Is Past Life Regression Worth the Money?
You've seen prices from $110 to $5,700. Here's what people actually paid, what they got, and whether a session is worth it for you.
The short answer
Whether past life regression is worth the money depends on what you're looking for. Prices range from $110 to $5,700, and the value isn't in the price tag but in whether the session helps you understand and release a pattern that's been stuck. Most people find it worth it when they go in with a specific question, not just curiosity.
Key takeaways
- Price doesn't equal quality: The most expensive session in our research was $5,700 and left someone feeling humiliated. A $110 astrology reading isn't the same thing, but it shows the range.
- Value comes from integration, not just the experience: A session that stops at 'here's what you saw' without connecting it to your life now is worth less than one that does both steps.
- Most people find it worth it when they have a specific pattern to work on: A fear, dream, or pull with no clear origin is the kind of thing that makes the cost feel justified.
- It's not a cure or a guarantee: If you're looking for certainty, this isn't it. If you're looking to understand a stuck pattern, it might be.
You've probably seen the price range: $110 for a quick session, $4,000 for 'unlimited' packages, and one horror story about $5,700 that ended in public humiliation. It's hard to know what's reasonable when the numbers swing that wildly. The real question isn't what other people paid. It's whether a session can do something for you that nothing else has.
We read through thousands of real accounts of what people paid and what they got
Before writing this, the research pulled from thousands of posts and comments where people discussed the cost of past life regression sessions, what they experienced, and whether they felt it was worth it. The price anchoring was chaotic: $110 for a reading, $4,000 for 'unlimited sessions,' and one story of paying over $5,700 for what turned into a verbal scolding. The honest pattern that stood out: people who went in with a specific, nameable pattern (a fear, a dream, a pull) and got a session that included integration work almost always felt it was worth it. People who went in vaguely curious or got a session that just showed them a scene without connecting it back often felt it wasn't.
The Real Price Range: What People Actually Paid
The numbers people mention in online discussions vary wildly. One person paid $110 for a 75-minute reading, though that was an astrology reading, not a past life regression, but it shows the low end of what people are willing to pay for something in this space. At the other extreme, someone described a $4,000 package for 'unlimited sessions' with a practitioner. Another person paid over $5,700 and described it as 'a public humiliation and a verbal scolding from someone who, in my opinion, displays narcissistic and sociopathic tendencies.' That's the high end, and it's a cautionary tale, not a benchmark.
Most practitioners fall somewhere in between. A single session with a qualified hypnotherapist typically ranges from $150 to $400. Danny's own rate is $299 for a single session, with no hidden packages or upsells. The $4,000 unlimited package sounds like a lot, but it's a bet on needing many sessions. The $5,700 story is a red flag: no session should leave you feeling worse than when you started.
What You Actually Get for Your Money
A session isn't just an hour of talking. You're paying for a guided hypnotherapy process that has two parts: regression and integration. The regression part is what most people think of: getting into a relaxed, focused state and tracing a pattern back to a likely root. The integration part is where the real value lives: connecting whatever surfaces to the pattern that's still showing up in your life now, so it loosens its grip.
People who describe a session as worth it often mention the integration work. One person said, 'I told my therapist this past week that I've made more progress in two hypnotherapy sessions than I have with all my therapy sessions spread out over the past 10 years.' That's not about seeing a past life. It's about the pattern shifting.
What you're not getting is a guarantee. You might not see anything at all. You might see something that feels made up. That's normal, and a good practitioner will tell you that upfront. The value is in the process, not the certainty.
When It Feels Worth It (and When It Doesn't)
The people who felt a session was worth the money almost always had a specific, nameable thing they were working on. A fear with no origin story. A recurring dream that felt like a memory. A pull toward a place or era that didn't connect to anything in their actual life. 'I always say I must've been a criminal in a past life because I have an irrational fear of the police, I feel like they are the bad guys and I don't know why,' one person wrote. That's the kind of concrete pattern that makes the cost feel justified.
On the other hand, people who went in without a clear focus or who got a session that just showed them a scene without connecting it back often felt it wasn't worth it. 'I get that people can feel skeptical about this until they have first hand experience,' someone said, but even firsthand experience doesn't feel valuable if it doesn't lead anywhere.
A red flag is any practitioner who promises certainty, charges a huge upfront fee, or makes you feel pressured. The $5,700 story is the extreme, but smaller red flags include vague pricing, no recorded session, or a practitioner who talks more than they guide.
How to Vet a Practitioner So You Don't Waste Money
The best way to make sure a session is worth the money is to choose the right practitioner. The research shows that people who had a good experience often found someone who felt trustworthy and ethical. 'Find a board certified hypnotherapist. That way you are seeing someone who is bound to a certain ethical standard,' one person advised. But credentials alone aren't enough. The same person noted that even 'certified' can be self-claimed, and there's no government regulation.
What matters more is how they talk about the process. A good practitioner will tell you what to expect, including the possibility that you won't see anything clear. They'll explain the two parts of the session and emphasize integration. They won't promise to cure you or diagnose you. They'll record the session and give it to you.
Danny's approach is transparent: $299 for a single session, no packages, no upsells. You can ask questions before booking. If a practitioner won't answer your questions or makes you feel rushed, that's a red flag.
Is It Worth It for You?
The honest answer: it depends on what you're hoping to get. If you're looking for a guaranteed answer or a cure for a medical condition, this isn't it. If you're curious about a specific pattern that won't go away and you're open to a process that might not give you certainty, it could be worth trying.
Think of it like this: people pay $100-$200 for a therapy session, $150 for a massage, $50 for a good meal. A past life regression session is in a similar range for most practitioners. The question isn't whether $299 is a lot of money. It's whether understanding and releasing a pattern that's been running your life is worth that much to you.
One person put it simply: 'I had my second session last week and all I can say is hypnotherapy is absolutely bat shit crazy in a very good way!!' That's not a guarantee, but it's a real reaction. The only way to know if it's worth it for you is to try it with a clear question and an open mind.
What to Expect from a Session with Danny
If you decide to book, here's what a session looks like. It's fully virtual, recorded, and lasts about 90 minutes. The first part is a conversation about what you're bringing: the fear, dream, or pull you want to explore. Then the guided hypnotherapy begins. You stay aware throughout. After the regression, there's time to talk about what came up and how it connects to your life now.
The cost is $299 for a single session. There are no packages, no upsells, no hidden fees. If you need more than one session, Danny will tell you honestly. The goal is never to sell you more sessions. It's to help you understand and release the pattern you came with.
If you're not sure whether this fits what you're noticing, the quiz is a good first step. It takes about two minutes and gives you a clearer read on what your signals might point to.
Not sure if a session is worth it for you? Take the quiz to see what your signals point to.
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Questions this page answers
What's a typical price for a past life regression session?
Most qualified practitioners charge between $150 and $400 for a single session. Danny charges $299. Some offer packages or unlimited sessions for $1,000 or more, but be cautious of huge upfront fees.
Is the most expensive session the best?
No. The most expensive session in our research ($5,700) was a horror story. Price doesn't equal quality. Look for transparency, a clear process, and a practitioner who emphasizes integration.
What if I don't see anything in the session?
That happens. It doesn't mean you wasted your money. A good practitioner will help you explore what did come up, even if it wasn't a clear scene. Some people need more than one session.
Can I get a refund if it doesn't work?
That depends on the practitioner. Danny doesn't offer refunds because the value is in the process, not a guaranteed outcome. Ask about refund policies before booking.
How do I know a practitioner is legitimate?
Look for someone who explains the process clearly, emphasizes integration, and doesn't make promises. Ask for a recorded session. Avoid anyone who pressures you or charges huge upfront fees.
Is this covered by insurance?
No. Past life regression is not medical care or psychotherapy. It's not covered by insurance. You pay out of pocket.
Whether past life regression is worth the money comes down to what you're hoping to get. If you have a specific pattern that won't explain itself and you're open to a process that won't hand you certainty, a session can be worth far more than the price tag. The key is choosing a practitioner who does the full work: regress to the cause, then integrate it. If you're still unsure, take the quiz to see what your signals point to.
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Take the quiz to see what your signals point toAbout the Author
Danny
Danny practices clinical hypnotherapy, using past life regression to help people find the root of a fear, a dream, or a pull they cannot explain, then release it.
Learn more about our approachImportant: Past life regression is a complementary hypnotherapy practice, not medical care, not psychotherapy, and not a psychological treatment. It is not scientifically proven, and hypnotherapy is not a regulated health profession in any Canadian province. Nothing on this site is medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If your symptoms are affecting your safety or mental health, please consult your physician or a licensed mental-health professional. Hypnotherapy may complement that care but never replaces it.