Psychologist vs Psychiatrist vs Psychotherapist in Ontario: What’s the Difference?

Key Takeaways

  • Psychiatrists complete medical school plus 5 years of specialized psychiatric residency and can prescribe medication.
  • Psychologists complete doctoral-level training (typically 8–10+ years of education) plus extensive supervised clinical practice and can diagnose.
  • Registered Psychotherapists complete graduate-level training with hundreds to thousands of supervised clinical hours and provide talk therapy.
  • All three are regulated in Ontario, but their training depth, medical authority, and scope differ significantly.

If you’re deciding who to see:
In Ontario, a psychiatrist is a medical doctor who diagnoses and prescribes medication. This differs from a psychologist who has doctoral training in psychology, can diagnose, and provides therapy but does not prescribe medication. A Registered Psychotherapist provides structured talk therapy and has graduate-level clinical training but does not diagnose or prescribe medication (unless also registered under another regulated profession).


Table of Contents

  1. What Is a Psychologist?
  2. What Is a Psychiatrist?
  3. What Is a Psychotherapist?
  4. How to Choose the Right Professional in Ontario
  5. FAQs
  6. References
  7. Author Bio

What Is a Psychologist?

In Ontario, psychologists are regulated by the College of Psychologists of Ontario.

Education and Supervised Training

Becoming a psychologist typically involves:

  • 4-year undergraduate degree
  • 5–7 years of doctoral training (PhD or PsyD)
  • A full-time pre-doctoral internship year
  • Approximately 1,500–2,000+ hours of supervised clinical practice
  • Written and oral licensing examinations

In total, psychologists usually complete 8–10+ years of post-secondary education and supervised training before independent practice.

What Psychologists Do

  • Diagnose mental health conditions
  • Depending on their specific area of focus, psychologists conduct formal psychological assessments (e.g., ADHD, learning disorders, mood disorders, cognitive testing, forensic evaluations)
  • Provide evidence-based psychotherapy
  • Develop structured treatment plans

What They Cannot Do

  • Prescribe medication

Psychologists often work in private practice, hospitals, and multidisciplinary clinics. Services are generally covered through extended health benefits.


What Is a Psychiatrist?

A psychiatrist is a medical doctor regulated by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario.

Education and Supervised Training

Psychiatrists complete:

  • 4-year undergraduate degree
  • 4 years of medical school
  • 5-year psychiatric residency program (full-time hospital-based training)

During residency, psychiatrists complete thousands of hours of supervised clinical practice, managing complex mental health conditions in hospital and outpatient settings.

In total, psychiatrists complete 13–15 years of education and supervised medical training before practicing independently.

What Psychiatrists Do

  • Diagnose mental health disorders
  • Prescribe and manage medication
  • Order medical tests
  • Provide psychotherapy (though many focus primarily on medication management)

Psychiatric services are covered by OHIP with a referral from a family physician.

Learn more: https://www.cpso.on.ca/

Additional information from the Canadian Psychiatric Association: https://www.cpa-apc.org/


What Is a Psychotherapist?

In Ontario, the protected title is Registered Psychotherapist (RP), regulated by the College of Registered Psychotherapists of Ontario.

Education and Supervised Training

Registered Psychotherapists typically complete:

  • 4-year undergraduate degree
  • 2-year master’s-level psychotherapy program
  • At least 450 direct client hours during training
  • Clinical supervision requirements both during and after registration

To become fully independent, RPs must complete:

  • 1,000+ total direct client hours
  • 100+ hours of clinical supervision
  • Registration examination

In total, this usually represents 6–8 years of post-secondary education and structured supervised clinical experience.

What Registered Psychotherapists Do

What They Cannot Do

  • Diagnose (unless licensed under another regulated profession)
  • Prescribe medication

Services are typically covered through extended health insurance plans.

Learn more: https://www.crpo.ca/


How to Choose the Right Professional in Ontario

The right provider depends on your needs:

  • If you may need medication → Speak to your family doctor about a referral to a psychiatrist.
  • If you need a formal psychological assessment or diagnosis → A psychologist is often the best fit.
  • If you’re seeking therapy for anxiety, stress, trauma, or relationship concerns → A Psychologist or Registered Psychotherapist can both provide effective treatment.

In many cases, people benefit from a combination of therapy and psychiatric consultation.


FAQs

1. Do I need a diagnosis to start therapy?

No. Many people begin therapy without a formal diagnosis. Psychotherapy can focus on stress, life transitions, relationship challenges, trauma, or emotional patterns, even if you do not meet criteria for a specific mental health disorder. If a diagnosis becomes clinically helpful, a psychologist or psychiatrist can provide one.

2. Can a psychotherapist diagnose me?

No. Only regulated professionals authorized to diagnose (such as psychologists and psychiatrists) can provide formal diagnoses in Ontario.

3. Are psychologists medical doctors?

No. Psychologists hold doctoral degrees in psychology, not medical degrees.

4. Is psychiatric care covered by OHIP?

Yes, when accessed through a referral from a physician.

5. Is therapy evidence-based?

Yes. Psychologists and Registered Psychotherapists are trained in evidence-based approaches and must meet regulatory standards for safe, competent care.


References


Author Bio

Centre Wellness Clinical Team

At Centre Wellness, our team develops blog content, and we sometimes use AI tools to assist in content creation. All content is directed, reviewed, and edited by our professional team to ensure accuracy and relevance to your needs. Please note that this blog is not a substitute for therapy or mental health treatment. We offer compassionate, evidence-informed therapy in Kingston and across Ontario.