Types of Therapy: A Guide to Different Therapeutic Approaches

With so many types of therapy available, choosing an approach can feel overwhelming. Understanding different therapeutic methods can help you find the right fit for your needs and preferences.

When you decide to try therapy, you might be surprised to learn that “therapy” isn’t just one thing. There are dozens of therapeutic approaches, each with different theories about how problems develop and how change happens. Some focus on changing thoughts, others on processing emotions. Some are structured and short-term, others exploratory and longer.

Understanding different types of therapy can help you make informed choices about your treatment. While your therapist will guide you toward appropriate approaches, knowing your options empowers you to participate in that decision.

Why Different Approaches Exist

Understanding the landscape.

Different Theories of Change

Varied perspectives:

  • Some believe changing thoughts changes feelings
  • Others focus on unconscious patterns
  • Some emphasize behavior change
  • Others prioritize emotional processing
  • Different routes to similar destinations

Different Problems, Different Solutions

Matching treatment to issue:

  • Some approaches better for specific problems
  • Anxiety may respond well to CBT
  • Trauma may benefit from EMDR
  • Depression may respond to various approaches
  • Match matters

Personal Preferences

What works for you:

  • Some people like structure
  • Others prefer exploration
  • Past experiences influence preference
  • Personality affects fit
  • Your preference matters

Therapist Training

Specialization:

  • Therapists train in specific approaches
  • May integrate multiple methods
  • Experience shapes their practice
  • Ask about their approach
  • Training influences practice

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

The evidence-based workhorse.

Core Principles

How it works:

  • Thoughts influence feelings and behaviors
  • Identify negative thought patterns
  • Challenge and change unhelpful thoughts
  • Develop healthier thinking
  • Cognitive restructuring

What Sessions Look Like

The CBT process:

  • Structured and goal-oriented
  • Homework between sessions
  • Identifying cognitive distortions
  • Behavioral experiments
  • Skills practice

Best For

When CBT helps most:

  • Anxiety disorders
  • Depression
  • Phobias
  • OCD
  • Insomnia
  • Eating disorders
  • Many conditions respond to CBT

Strengths

What makes it effective:

  • Strong research support
  • Structured approach
  • Relatively short-term
  • Skills you can use independently
  • Practical and focused

Limitations

Where it may fall short:

  • May not address underlying issues
  • Can feel formulaic
  • Not ideal for complex trauma
  • May not suit those who want exploration
  • Doesn’t fit everyone

Psychodynamic Therapy

Exploring deeper patterns.

Core Principles

The foundation:

  • Unconscious patterns influence behavior
  • Past experiences shape present
  • Therapeutic relationship reveals patterns
  • Insight leads to change
  • Understanding the roots

What Sessions Look Like

The process:

  • Less structured than CBT
  • Free association sometimes used
  • Exploring childhood and past
  • Examining relationship patterns
  • Analyzing defenses

Best For

When it helps:

  • Chronic or recurring issues
  • Relationship patterns
  • Understanding yourself deeply
  • Personality issues
  • When symptoms recur despite treatment

Strengths

What it offers:

  • Deep understanding of patterns
  • Addresses root causes
  • Therapeutic relationship is healing
  • Lasting change through insight
  • Comprehensive exploration

Limitations

Considerations:

  • Longer-term typically
  • Less research support than CBT (though growing)
  • May not suit those wanting quick fixes
  • Can be vague about goals
  • Requires patience

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)

Accepting what is, committing to values.

Core Principles

The approach:

  • Accept difficult thoughts and feelings
  • Defusion from unhelpful thoughts
  • Present-moment awareness
  • Values clarification
  • Committed action toward values

Key Concepts

What you’ll learn:

  • Psychological flexibility
  • Mindfulness skills
  • Values-based living
  • Acceptance vs. avoidance
  • Moving toward what matters

Best For

When it helps:

  • Anxiety and depression
  • Chronic pain
  • When avoidance is the problem
  • Values confusion
  • Those who appreciate mindfulness

Strengths

What it offers:

  • Strong research support
  • Mindfulness integration
  • Values-focused
  • Acceptance reduces struggle
  • Flexible application

Limitations

Considerations:

  • Acceptance can be misunderstood
  • May not address trauma directly
  • Mindfulness doesn’t suit everyone
  • Requires engagement with concepts
  • Some find it abstract

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

Skills for emotional regulation.

Core Principles

The foundation:

  • Balance acceptance and change
  • Skills training focus
  • Four skill modules
  • Validation plus change strategies
  • Originally for borderline personality disorder

The Four Modules

Skills taught:

  • Mindfulness: present-moment awareness
  • Distress tolerance: crisis survival skills
  • Emotion regulation: managing feelings
  • Interpersonal effectiveness: relationship skills

Best For

When it helps:

  • Borderline personality disorder
  • Chronic suicidal thoughts
  • Self-harm
  • Intense emotions
  • Eating disorders
  • Substance abuse

Strengths

What it offers:

  • Concrete, learnable skills
  • Addresses emotional dysregulation directly
  • Strong research support
  • Structured approach
  • Group and individual components

Limitations

Considerations:

  • Requires significant commitment
  • Full DBT is intensive
  • May be more than needed for some
  • Not widely available everywhere
  • Time-intensive

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)

Processing trauma through bilateral stimulation.

Core Principles

How it works:

  • Trauma stored maladaptively in memory
  • Bilateral stimulation aids processing
  • Targets traumatic memories
  • Allows natural healing to occur
  • Reprocessing of disturbing memories

What Sessions Look Like

The process:

  • Assessment and preparation
  • Identifying target memories
  • Bilateral stimulation (eye movements, tapping)
  • Processing and reprocessing
  • Integration

Best For

When it helps:

  • PTSD
  • Single-incident trauma
  • Childhood trauma
  • Anxiety rooted in past experiences
  • Phobias

Strengths

What it offers:

  • Strong research support for trauma
  • Often faster than talk therapy for PTSD
  • Doesn’t require extensive verbal processing
  • Can work when words fail
  • Effective for trauma

Limitations

Considerations:

  • Requires specialized training
  • Not suited for all issues
  • Can be intense
  • Requires stability before starting
  • Not universally available

Person-Centered Therapy

The healing relationship.

Core Principles

The foundation:

  • Unconditional positive regard
  • Empathy and understanding
  • Genuineness from therapist
  • Client-directed
  • Self-actualization natural with right conditions

What Sessions Look Like

The process:

  • Non-directive approach
  • Therapist reflects and validates
  • Client leads content
  • Supportive relationship
  • Space for self-exploration

Best For

When it helps:

  • Those who feel judged
  • Need for acceptance
  • Self-exploration goals
  • Less specific presenting problems
  • Supportive therapy needs

Strengths

What it offers:

  • Deeply validating
  • Client empowerment
  • Relationship itself is healing
  • Non-judgmental space
  • Respects client autonomy

Limitations

Considerations:

  • May lack structure some need
  • Less effective for specific disorders
  • Can feel directionless
  • Skills not explicitly taught
  • Some want more guidance

Somatic Therapy

The body remembers.

Core Principles

The foundation:

  • Body holds trauma and emotion
  • Physical sensations connect to psychological states
  • Body-up processing
  • Mind-body integration
  • Nervous system regulation

Approaches

Various methods:

  • Somatic Experiencing
  • Sensorimotor Psychotherapy
  • Body-based techniques
  • Breath work
  • Movement integration

Best For

When it helps:

  • Trauma stored in body
  • Dissociation
  • Chronic pain
  • When talk therapy hasn’t worked
  • Nervous system dysregulation

Strengths

What it offers:

  • Addresses body directly
  • Helps when words aren’t enough
  • Regulates nervous system
  • Integrates mind and body
  • Works with bodily experience

Limitations

Considerations:

  • Less mainstream research (growing)
  • May feel unfamiliar
  • Not all therapists trained
  • May not suit those uncomfortable with body focus
  • Requires specialized therapist

Psychoanalysis

The original depth therapy.

Core Principles

The foundation:

  • Unconscious drives behavior
  • Childhood experiences foundational
  • Free association reveals unconscious
  • Transference analyzed
  • Deep insight goals

What Sessions Look Like

The process:

  • Multiple sessions per week traditionally
  • Long-term commitment
  • Free association
  • Dream analysis sometimes
  • Analyzing the therapeutic relationship

Best For

When it helps:

  • Deep character change goals
  • Recurring life patterns
  • Those committed to self-understanding
  • Willingness for intensive work
  • Complex personality issues

Strengths

What it offers:

  • Profound self-understanding
  • Addresses deep patterns
  • Comprehensive exploration
  • Long-lasting changes
  • Relationship focus

Limitations

Considerations:

  • Time and cost intensive
  • Less accessible
  • Limited research by modern standards
  • Not efficient for specific symptoms
  • Requires significant commitment

Family Systems Therapy

The family as the client.

Core Principles

The foundation:

  • Problems exist in context of family
  • Family is a system
  • Change one part, affect the whole
  • Patterns passed down generations
  • Systemic view

Approaches

Various methods:

  • Structural Family Therapy
  • Bowenian Therapy
  • Strategic Family Therapy
  • Narrative Family Therapy
  • Multiple approaches exist

Best For

When it helps:

  • Family conflict
  • Child and adolescent issues
  • Relationship patterns
  • Communication problems
  • When individual therapy hasn’t worked

Strengths

What it offers:

  • Addresses context
  • Systemic change
  • Improves family functioning
  • Recognizes interconnection
  • Powerful for relationship issues

Limitations

Considerations:

  • Requires family participation
  • Not for all issues
  • Logistics of scheduling
  • Some problems are individual
  • May not suit all families

Other Approaches

Additional options.

Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT)

CBT plus mindfulness:

  • Combines cognitive therapy and mindfulness
  • Especially for depression relapse prevention
  • Skills-based
  • Strong research support
  • Structured approach

Narrative Therapy

Rewriting your story:

  • Separates person from problem
  • Examines stories we tell
  • Creates alternative narratives
  • Empowering approach
  • Less pathologizing

Gestalt Therapy

Present-moment focus:

  • Here-and-now awareness
  • Experiential techniques
  • Empty chair work
  • Awareness is curative
  • Experiential approach

Art Therapy

Creative expression:

  • Uses art as therapeutic tool
  • Bypasses verbal limitations
  • Processing through creation
  • Good for trauma, children
  • Trained art therapists

Play Therapy

For children:

  • Child’s natural language is play
  • Processing through play
  • Non-verbal expression
  • Child-appropriate
  • Specialized training required

Choosing the Right Approach

How to decide.

Consider Your Goals

What do you want:

  • Symptom relief → CBT, DBT
  • Deep understanding → Psychodynamic
  • Trauma processing → EMDR, Somatic
  • Skills building → DBT, CBT
  • Match approach to goals

Consider Your Preferences

Personal style:

  • Structured vs. exploratory
  • Active vs. reflective
  • Present-focused vs. past-exploring
  • Verbal vs. body-based
  • Your preference matters

Consider Your Issue

Problem matching:

  • Some approaches work better for specific issues
  • Ask therapist what they recommend
  • Research what works for your concern
  • Evidence-based matching
  • Don’t assume one-size-fits-all

Trust Your Therapist

Professional guidance:

  • They know approaches
  • Can recommend based on assessment
  • May integrate multiple approaches
  • Ask them about their approach
  • Collaborate on decision

Try and Evaluate

Experience-based:

  • You’ll know if it fits
  • Give it fair trial
  • Provide feedback
  • Adjust if needed
  • Your experience matters

Most Therapists Are Integrative

The reality of practice.

Eclectic Approaches

What most do:

  • Draw from multiple approaches
  • Tailor to individual client
  • Combine techniques
  • Flexibility in practice
  • What works for you

The Relationship Matters Most

Research finding:

  • Therapeutic relationship predicts outcomes
  • More than specific technique
  • Connection is healing
  • Approach matters less than fit
  • Find someone you connect with

Focus on Fit

The bottom line:

  • Right therapist matters more than right approach
  • Find someone you trust
  • Feel heard and understood
  • Approach is secondary
  • The relationship heals

Finding Your Path

Different types of therapy offer different paths to healing. There’s no single “best” approach—only what works best for you, given your specific concerns, preferences, and goals. An evidence-based approach for your particular issue, delivered by a therapist you trust and connect with, is typically the recipe for success.

Don’t be afraid to ask potential therapists about their approach, how they would work with your concerns, and why they think their method might help. Be an informed consumer of therapy services while remaining open to your therapist’s expertise and recommendations.

The most important thing isn’t finding the “perfect” approach—it’s finding a therapist you can work with and committing to the process. The types of therapy outlined here are all potentially helpful. The one that works is the one you’ll engage with fully, guided by a therapist who sees you and helps you heal.

This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re seeking therapy, please consult with a qualified mental health provider to determine the best approach for your needs.

Ready to Take the Next Step?

If you'd like support in working through these issues, I'm here to help.

Schedule a Session