisation (DPDR)
      • Fear of Public Speaking
      • GAD
      • Health anxiety
      • Panic Attacks
      • Perfectionism
      • Phobias
      • Social Anxiety
      • Stress
    • Eating and Body Image Disorders
      • Anorexia
      • Binge Eating Disorder
      • Body Dysmorphic Disorder
      • Bulimia Treatment
      • Eating Disorders
      • Weight Loss
    • Grief, Loss and Bereavement
      • Bereavement
      • Grief
    • LGBTQ+ and Identity
      • LGBT
    • Mood and Personality Disorders
      • Bipolar Disorder
      • Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)
      • Mood Related Difficulties
      • Narcissistic Personality Disorder
      • Paranoid personality disorder
      • Personality Disorders (PD)
    • Neurodevelopmental and Learning Disorders
      • ADHD/ADD
      • Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
      • Assessment for Dyscalculia
      • Dysgraphia
      • Dyslexia
      • Learning difficulties
      • Neurobehavioral Disorders Treatment
    • Other Psychological Conditions
      • Dementia Assessment
      • Dissociation
      • Selective Mutism
      • Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
      • Psychosomatic Symptoms
      • Physical conditions treatment
      • Codependency
      • Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)
      • Distress & Crisis information
      • Obsessive Compulsive Disorders
      • Pain Management
      • Post Natal Depression (PND)
      • Tics and Tourette’s Syndrome
    • Psychotic and Severe Mental Health Conditions
      • Paranoia, Schizophrenia and Psychosis
      • Munchausen Syndrome
    • Self-esteem and Emotional Issues
      • Emotional difficulties
      • Narcissistic Abuse
      • Self Harm
      • Self-esteem related issues
      • Shame
    • Sexual Health and Relationship Issues
      • Erectile dysfunction treatment
      • Gender Dysphoria and Transgender Issues
      • Infidelity
      • Jealousy
      • Loss of Libido
      • Premature Ejaculation (PE)
      • Psychosexual Disorders
      • Relationship Break up
      • Relationship Issues
      • Sexual Abuse / Rape
      • Vaginismus Treatment
    • Sleep and Fatigue
      • Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
      • Insomnia
      • Sleep Disorders
    • Trauma and PTSD
      • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Trauma
      • Psychological Treatment for Medical Trauma
  • Talking Therapists
    • Aisling Ryan
    • Aoife Cassidy
    • Brian O’Shea
    • Dr. Becky Spelman
    • Edward Fisher
    • Eric Lacey
    • George Camilleri
    • Maríosa Scully
    • Nuala Morris
    • Sarah Kelly
  • Psychiatrists
    • Dr. Deepti Rodrigues
    • Dr. Man Ching (Christopher) Wong
    • Dr. Vaiva Bugaite
  • Blog
    • Podcast
    • Videos
  • Contact
Contact

+353 (67) 61050 If we miss your call please leave a voicemail and we will typically get back to you on the same day.

Reach us via email, chatbot or WhatsApp messages
Reach us on WhatsApp messages only: 7511116565 Appointment times: Monday - Sunday: 8 AM-10 PM. Book Online
Visit AE Website AE Flag Visit UK Website UK Flag Visit IE Website IE Flag
Book Online

Psychology Conversion Courses in Ireland: What You Need to Know

  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Psychology Conversion Courses in Ireland: What You Need to Know

A psychology conversion course in Ireland is a postgraduate qualification, usually a Higher Diploma or Master’s degree, that gives graduates from other disciplines the academic foundation to pursue a career in psychology. Completing an accredited course confers eligibility for Graduate Membership of the Psychological Society of Ireland (PSI), which is the academic gateway to further professional training.

If you completed your undergraduate degree in something other than psychology but now want to enter the profession, a conversion course is where most people start. In Ireland, these courses are accredited by the Psychological Society of Ireland (PSI) rather than the British Psychological Society (BPS), though the two organisations have a Memorandum of Cooperation that means graduates of PSI-accredited courses are also eligible to apply for BPS Graduate Membership, and vice versa.

We write about this as a clinic that employs psychologists and psychiatrists across our services. Some of our team came into psychology as a second career, and we have seen first-hand how conversion course graduates develop into strong clinicians when the right training and experience follow.

Who Is a Psychology Conversion Course For?

True conversion courses are designed for graduates who completed their first degree in a subject other than psychology and have no prior psychology credits. That covers an enormous range of people. It is worth noting that some Irish postgraduate psychology programmes, such as Maynooth’s MSc, require applicants to already hold substantial psychology credits, so they function more as top-ups than pure conversions. The distinction matters, because a true conversion course assumes no prior psychology knowledge.

Career Changers

Some applicants are recent graduates who discovered an interest in psychology through elective modules or work experience. Others are further into their careers. Teachers, nurses, social care workers, people in HR or business who realised they wanted to work more directly with people in a clinical capacity. Career changers often bring a depth of life experience that shapes how they connect with clients, and research on conversion course students has found that adaptability, rather than prior subject knowledge, is the strongest predictor of academic success (Sheriston, Holliman & Payne, 2019).

People Motivated by Personal Experience

This comes up regularly. A number of people who pursue psychology conversion courses do so because they have personal or family experience with mental health conditions. They may have gone through ADHD assessments themselves, supported a child through an autism assessment, or experienced anxiety or depression first-hand. That personal understanding can become a genuine clinical strength, provided it is paired with the right academic and professional training.

What Do You Study on a Psychology Conversion Course in Ireland?

PSI-accredited conversion courses cover the same core areas required for an undergraduate psychology degree. Accredited programmes typically cover six core areas, though the precise structure and terminology may vary between providers.

The Core Curriculum

  • Biological basis of behaviour: neuroscience, psychopharmacology, and the physiological basis of psychology
  • Cognitive psychology: perception, memory, attention, and thinking
  • Developmental and lifespan psychology: how people change from infancy through to older adulthood
  • Social psychology: how we are influenced by and relate to others
  • Personality and individual differences: what makes people psychologically distinct
  • Research design, quantitative and qualitative methods: how to design studies, collect data, and analyse results

Most courses also include a research project or dissertation. This is an important component, because it demonstrates your ability to design, conduct, and write up original research. A strong dissertation can strengthen applications for assistant psychologist roles or doctoral training.

How Long Does It Take?

Irish conversion courses typically run for one to two years full-time, depending on the provider and study mode. At the time of writing, the Higher Diploma at UCC and the MA at the University of Limerick are one-year programmes, while Trinity College Dublin’s Higher Diploma in Psychology runs over two years. Course structures and entry requirements can change between intakes, so always check the current course page before applying.

Does PSI Accreditation Matter?

Yes. For most regulated psychology career paths in Ireland, PSI accreditation is essential. A conversion course that is not accredited by the PSI does not usually confer eligibility for PSI Graduate Membership, and without Graduate Membership, you cannot progress to the accredited professional training programmes that lead to practising as a psychologist.

What Is PSI Graduate Membership?

PSI Graduate Membership is the Psychological Society of Ireland’s confirmation that your academic training covers psychology in sufficient breadth and depth. It is the equivalent of BPS Graduate Basis for Chartered Membership (GBC) in the UK. To be eligible, you need to complete a PSI-accredited course with a 2:2 honours or above, or for conversion courses specifically, an overall pass mark of 50% or above.

It is important to understand that Graduate Membership is not the same as PSI Chartered Membership, which requires further professional training (typically a doctoral or accredited master’s qualification plus supervised practice). Graduate Membership is the academic entry point; Chartered Membership is the professional recognition that follows completion of the full training pathway.

The BPS-PSI Memorandum of Cooperation

If you are considering studying in the UK but practising in Ireland, or the other way around, this is worth knowing about. The BPS and PSI have a reciprocal arrangement that means graduates of accredited courses in either jurisdiction are eligible to apply for graduate membership of both organisations. This gives you flexibility if your career takes you across the border or across the Irish Sea. For a detailed look at the UK pathway, see our guide to psychology conversion courses in the UK.

What Comes After a Conversion Course in Ireland?

A conversion course provides the academic foundation for entering the profession, but it is not the finish line. On its own, it does not qualify you to practise as a psychologist, and PSI Graduate Membership alone is not a licence to practise. The pathway to becoming a practising psychologist in Ireland involves further postgraduate professional training, and the regulatory landscape is currently changing as CORU works toward introducing statutory registration.

The Career Pathway

Stage Typical Duration What It Involves Outcome
Conversion course (HDip or MSc) 1–2 years full-time Core psychology curriculum, research project Eligibility for PSI Graduate Membership
Assistant psychologist role 1–3 years (varies) Clinical experience under supervision (HSE, voluntary sector, or private) Relevant experience for doctoral applications
Professional doctoral training 3 years Advanced clinical training, research, supervised practice Eligibility for CORU registration (once registers are open)

Assistant Psychologist Roles in Ireland

After completing a conversion course, many graduates seek work as an assistant psychologist. These roles are common but not guaranteed, and availability depends on sector and competition. In the HSE, assistant psychologists support qualified psychologists with assessments, therapeutic work, and research under clinical supervision. Similar posts also exist in voluntary organisations, disability services, and private clinics.

At The Private Therapy Clinic, our team works across a range of areas including ADHD and autism assessments, therapy support, and research. For many people, the exposure to clinical work at this stage is what confirms which speciality they want to pursue.

Doctoral Training in Ireland

The most common route to practising as a clinical, counselling, or educational psychologist in Ireland is a professional doctorate accredited by the PSI. The main programmes include the Doctorate in Clinical Psychology (DClinPsych) at TCD, UCD, and UL, the Doctorate in Counselling Psychology at TCD, and the Doctorate in Educational Psychology at UCD and Mary Immaculate College, Limerick. PSI also recognises a master’s professional qualification route with supervised practice for some specialisms, though the doctoral route is the more common pathway for clinical psychology specifically.

Competition for clinical psychology doctoral places in Ireland is intense, similar to the UK. The clinical experience, research, and supervisory relationships you build between your conversion course and doctoral training are what set your application apart. For a comparison of the two most common specialisms, see our guide to the differences between clinical and counselling psychologists.

CORU Registration: What Is Changing

Ireland is in the process of introducing statutory regulation for psychologists through CORU, the Health and Social Care Professionals regulator. The Psychologists Registration Board is working toward opening registers in phases: the first three registers will cover clinical, counselling, and educational psychologists, with a fourth register for all other psychology specialisms to follow. The timeline for opening these registers has shifted several times, and at the time of writing, the process is ongoing.

Once the registers are open, using the title “clinical psychologist,” “counselling psychologist,” or “educational psychologist” in Ireland will require CORU registration. This is a significant change. Until now, there has been no statutory requirement to register in order to use the title “psychologist” in Ireland. The introduction of CORU registration will mean that only practitioners registered on the appropriate division of the register can use these protected titles, bringing Ireland’s regulatory framework closer to the model used for other health professions regulated by CORU.

Where Do Qualified Psychologists Work in Ireland?

Many newly qualified clinical psychologists in Ireland begin their careers in the HSE. The HSE pay scale for a staff-grade clinical psychologist starts at €62,596 (as of February 2026), progressing to over €107,000 with long service increments. Senior clinical psychologist posts start at approximately €99,488. These are public service salaries with pension benefits.

A growing number of qualified psychologists also work in private practice, either alongside HSE roles or independently. At The Private Therapy Clinic, our team includes psychologists and psychiatrists who work across both sectors.

How to Choose the Right Conversion Course in Ireland

Not all conversion courses are equal. From our experience of reviewing the qualifications of applicants, there are several things that make a difference.

Non-Negotiables

  • PSI accreditation. Without it, the course does not usually confer eligibility for PSI Graduate Membership and your options for regulated career paths will be severely limited. You can check accredited courses on the PSI website.
  • A research project component. This is essential for developing the skills you will need for doctoral applications and clinical practice.

Worth Considering

  • Duration. Irish conversion courses typically vary from one to two years. At the time of writing, TCD’s Higher Diploma runs over two years, while UCC and UL offer one-year programmes. Consider how the length fits with your financial situation and other commitments.
  • Entry requirements. Some programmes require prior psychology credits, which means they are not true conversion courses in the broadest sense. Others accept graduates from any discipline with no prior psychology study. Check carefully before applying.
  • Placement opportunities. Some courses include clinical or research placements. These give you a head start in building the experience needed for assistant psychologist roles.

What We See from the Other Side

Most content about psychology conversion courses is written by universities trying to recruit students. As a clinic that employs psychologists at various stages of their career, from assistant psychologists building their clinical hours to fully qualified counselling psychologists and psychiatrists, we see the full picture.

The conversion course itself is the smallest part of the training pathway. It matters, but it is the years that follow, the assistant roles, the research, the supervised clinical work, that shape whether someone becomes a strong practitioner. Career changers can bring qualities that are difficult to acquire through academic training alone. The people who come to psychology because they experienced therapy themselves, or because they supported someone through a mental health crisis, frequently bring a quality of understanding to clinical work that complements their formal training well.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I become a clinical psychologist after a conversion course in Ireland?

Yes, but not directly. A PSI-accredited conversion course confers eligibility for Graduate Membership, which is required for entry to professional doctoral training such as the DClinPsych. Between the conversion course and the doctorate, you will typically need one to three years of relevant clinical experience. The full pathway from conversion course to qualified clinical psychologist usually takes around five to seven years, though the actual timeline varies depending on how quickly you secure relevant experience and a doctoral place.

Is a Higher Diploma equivalent to a Master’s?

For the purposes of PSI Graduate Membership, both can serve the same function. Both the Higher Diploma (HDip) and the MSc can be PSI-accredited and both can confer eligibility for Graduate Membership. The HDip is classified at NFQ Level 8 (equivalent to an honours degree), while the MSc is NFQ Level 9. In practice, both open the same professional pathways.

Can I use an Irish conversion course to work in the UK?

Yes. The BPS-PSI Memorandum of Cooperation means that graduates of PSI-accredited conversion courses are eligible to apply for BPS Graduate Membership (GBC), which is required for professional training in the UK. This works both ways, so UK conversion course graduates can also apply for PSI membership.

Will I need to register with CORU?

Once the CORU registers for psychologists are open, anyone using a protected title such as clinical psychologist, counselling psychologist, or educational psychologist in Ireland will need to be registered. The timeline for opening these registers has shifted, and the process is ongoing. If you are still in training or working as an assistant psychologist, registration will not be required at that stage, but it is worth being aware of where the profession is heading.

How The Private Therapy Clinic Can Help

If your interest in psychology grew from personal experience with mental health, whether your own or someone close to you, we are here for that too. The Private Therapy Clinic offers ADHD assessments, autism assessments, and therapy across a wide range of areas. If you are not sure where to start, you can book a free 15-minute consultation to talk through your options with one of our team.

About the author

Dr Becky Spelman, Counselling Psychologist

Dr Becky Spelman is an HCPC-registered Counselling Psychologist and founder of the Private Therapy Clinic, with over 22 years of experience helping clients successfully manage and overcome a wide range of mental health difficulties.

References

Sheriston, L., Holliman, A.J., & Payne, A. (2019). Student Adaptability and Achievement on a Psychology Conversion Course. Psychology Teaching Review, 25(1), 22–29.

Psychological Society of Ireland. (n.d.). Accredited Courses. Link

CORU Psychologists Registration Board. (2026). Update on Statutory Regulation of Psychologists. Link

CORU. (n.d.). Standards and Criteria for Clinical, Counselling and Educational Psychologists. Link

Health Service Executive. (2026). February 2026 Pay Scales. Link

Categories: News - By Dr Becky Spelman - May 8, 2026

Related Posts

Clinical Psychologist vs Counselling Psychologist: Key Differences

Clinical Psychologist vs Counselling Psychologist: Key Differences

29th April 2026
How Much Do Psychologists, Psychiatrists and Counsellors Make in Ireland?

How Much Do Psychologists, Psychiatrists and Counsellors Make in Ireland?

27th April 2026
What’s the Difference Between a Psychologist and a Psychiatrist?

What’s the Difference Between a Psychologist and a Psychiatrist?

26th February 2026

Categories

  • ADD/ADHD(27)
  • Addictions(1)
  • Anxiety(10)
  • ASD(17)
  • Bipolar(1)
  • Borderline Personality Disorder(1)
  • Child Therapy(1)
  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy(1)
  • Couples Therapy(1)
  • Depression(3)
  • Eating Disorders(2)
  • EMDR(1)
  • Family(2)
  • General(5)
  • Grief and loss(1)
  • Marital Issues(1)
  • Mental Health(8)
  • Mindfulness(2)
  • News(17)
  • OCD(2)
  • Parenting(1)
  • Personality Disorders(8)
  • Psychiatry(3)
  • Psychology(3)
  • psychotherapy(4)
  • Relationship Issues(2)
  • Relationships(8)
  • Self-Esteem(1)
  • self-harm(1)
  • sex(1)
  • Sleep(2)
  • Stress(8)
  • Trauma(4)

Recent Articles

  • Psychology Thumbnail
    Psychology Conversion Courses in Ireland: What You Need to Know May 8, 2026
  • Burnout: Why it's on the rise in 2025 | Private Therapy Clinic IE
    Why So Many Professionals Are Experiencing Burnout and What to Do May 5, 2026
  • Autism and ADHD Overlap
    Autism and ADHD Overlap: The Internal Battle Nobody Sees April 30, 2026
  • PTC ADHD
    ADHD: Why You Have to Say How You Feel April 30, 2026
  • Clinical Psychologist vs Counselling Psychologist: Key Differences April 29, 2026
  • Psychologist Earn Slider
    How Much Do Psychologists, Psychiatrists and Counsellors Make in Ireland? April 27, 2026

As Seen On

forbes
channel-4
sky-news
itv
bbc-radio
the-guardian

Professional Memberships

PSI
apcp
iacp
imc
CPsychI
PTC Ireland HighRes

Private Therapy Clinic was set up in 2011 by HCPC registered Irish Psychologist Dr Becky Spelman who is an entrepreneur and mental health content creator. Dr. Spelman has 23 years experience working in the field of mental health.

  • Email:info@privatetherapyclinic.com
  • WhatsApp (Messages only):Whatsapp Icon
  • Phone:+353 (67) 61050 If we miss your call please leave a voicemail and we will typically get back to you on the same day.

Popular Blog Posts

  • Shortage of Psychiatrists in Ireland: Impact on Mental Health Care
    Shortage of Psychiatrists in Ireland: Impact on Mental Health Care January 29, 2025
  • ADHD Medication Shortages in Ireland: Causes, Impacts, and Solutions
    ADHD Medication Shortages in Ireland: Causes, Impacts, and Solutions January 2, 2025
  • Therapy in Ireland: Addressing Anxiety, Depression & Relationships
    Therapy in Ireland: Addressing Anxiety, Depression & Relationships January 14, 2025
  • How Sports and Athletes Are Tackling Mental Health Stigma in Ireland
    How Sports and Athletes Are Tackling Mental Health Stigma in Ireland January 16, 2025

What we Do

  • Adult Psychiatry
  • Child Psychiatry
  • Psychological Testing and Evaluation 
  • Pets for Therapy & Emotional Support Animals
  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
  • Psychotherapy
  • Psychologist
  • All Services

Information

  • About us
  • Fees
  • Reviews
  • Jobs
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Complaints Policy
  • Privacy Policy

Private Therapy Clinic Limited. Registered address: Morrison Chambers 32 Nassau St, Dublin 2, D02 YE06, Ireland.