About Ease Wellbeing
Ease Wellbeing is a counselling practice based at 63 Ubi Ave 1, #05-01, serving clients islandwide in Singapore. KakiList has verified its operating details and contact channels. With only 4 Google reviews at a rating of 4.0/5, the sample is too small to draw firm conclusions about client experience, and prospective clients should treat that figure as directional only. Pricing is positioned at a mid-range level ($$), though specific session fees are not publicly listed.
Enquiries can be made via WhatsApp, phone, or the online contact form. At a first consultation, the practitioner will typically conduct an intake to understand the presenting concern — whether that is anxiety, depression, relationship difficulties, grief, work stress, or another issue — before agreeing on a therapeutic approach and session cadence. Clients should ask whether sessions are one-to-one or available in other formats, whether online sessions are offered alongside in-person appointments at Ubi, the cancellation and no-show policy, and whether a fixed-fee package or per-session billing applies.
To take the next step, reach out via WhatsApp or the online form to request an initial consultation, confirm the practitioner's credentials and therapeutic approach, and clarify the session fee before your first appointment.
Listing data is incomplete — contact Ease Wellbeing directly to confirm details.
Confirm the practitioner's licence number on the relevant board's public register before treatment.
Wan Yeng (Therapist) is very professional. She was able to provide an empathetic listening ear as much as guiding me through the solutioning process, including how to move forward from my psychological obstacles through concrete actions.
I found her through a recommendation on Perplexity and accompanied my son to his first session. From the start, my first impression of the therapist (Wan Yeng) was that she seemed inexpressive and lacked energy. Unfortunately, my son also felt the session wasn’t helpful. When he couldn’t answer a question, she kept repeating it without offering any guidance or support, which left him feeling frustrated and discouraged. We are not going back to her
Highly recommended, professional, dedicated and empathetic. Thank you for all the progress made in therapy. Trusted and skilled therapist and counsellor. AAA +++ 😀😀😀
I have been seeing Wan Yeng for a few years now and a visit has been helpful to me every time
Side-by-side with the next three highest-rated counselling providers on KakiList, so you can see how Ease Wellbeing stacks up at a glance.
| Provider | Google Rating | Reviews | Years | Verified |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ease Wellbeing (this page) | ⭐ 4.0 | 4 | — | ✓ |
| Mind Mojo Hypnotherapy | ⭐ 5.0 | 117 | — | ✓ |
| MindEase | ⭐ 5.0 | 117 | — | ✓ |
| Bloom Child Psychology | ⭐ 5.0 | 91 | — | ✓ |
Ease Wellbeing does not publicly list a specific session rate, though pricing is indicated at a mid-range ($$) level. Individual counselling sessions in Singapore typically run S$80–180 per 50-minute session at private practices, with initial consultations sometimes priced differently. Ask whether a per-session rate or a bundled package applies, whether the rate differs for individual versus couples sessions, and whether a no-show or late-cancellation fee is charged. Confirm the full fee in writing before your first appointment. See the full counselling cost guide for Singapore →
Most counselling practices in Singapore accept self-referrals directly — no GP letter is required to book a first session. At the initial appointment, the practitioner will typically complete an intake assessment covering your presenting concerns, relevant history, and goals for therapy, which helps determine the most appropriate therapeutic approach and session frequency. A GP referral can be useful if you intend to make a claim under an integrated shield plan or employer health benefit that covers mental health — check your insurer's requirements in advance. For complex or clinical presentations (severe depression, psychosis, or trauma requiring psychiatric medication), the counsellor may recommend a concurrent referral to a psychiatrist or polyclinic.
Counselling in Singapore is not yet a legally regulated profession in the same way as physiotherapy or TCM, but credentialled practitioners typically hold membership with the Singapore Association for Counselling (SAC) or the Singapore Psychological Society (SPS), or registration with the Singapore Register of Counsellors. No regulatory licences are currently listed for Ease Wellbeing on KakiList, so it is important to ask the practitioner directly about their qualifications, professional body membership, and whether they carry professional indemnity insurance. Confirm the practitioner's licence number or membership on the relevant body's public register before committing to ongoing sessions.
If Ease Wellbeing isn't the right fit, these are other counselling providers on KakiList worth shortlisting. All are independently listed — no affiliate fees, no "featured" sponsorships.