Expensive? What a Session Costs at “Married at First Sight” Bride Noa Moses’s Clinic
While we are invested in Noa Moses’s relationship with Ari Goldberg on "Married at First Sight," it turns out the bride receives patients at her own clinic. So we checked the details and, of course, how much a session will cost you.
Lilah Markovich, mako Published: 11.06.26, 13:54 | Updated: 11.06.26, 21:40 Noa Moses | Photo: Instagram, Section 27A
Although on screen we see "Married at First Sight" bride Noa Moses sitting in the patient’s chair at the clinic, in her day-to-day life she is usually the one providing the treatment. The bride, whose many titles include technology and medical innovation entrepreneur, stock trader, and holder of three degrees, business administration, financial economics and psychology, is also a psychotherapist.
For readers wondering, it should be said that Noa is still seeing patients these days, even as she appears on screen, but how much will the pleasure cost you? Moses, whose clinic is in central Tel Aviv, charges 400 shekels per session.
In a question-and-answer session she held on her Instagram account, the bride was asked what it is like to be a psychotherapist while being seen on screen at the same time. "I think a good therapist, and what makes me a good therapist, is that I am constantly evolving throughout my life. I am willing and want to go through processes and I do not settle for life as it is or for certain behaviors."
In another question, she was asked whether treatment is not affected when a therapist’s private life is exposed. "That is a question that has occupied me," Moses replied. "It is important for me to clarify that a therapist does not have to be an anonymous person whom no one knows anything about. Before I was a therapist, I am a person. My participation in 'Married at First Sight' was as a woman looking for love and not as part of my path as a therapist, although there are things I can take, such as experiences, and bring those tools into the therapy room. The real test is what happens when the therapy room door closes and the patient sits in front of me, and there, only they are at the center, I am not the event."
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