Financial Psychology
The Psychology of Money and Finances
Money is one of the most significant sources of stress in modern life. It influences our wellbeing, relationships, career choices, sense of security, and long-term life direction. Yet most financial support focuses only on numbers, investments, or budgeting strategies.
At Immersive Psychology Group, we recognise that money decisions are deeply psychological. Our Financial Counselling and Psychology of Money service focuses on the emotions, beliefs, and behavioural patterns that shape how people think about and manage money.
Through telehealth psychology sessions, we support individuals and couples to develop a healthier relationship with money, reduce financial anxiety, and make clearer, values-aligned decisions about their financial future.
What is it?
The psychology of money explores how our thoughts, emotions, upbringing, and experiences influence financial behaviours such as spending, saving, investing, and long-term planning.
Many people understand what they should do financially, but still feel stuck, overwhelmed, or avoidant when it comes to actually doing it.
This is because financial decisions are rarely purely logical. They are shaped by:
- Emotional responses to risk and uncertainty
- Past experiences with money growing up
- Beliefs about success, security, and identity
- Cognitive biases that influence decision making
- Relationship dynamics and differing financial values
Psychology-informed financial support helps people understand these patterns and develop more balanced, intentional approaches to money.
Why financial psychology matters
Human decision-making is influenced by a range of psychological biases and threat responses.
For example:
Loss aversion
Research shows that losses feel approximately twice as painful as equivalent gains feel good. This can lead people to avoid investing, panic during market changes, or stay stuck in overly conservative financial patterns.
Present bias
Our brains naturally prioritise immediate rewards over long-term benefits, making saving or investing for the future more difficult.
Financial threat responses
Money can activate anxiety and stress responses that lead to procrastination, perfectionism, impulsive decisions, or complete avoidance.
Working with a psychologist who understands financial behaviour can help reduce emotional friction and support clearer decision-making.
What can financial psychology help with?
Clients often seek support when they notice patterns such as:
- Feeling stuck or overwhelmed about financial decisions
- Anxiety around investing, saving, or financial planning
- Overthinking or analysis paralysis when making financial choices
- Avoiding financial conversations or planning altogether
- Persistent money anxiety despite financial stability
- Difficulty aligning career decisions with financial goals
- Conflicting financial attitudes within a relationship
- Procrastination around retirement planning or long-term goals
- Navigating financial decisions during life transitions such as career change, divorce, or inheritance
This work focuses on understanding patterns, building awareness, and developing practical psychological tools to support more confident decision-making.
Financial conversations for couples
Money is one of the most common sources of conflict in relationships.
Financial disagreements often reflect deeper themes such as values, security, identity, control, or differing experiences with money growing up. When these underlying drivers remain unspoken, couples may find themselves stuck in repeated arguments or avoidance.
Psychology-informed financial counselling for couples can help partners:
- Understand each other’s relationship with money
- Develop shared financial goals
- Improve communication around financial decisions
- Balance different risk tolerances or spending styles
- Reduce conflict and increase collaboration around money
Approaching finances as a shared conversation rather than a source of tension can strengthen both financial wellbeing and relationship stability.
How Financial Psychology can help
Working on the psychology behind financial decisions can help people:
- Identify unhelpful beliefs and patterns around money
- Reduce financial anxiety and emotional avoidance
- Build confidence in financial decision-making
- Clarify personal values and long-term goals
- Develop healthier spending, saving, and investing habits
- Approach money decisions with greater clarity and calm
Small psychological shifts can create meaningful long-term impact, just as small financial habits compound over time.
Telehealth Therapy: financial based psychology sessions
All sessions are delivered via secure telehealth, allowing clients across Australia to access support from the comfort of their home.
Sessions provide a confidential space to explore:
- Financial decision-making patterns
- Emotional responses to money
- Career and financial goal alignment
- Financial communication within relationships
- Behavioural strategies to support long-term change
Meet your Psychologist
This service is provided by our Sydney-based Registered Psychologist, Justine Dekaro, with a Master’s in Organisational Psychology and over a decade of experience working within corporate environments, including extensive experience supporting leadership development, decision-making, and behavioural change within financial services organisations.
Alongside her psychological work, she has developed a strong interest in investing and financial behaviour, recognising the significant role that beliefs, emotions, and cognitive patterns play in financial outcomes.
Her therapeutic approach integrates Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) to help clients develop practical psychological skills that support clearer thinking, reduced avoidance, and values-aligned action over time.
Important: This service focuses on the psychological and behavioural aspects of money decisions. It does not provide financial advice.
Book a Financial Psychology Session
If you would like support exploring the psychology behind your financial decisions, our team would be happy to help.
Contact us
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