GestaltReviewTherapistsBurlington
Depression Therapy · Burlington
Burlington, Ontario · Halton Region

Depression Therapist in
Burlington,
Ontario

Our registered depression therapists in Burlington, Ontario offer in-person sessions at our Harvester Rd clinic and secure online therapy across the province — using CBT, ACT, interpersonal therapy, and integrative approaches for depression, low mood, burnout, and grief. Same-day availability, no waitlist, free 15-minute discovery call.

6Therapists
In-personBurlington available
4+Modalities
FreeInitial consult

Depression Therapist Burlington — at a glance
GestaltReview · Burlington
Cost per sessionFrom $140 · sliding scale available
Wait timeSame-day · no waitlist
Session length50 minutes
FormatIn-person Burlington · Online Ontario
Ages servedTeens · adults · seniors
ApproachesCBT · ACT · interpersonal · Gestalt · integrative
InsuranceReceipts provided · most plans accepted
HSTExempt
Free consultation15–30 min · no commitment






Our depression therapists in Burlington

In-person at 3425 Harvester Rd · online across Ontario

2 practitioners

Alisa Ziad Al Haj
Alisa Ziad Al Haj
Registered Psychotherapist (Qualifying)
In-Person in Burlington · Online across Ontario
DepressionAnxietyComplex TraumaBurnoutPerfectionismIdentity

FormatIn-person & online
Session fee$140
LanguagesEnglish, Arabic, Russian
Location3425 Harvester Rd, Burlington

Alisa offers depression therapy in-person at our Burlington clinic and online across Ontario, working with depression that is often entangled with anxiety, burnout, perfectionism, and complex trauma. Her integrative approach draws on CBT, DBT, EFT, and trauma-informed methods within a warm, relational frame that takes the full context of a person’s life seriously. She is particularly attuned to the experience of clients from multicultural and immigrant backgrounds, where identity strain, isolation, and cultural dislocation can deepen depression in ways that more generic approaches miss.

Olga Klimenkova
Olga Klimenkova
Registered Psychotherapist, RP, GIT Dip
In-Person in Oakville · Online serving Burlington & Halton
DepressionGestaltTrauma & PTSDAnxietyRelationshipsShame

FormatIn-person & online
Session fee$160–$190
LanguagesEnglish, Russian
Experience7+ years

Olga is a Gestalt-trained Registered Psychotherapist with 7+ years of experience offering depression therapy in-person in Oakville and online across Burlington and Halton Region. Her Gestalt and relational approach to depression takes seriously the relational and somatic dimensions of low mood — the withdrawal, the flatness, the collapse of contact with life. She works with depression alongside trauma, shame, and addiction, and brings a particular depth to the kind of depression that presents not as visible sadness but as numbness, disengagement, and loss of self.

More depression therapists — online across Ontario

All online · serving Burlington & province-wide

4 practitioners

Donna Mahoney
Donna Mahoney
Social Worker, Psychotherapist
Online across Ontario
DepressionTrauma & PTSDAnxietyAddiction RecoveryCouples TherapyStress Management

FormatOnline only
Session fee$150–$165
Experience18+ years
LanguagesEnglish

Donna is a Social Worker and Psychotherapist with 18+ years of clinical experience offering depression therapy online to Burlington residents and across Ontario. She is particularly well-suited to depression that is complicated by trauma, addiction, relationship difficulty, or chronic stress — presentations that require both clinical depth and genuine human presence. Her trauma-informed integrative framework draws from CBT, DBT, Solution-Focused Therapy, Mindfulness-Based Therapy, and Person-Centred Therapy to address depression comprehensively.

Justine Maurice
Justine Maurice
Social Worker M.S.W., R.S.W.
Online across Ontario
DepressionAnxietyTrauma & PTSDFamily & CouplesChild & YouthIndigenous Mental Health

FormatOnline only
Session fee$150–$160
LanguagesEnglish

Justine is a Registered Social Worker (M.S.W., R.S.W.) offering depression therapy online to Burlington-area clients and across Ontario. Her integrative and culturally sensitive approach draws on CBT, DBT, Attachment-Based Therapy, and Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction. She works with depression across a wide range of presentations — including depression in children and youth, family-related depression, grief, and depression connected to Indigenous identity, intergenerational trauma, and cultural disconnection.

Oksana Denysenko
Oksana Denysenko
Registered Psychotherapist, MACP (she/her)
Online across Ontario · In-Person in Toronto
DepressionAnxietyDevelopmental TraumaSelf-EsteemRelationshipsLife Transitions

FormatOnline & in-person (Toronto)
Session fee$150
LanguagesEnglish, Ukrainian, Russian
Experience5+ years

Oksana is a Registered Psychotherapist (MACP) offering depression therapy online to Burlington clients and across Ontario through a developmental and attachment-based lens. She works with depression that is rooted in low self-worth, relational difficulty, codependency, and the long shadow of early relational experience — the kind of depression that says “this is just who I am” rather than “I am unwell.” She offers sessions in English, Ukrainian, and Russian, and brings particular sensitivity to life transitions as triggers for depressive episodes.


Gina Li
Gina Li
Registered Psychotherapist, MA, RP
Online across Ontario
DepressionBurnoutAnxietyEmotional RegulationSelf-EsteemLife Transitions

FormatOnline only
Session fee$140
LanguagesEnglish, Cantonese, Mandarin

Gina is a Registered Psychotherapist (MA, RP) offering depression therapy online to Burlington-area clients and across Ontario. Her holistic and person-centred approach draws from CBT, ACT, DBT, and mindfulness-based methods, and is especially well-suited to depression that presents alongside burnout, anxiety, low self-esteem, or emotional dysregulation — common clusters in high-achieving individuals who find it difficult to acknowledge or seek help for their low mood. She offers sessions in English, Cantonese, and Mandarin.

In-person clinic
Anytime Anywhere Therapy
3425 Harvester Rd, Unit 213, Burlington, ON L7N 3N1

Our Burlington practitioners also see clients at Anytime Anywhere Therapy, a few steps away.

Visit clinic website →

Depression therapy in Burlington, Ontario

Registered depression therapists in Burlington, Ontario are available at GestaltReview for in-person sessions at our Harvester Rd clinic and online across the province. Depression is one of the most common reasons people seek therapy — and one of the most varied in how it presents. Effective depression therapy is rarely one-size-fits-all: it depends on the nature and severity of the depression, its relationship to anxiety, trauma, and life circumstances, and on finding a therapist whose approach genuinely resonates.

We work with a range of depressive presentations: major depression, persistent depressive disorder (dysthymia), depression following trauma or loss, postpartum depression, burnout-related low mood, and the low-grade depression that comes from living at odds with one’s own values or circumstances. Therapeutic approaches include CBT (the most extensively researched approach for depression), ACT, interpersonal therapy, Gestalt-informed relational therapy, somatic approaches, DBT, and mindfulness-based methods.

In-person depression therapy in Burlington is available at 3425 Harvester Rd, Unit 213. Online depression therapy is available province-wide. Sessions start at $140, are HST exempt, and all practitioners hold current registration with CRPO or OCSWSSW.

How to choose a depression therapist in Burlington

Depression therapy is most effective when the approach matches the nature of the depression. For depression driven by negative thought patterns and withdrawal behaviours, CBT — with its structured focus on identifying and challenging depressive cognitions — has the strongest evidence base. For depression connected to loss of meaning, values conflict, or difficulty accepting what cannot be changed, ACT and existential approaches can be more resonant. For depression that is relational in origin — shaped by loss, disconnection, or difficult attachment — interpersonal or Gestalt-informed therapy may be more fitting.

The therapeutic relationship is consistently the strongest predictor of outcome in depression treatment. A therapist who creates a genuine sense of being understood, without judgment, is the foundation for everything else. The free 15-minute discovery call we offer with every practitioner gives you the opportunity to assess this before committing to a full session.

If your depression is severe or accompanied by thoughts of self-harm, please reach out to a crisis line or your GP alongside beginning therapy. All practitioners in our group are registered clinicians trained to assess safety and provide appropriate referrals.

01
CBT for depression
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy targets the negative thought patterns, low motivation, and withdrawal behaviours that maintain depression. The most extensively researched approach, effective across mild to moderate depression.
02
ACT
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy focuses on accepting difficult emotions without fighting them, and re-engaging with life according to personal values. Particularly valuable when depression involves loss of meaning or purpose.
03
Interpersonal therapy
Focuses on the relationship between depression and interpersonal difficulties — grief, role transitions, conflict, and isolation. Especially helpful when depression is clearly connected to relationship or life change.
04
Integrative
Most of our depression therapists work across multiple modalities, combining cognitive and relational approaches, somatic awareness, and trauma-informed care to meet each client’s specific presentation.

Depression therapy approaches compared

Different depression therapy approaches suit different presentations. This table helps clarify the key differences before your free discovery call.

Approach CBT ACT Interpersonal Gestalt/Relational Integrative
Focus Negative thoughts & withdrawal Acceptance & values re-engagement Relationships, grief, life transitions Contact, body, relational meaning Tailored to client
Best for Mild-moderate depression, cognitive patterns Loss of meaning, existential depression Grief, isolation, relational depression Numbing, disconnection, identity loss Complex or mixed presentations
Structure Structured, skills-based Structured but flexible Time-limited, focused protocol Exploratory, client-led Varies by therapist
Evidence base Very strong — most researched Strong — growing for depression Strong — especially for grief/loss Growing — strong for relational outcomes Varies by combination
Homework Yes — behavioural activation Often Sometimes Rarely Depends on therapist
Session length 50 min 50 min 50 min 50 min 50 min

Depression therapy across Halton Region and Ontario

All our practitioners offer online depression therapy province-wide. In-person depression therapy is available in Burlington and nearby Oakville.

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Common questions

What does depression therapy involve in Burlington?

Depression therapy in Burlington at GestaltReview involves working one-to-one with a registered psychotherapist or social worker to understand the nature of your depression and address the thoughts, behaviours, and relational patterns that maintain it. Depending on the approach your therapist uses, sessions may involve identifying and challenging negative thinking patterns (CBT), re-engaging with values-driven activity despite low motivation (ACT), exploring how relationships and life transitions have contributed to depression (interpersonal therapy), or examining the relational and somatic dimensions of low mood (Gestalt, somatic, and attachment-based approaches). Sessions are 50 minutes and a free 15-minute discovery call is available with every practitioner.

How much does depression therapy cost in Burlington?

Depression therapy sessions in Burlington at GestaltReview range from $140 to $190 per 50-minute session, depending on the practitioner. Sliding scale pricing is available if cost is a barrier — mention this during your free discovery call. Psychotherapy is exempt from HST in Ontario. Most extended health benefit plans cover registered psychotherapy provided by Registered Psychotherapists (CRPO) or Registered Social Workers (OCSWSSW). Confirm your coverage and annual limit with your insurer before beginning treatment, as depression therapy often continues over several months.

Is online depression therapy as effective as in-person?

Research consistently shows that online therapy is as effective as in-person therapy for depression across mild to moderate presentations. The therapeutic relationship — the primary driver of outcomes in depression treatment — can be built just as effectively over video. All our practitioners use PHIPA-compliant, encrypted video platforms. For Burlington residents, online depression therapy also provides access to the full group of six practitioners, rather than only those offering in-person sessions locally. In-person depression therapy is available at 3425 Harvester Rd with Alisa Ziad Al Haj.

How long does depression therapy take?

The length of depression therapy depends significantly on the severity and complexity of the depression. Structured CBT for mild to moderate depression often produces meaningful improvement within 12 to 20 sessions. For more complex or longer-standing depression — particularly depression rooted in trauma, grief, relational difficulty, or low self-worth — longer-term work over several months to a year is common. Most clients begin to notice shifts in mood, energy, and engagement within the first four to eight sessions. Your therapist will discuss realistic expectations and timeframes during your early sessions.

When should I see a GP or psychiatrist alongside therapy?

Therapy and medication work well together for many people with depression. If your depression is severe — affecting your ability to function day-to-day, involving significant sleep or appetite disruption, or accompanied by thoughts of self-harm — speaking with your GP or a psychiatrist about medication alongside therapy is worth considering. Your therapist can help you think through this decision and provide appropriate referrals if needed. GestaltReview’s practitioners are psychotherapists, not psychiatrists, and cannot prescribe medication. All practitioners are trained to assess safety and provide crisis referrals when appropriate.

What is the difference between depression and burnout?

Depression and burnout overlap significantly — both involve low energy, loss of motivation, difficulty concentrating, and withdrawal from activities. The key distinction is in origin: burnout typically develops in response to prolonged stress and overwork, and often lifts when the stressor is removed or reduced. Depression is more pervasive — it affects mood, cognition, and sense of self regardless of external circumstances, and often requires structured therapeutic intervention to resolve. Many people who present with burnout are also experiencing depression, and many depressive episodes are triggered by burnout. Our Burlington depression therapists are experienced with both presentations and their overlap.

Understanding depression — editorial resources

GestaltReview’s editorial content approaches depression from a relational and somatic perspective — exploring how low mood intersects with shame, disconnection, loss of contact with the self, and the patterns of withdrawal that depression both causes and deepens. Our articles are written for a thoughtful general audience by Gestalt-trained practitioners.

Coming to a first depression therapy session with some understanding of how depression maintains itself — and why the instinct to wait until you feel better before seeking help is precisely what makes depression harder to shift — can help you engage with the work more actively from the beginning.

Introduction
What is Gestalt therapy?


Concept
Shame and self-awareness in depression


Concept
Contact interruptions — how depression withdraws from life


Comparison
Gestalt and mindfulness in depression therapy


Concept
Contact & withdrawal — the rhythm of depression