Why Do Past Life Regression Prices Vary So Much?
From $110 to $5,700, the range is real. Here is what drives the difference and what you are actually paying for.
The short answer
Past life regression prices vary because there is no standard regulation or credential in the field. Prices reflect the practitioner's experience, session length, whether it includes follow-up, and sometimes just what the market will bear. The range goes from around $110 for a basic session to $5,700 for high-end packages, with most single sessions falling between $150 and $400.
Key takeaways
- No standard pricing exists: Past life regression is not a regulated industry, so prices range from $110 to $5,700 with no built-in quality signal.
- You pay for time and integration: A cheap session may skip the second step: connecting what surfaces to your life now. That is the part that actually matters.
- The horror stories are real: One person paid over $5,700 for what they called 'public humiliation.' Price alone does not guarantee safety or quality.
- Transparency is the real signal: A good practitioner will tell you exactly what you get for the price before you book.
You have a fear you can't explain. A dream that repeats. A place you've never been that feels like home. You start looking into past life regression, and the first thing you see is prices that make no sense. $110 for a session. $4,000 for unlimited. $5,700 for a nightmare experience someone posted about on Reddit. It is confusing, and it makes you wonder if any of this is worth it. Here is what actually drives the numbers.
We read through thousands of real accounts of people describing their own past life experiences
Before writing this, the research pulled from thousands of posts and comments in communities where people describe their own experiences: an unexplained fear, a recurring dream, a child's unprompted comment, a session they tried and what it actually felt like. Most of it is not sales talk. It is people trying to describe something that doesn't have an easy explanation. Pricing came up a lot, and the range was stark. People reported paying anywhere from $110 to $5,700, with no clear relationship between price and quality. The worst experience anyone described cost the most.
The Real Price Range People Report
In the accounts we reviewed, past life regression prices ranged from about $110 to $5,700. The low end was often a single session with a practitioner who might be newer or offering a basic package. The high end was usually a multi-session package or a practitioner with a big reputation.
One person mentioned paying $110 for a 75 minute reading, though that was an astrology reading, not a regression, it shows the price anchoring in the broader spiritual space. Another reported a $4,000 unlimited sessions offer, which a hypnotist in the same thread called holy $h!t. The most extreme case was someone who paid over $5,700 for what they described as a public humiliation and a verbal scolding from someone who, in my opinion, displays narcissistic and sociopathic tendencies.
Most single sessions fall between $150 and $400. That is the range where most practitioners operate, and where you can expect a reasonable session length and a basic level of professionalism.
What Actually Drives the Price
A few things explain the variation. First, session length. A 60 minute session costs less than a 90 minute one, and a package of three sessions costs more than one. Second, the practitioner's experience and approach. Someone who has done hundreds of sessions and has a clear method will charge more than someone just starting out. Third, whether the session includes integration work. The cheap sessions sometimes stop at the regression itself, without the second step of connecting what surfaces to your life now. That second step is the whole point.
Fourth, location and format. In person sessions in a major city tend to cost more than virtual ones. But virtual sessions have become the norm, and many experienced practitioners work online with no drop in quality. Fifth, reputation and marketing. Some practitioners charge more simply because they can, based on a book, a social media following, or a claim of being certified. But as one Reddit comment pointed out, something is amusingly off if a subreddit mod is doing more to verify the legitimacy of certified hypnotists than the government. The flairs of certified hypnotist might as well be self-claimed certified hypnotist.
Finally, there is the unlimited sessions model. One person described a $4,000 unlimited package, which sounds like a deal if you need many sessions, but it can also be a way to lock you in. Ask what unlimited actually means and whether there is a time limit.
The $5,700 Horror Story and What It Teaches
The most expensive session in the accounts we reviewed was also the worst. One person wrote: In the end, I paid over $5,700 for what amounted to a public humiliation and a verbal scolding from someone who, in my opinion, displays narcissistic and sociopathic tendencies. That is a real quote from someone who went looking for help and got hurt instead.
What went wrong? The practitioner was not transparent about what the session would involve, did not establish a safe container, and apparently used the power dynamic to dominate rather than guide. The price alone should have been a red flag, but it is not always. A high price can signal confidence, but it can also signal exploitation.
The lesson is not that expensive sessions are bad. It is that price is not a reliable signal of quality. You need other signals: transparency about the method, a clear description of what you will experience, and a practitioner who answers questions directly without defensiveness.
How to Tell If a Price Is Reasonable
A reasonable price for a single past life regression session, in our view, is between $200 and $400. That should include a pre-session conversation, the regression itself (60 to 90 minutes), and a follow-up discussion or integration guidance. If the price is significantly lower, ask what is included. If it is significantly higher, ask why.
Here are some questions to ask before you book:
- What does the session include? How long is it?
- Do you do integration work after the regression?
- What is your experience with past life regression specifically?
- Can you describe what a typical session feels like?
- What if I don't see or feel anything?
- Is the session recorded? Can I keep a copy?
- What is your refund or rescheduling policy?
A good practitioner will answer these clearly. A red flag is vagueness, defensiveness, or pressure to buy a package before you have tried a single session.
What a Fair Session Looks Like
A fair session, at a reasonable price, follows the method spine: regress to the cause, then integrate it. The regression part takes you into a relaxed, focused state where you can explore a specific fear, dream, or pull. The integration part connects what surfaces back to your life now, so the pattern loosens its grip.
People who have had good sessions describe them in consistent terms: a guide asking questions, not telling you what you are seeing; a safe pace; and a clear structure. "He guided me towards my past life. At first it happened subtly, he guided me by asking questions, to analyze my body and making sure i was relaxed as possible," is a typical description. Another person said, "I had my second session last week and all I can say is hypnotherapy is absolutely bat shit crazy in a very good way!!"
A fair session does not promise certainty. It promises a process. If a practitioner guarantees that you will see a specific past life or that your phobia will vanish, that is a red flag. The honest ones say: we will look, and we will work with whatever comes up.
Our Pricing: Transparent and Simple
We keep it simple. A single session is $299. That includes a pre-session conversation, the regression itself (typically 60 to 90 minutes), and integration work afterward. The session is virtual and recorded, so you keep a copy. No hidden packages, no upsells, no unlimited plans that lock you in.
If you want to go deeper, there is a three session Thread for $799 and a Program for $2,499. But you can start with one session and decide from there. No pressure.
We believe transparency is the real signal of quality. You should know exactly what you are getting before you pay. If you have questions, ask them. We will answer.
Not sure if past life regression is right for you? Take the quiz to see what your signals point to.
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Questions this page answers
Why do some past life regression sessions cost $110 and others $5,700?
There is no standard pricing in this field. The difference comes from session length, practitioner experience, whether integration is included, and sometimes just what the market will bear. A low price may mean a shorter or less thorough session. A high price may mean a package or a practitioner with a big reputation, but it does not guarantee quality.
What is a fair price for a single session?
Most single sessions fall between $150 and $400. A fair price includes a pre-session conversation, the regression itself (60 to 90 minutes), and integration work afterward. Our single session is $299.
Is a more expensive session better?
Not necessarily. The worst experience in our research cost over $5,700. Price is not a reliable signal of quality. Look for transparency about the method, a clear description of what you will experience, and a practitioner who answers questions directly.
Should I buy an unlimited sessions package?
Be cautious. One person reported a $4,000 unlimited package that other practitioners criticized as excessive. Ask what unlimited actually means, whether there is a time limit, and whether you can try a single session first.
What if I cannot afford a session?
Some practitioners offer sliding scale or payment plans. You can also try self-guided meditations or YouTube regressions, though they are not a substitute for a guided session. Our single session is $299, and we offer a three session Thread if you want to go deeper.
How do I know if a practitioner is worth the price?
Ask questions before you book. What is included? How long is the session? Do you do integration work? What is your experience? A good practitioner will answer clearly. A red flag is vagueness or pressure to buy a package.
Past life regression prices vary because the field has no standard regulation. The range goes from $110 to $5,700, but most fair sessions fall between $150 and $400. What matters more than the price is transparency: knowing exactly what you get, how the session works, and whether integration is included. If you are curious about what your own signals might point to, 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.