Doula training is the structured educational process that prepares you to support individuals and families during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period. A doula is a non-medical professional who provides emotional, physical, and informational support — and the training required to do this effectively covers a broad range of topics including childbirth physiology, comfort techniques, communication skills, evidence-based care practices, and the scope of a doula's role within the broader healthcare team.
The doula field is currently unregulated in the United States and most other countries, meaning there is no single licensing body that all doulas must answer to. This creates both flexibility and confusion — technically anyone can call themselves a doula, but completing a recognised training program and obtaining certification through an established organisation is strongly recommended. It builds your competency, boosts client confidence, and increasingly, hospitals and insurance networks that compensate doulas require certification through an accredited program.
Most doula training programs are structured around a workshop or course component, a set of required reading, and a practical requirement — typically attending a set number of births or postpartum visits to complete a mentored apprenticeship before full certification is awarded. The training differs depending on the type of doula work you intend to do: birth doula training focuses on labour support, while postpartum doula training emphasises newborn care, infant feeding, and recovery. Some organisations offer combined programs covering both.
The doula profession has grown significantly over the past decade, driven by increasing evidence of the benefits doulas provide. Research consistently shows that continuous labour support — the core function of a birth doula — reduces caesarean section rates, reduces the use of pain medication, shortens labour duration, and improves maternal satisfaction with the birth experience. This evidence base has driven demand for trained, certified doulas in hospitals, birth centres, and home birth settings alike.
Doula schooling doesn't require a prior healthcare background. Many doulas come from entirely different careers — social work, nursing, teaching, counselling — and many others enter the field without any healthcare experience at all. What matters most is a genuine commitment to supporting families during one of the most significant experiences of their lives, strong communication and empathy skills, and the willingness to complete the required training and births before certification.
Research the major doula training organisations — DONA International, CAPPA, International Doula Institute, ICEA, and others — and select one based on your learning style, budget, and the certification's recognition in your area. Some hospitals and insurance networks prefer or require specific certifications. DONA International is the oldest and most widely recognised globally; CAPPA has a strong presence in the US; IDI is popular for its flexible online format.
Attend the required training — this is typically a 2-3 day in-person workshop, a multi-week online course, or a hybrid format. Topics covered include the physiology of labour, comfort measures (breathing, positioning, massage, hydrotherapy), birth preferences, communication with medical staff, evidence-based interventions, and the doula's scope of practice. Most programs also address postpartum basics, breastfeeding support, and common complications.
Most certification programs include a required reading list — books covering birth, lactation, evidence-based care, and doula practice — and written assignments or reflections. DONA International requires several specific books; CAPPA and IDI have their own lists. This self-study component deepens your knowledge between the workshop and your practical experience.
This is the practical heart of doula training. Birth doula certification typically requires attending 3-5 births as a doula (not as an observer). Postpartum certification requires completing a set number of postpartum visits. These must usually be with clients who complete an evaluation. Finding your first clients can feel daunting — many new doulas work with friends, family, or reduced-fee clients to complete their birth requirements.
Once births and reading requirements are complete, you compile a certification portfolio — evaluations from clients and healthcare providers, birth reports, evidence of reading completion, and sometimes a skills demonstration or oral examination. Submit this to the certifying organisation for review. Approval results in full certification, which you'll maintain with continuing education and renewal fees.
DONA International — originally Doulas of North America — is the oldest and largest doula certification organisation in the world, founded in 1992. DONA doula training is widely recognised by hospitals, midwifery practices, and insurance networks and carries strong credibility for both birth and postpartum doula work.
DONA-approved workshops are offered by independent DONA-approved educators across the US, Canada, and internationally. The in-person workshop typically runs 2-3 days and covers all core birth doula competencies. After the workshop, candidates must complete a required reading list, attend three births, collect evaluations from clients and healthcare providers, and submit a birth report and reflection for each birth.
DONA International also offers postpartum doula training separately, with its own workshop and certification requirements including completion of postpartum visits, reading requirements, and evaluation forms. The combined pathway — completing both birth and postpartum certification — is popular among doulas who want to offer full-spectrum support to families.
DONA certification costs vary depending on the workshop educator, but expect to pay $300-$800 for the workshop itself plus DONA membership fees (~$100/year) and certification application fees. Annual membership and certification renewal every three years require continuing education credits. For those specifically researching DONA training, the organisation's website lists approved educators by region, making it straightforward to find a workshop near you or online. Understanding what a doula does and what clients expect is valuable context before committing to a specific training pathway.
The DONA model emphasises what is sometimes called the three Rs of doula support — reassurance, information, and physical comfort — and training reflects these priorities through a mix of didactic content, practice scenarios, and role-play exercises. Many candidates describe the workshop as transformative even before they've attended their first birth.
The oldest and most widely recognised doula certification organisation, founded in 1992. DONA offers birth doula and postpartum doula certification through approved workshops worldwide. Strong recognition among hospitals and insurance networks. Workshop-based with in-person, online, and hybrid formats. Requires 3 attended births for birth doula certification.
Childbirth and Postpartum Professional Association — a major US certifying body offering birth doula, postpartum doula, lactation educator, and childbirth educator certifications. CAPPA doula training is available through approved trainers and online formats. Strong presence in hospital settings. Requires 3 births for certification with client and provider evaluations.
One of the most popular online doula training programs, IDI offers a fully online curriculum that can be completed at your own pace. Particularly accessible for those who cannot attend in-person workshops. IDI certification requires births and evaluations like other major programs. Frequently cited for the quality of its online content and student support.
The International Childbirth Education Association offers doula certification with a strong emphasis on evidence-based practice and childbirth education. ICEA has a long history in the childbirth education field and its doula certification is well-regarded. Training is available through approved educators with online options.
DONA International is the standard-bearer for doula certification worldwide.
CAPPA (Childbirth and Postpartum Professional Association) is one of the largest US certifying bodies.
Online doula training has become increasingly mainstream since 2020, with major organisations adding or expanding digital formats.
The cost of doula training varies considerably depending on the organisation, format, and whether you're pursuing birth doula, postpartum doula, or dual certification. Workshop fees typically range from $200 on the lower end for some online programs to $1,500 or more for comprehensive in-person intensive workshops that include meals, materials, and additional mentoring. Most fall in the $400-$900 range for the core training component.
Beyond the initial workshop, factor in membership fees (most major organisations charge annual fees of $75-$150), certification application fees ($50-$200), required books ($100-$300 depending on the reading list), and any travel costs if attending an in-person workshop in another city. The total investment to reach full certification — including all fees, books, and incidentals — typically runs $600-$2,000.
The time commitment to full certification is less predictable than the financial cost because it depends heavily on how long it takes to complete your required births or postpartum visits. The training workshop itself might be done in a weekend, but the practical component — attending three births as a doula — could take months. Birth timing is unpredictable: a client could go into labour at 37 weeks or 42 weeks, day or night, weekday or weekend. New doulas often carry 2-3 active clients simultaneously to increase the likelihood of having births available within a reasonable timeframe.
Most doulas complete their certification within 12-24 months of beginning training, though some complete it faster (particularly those with supportive family circumstances or who actively take on reduced-fee clients to build their birth count quickly) and some take longer if births are slow to materialise or if life circumstances intervene. Understanding the full scope of doula services and what clients pay for helps set realistic expectations about income during the certification phase, when many doulas charge reduced or volunteer rates to complete their required births.
Doula training covers a broad curriculum designed to prepare you for the practical, emotional, and informational dimensions of supporting families. While specific content varies by organisation, most comprehensive doula training programs cover the following core areas.
Childbirth physiology and the stages of labour form the foundation of birth doula training. Understanding how labour progresses — from early latent phase through active labour, transition, and the pushing and delivery phases — allows you to interpret what a labouring person is experiencing and adapt your support accordingly. Training covers the hormonal cascade of labour (oxytocin, endorphins, adrenaline), the mechanics of fetal descent, and common variations in labour progress that may or may not require intervention.
Comfort measures are a central practical component. Birth doulas are not medical professionals — they don't perform clinical procedures — but their repertoire of physical comfort techniques is extensive. Training covers breathing and vocalisation patterns, counter-pressure on the sacrum and hips, massage techniques, positioning strategies (hands and knees, side-lying, walking, using a birth ball), hydrotherapy, warm and cold compresses, and the rebozo technique — a traditional Mexican woven shawl used for sifting, jiggling, and supporting during labour. Practice sessions with a partner are a key part of in-person workshops.
Communication skills and the doula's scope of practice are covered extensively. Doulas occupy a unique position — they work alongside midwives, OBs, nurses, and other care providers, not in opposition to them. Training emphasises how to support clients without overstepping professional boundaries, how to communicate effectively with hospital staff, and how to help clients advocate for themselves within the medical system rather than speaking for them.
The BRAIN framework (Benefits, Risks, Alternatives, Intuition, Nothing/delay) is a standard tool taught in doula training for helping clients think through decisions. For those also interested in end-of-life doula work, the death doula training pathway is a separate specialisation with its own certification organisations and competencies.
Evidence-based care and birth interventions are covered so doulas can provide accurate information. Training includes an overview of common interventions — electronic fetal monitoring, induction, epidural anaesthesia, caesarean delivery — including what the evidence shows about their benefits and risks. Doulas are not expected to be medical experts, but familiarity with these topics allows them to help clients find reliable information and ask informed questions of their care providers.
Postpartum content is included in birth doula programs at a basic level and forms the primary focus of postpartum doula training. Topics include newborn behaviour and care, infant feeding (breastfeeding basics, formula feeding, pumping), postpartum emotional adjustment, recognising signs of postpartum mood disorders, infant sleep, and supporting the whole family unit through the transition to parenthood. Postpartum doulas also learn about practical household support — meal preparation, light household tasks, older sibling support — as this hands-on assistance is a core part of what postpartum clients hire them for.
Completing your training workshop is the beginning of the certification journey, not the end. After the workshop, candidates enter a practicum period during which they must complete their required births or postpartum visits, fulfil reading and assignment requirements, and collect the necessary evaluations to submit a certification portfolio. This phase varies in length from a few months to two years depending on individual circumstances.
Finding your first doula clients as a trainee is one of the most common challenges new doulas face. Effective strategies include letting everyone in your personal network know you're in training and available to serve as a doula at a reduced or volunteer fee, connecting with midwifery practices and birth centres in your area that may be willing to connect trainee doulas with clients, joining local doula communities or Facebook groups where clients seeking affordable doula support may post, and reaching out to childbirth educators who can make referrals.
Many new doulas work at significantly reduced rates — or even volunteer — for their certification births. This is a normal part of the profession's entry pathway and is worth viewing as part of the investment in training rather than lost income. Once certified, doulas in most US markets charge $800-$2,500 per birth for full support packages; in major metropolitan areas, rates of $3,000-$5,000 are not uncommon for experienced certified doulas.
After full certification is achieved, the next professional development steps typically include building a client base through referrals and online presence, potentially specialising in specific populations (teen parents, LGBTQ+ families, high-risk pregnancies, military families), seeking additional certifications (lactation support, childbirth education, bereavement doula), and eventually potentially becoming a doula trainer yourself. The pathway from student to trainer within organisations like DONA typically requires several years of active practice and a significant birth count.
Business skills — marketing, client contracts, payment processing, liability insurance, and professional boundaries — are often undercovered in doula training programs and require separate self-study. Many doulas find online communities, doula business courses, and mentorship with experienced doulas invaluable for navigating the business side of building a sustainable practice. Setting your rates, creating a client agreement, and choosing how to market yourself — through a website, social media, or direct referral relationships with midwives and OBs — are practical decisions you'll navigate in the first year after certification. Building these systems early prevents scrambling later when clients start arriving.
Finding doula training classes near you is easier than it was a decade ago, when in-person workshop availability was highly geographic. All of the major certification organisations maintain searchable directories of approved trainers and upcoming workshops on their websites, filterable by location, format (in-person/online/hybrid), and date. Searching through these directories is the most reliable way to find training that satisfies your chosen organisation's requirements.
For those in areas with limited local workshop availability, online and hybrid formats have expanded access significantly. DONA International now accepts some online workshop completions for certification purposes when delivered by an approved educator. CAPPA similarly has expanded its online educator roster. IDI and Birth Arts International offer fully online curricula that can be completed from anywhere.
Cost assistance is available for doulas from underrepresented communities in many markets. Organisations including DONA International offer scholarships and sliding-scale training options. Some community organisations and public health departments in underserved areas sponsor doula training for community members who will serve families in those communities — a model that has been funded in cities including Chicago, New York, and Seattle as part of maternal health equity initiatives.
Doula training classes online have become the primary entry point for many new doulas in recent years, and the quality of online training has improved dramatically as organisations have invested in digital curriculum development. That said, online training works best when supplemented by hands-on practice — whether through a skills day workshop, mentorship from a local experienced doula, or simply practicing comfort measures with a willing partner or mannequin before your first birth.
The knowledge content transfers well online; the physical skills benefit from in-person practice. Whichever format you choose, connecting with other trainee doulas in online communities or local meetups makes the certification journey more sustainable and less isolating during the period between training completion and your first births. Peer support — sharing experiences, trading on-call schedules, and debriefing births together — is one of the most valuable informal resources a new doula can access.