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CBT therapy techniques to try: An overview for mental health providers
Need fresh CBT therapy techniques? Get practical ideas, tips, and condition-specific adjustments — plus implementation help from Headway.
Cognitive behavioral therapy, or CBT, is a cornerstone treatment in the mental health field. It popularized working with the connection between thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. CBT is also one of the most researched forms of psychotherapy, has proven helpful across a wide range of disorders and has helped millions of people worldwide.
If you’re curious to learn more, need to add some foundational tools to your clinical skillset, or simply need a refresher, this guide will lay out the key components of CBT and specific techniques that can be included in treatment plans and applied for several disorders.
Key insights
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CBT is a structured, evidence-based therapy targeting the connection between thoughts, behaviors, and emotions. It’s most effective when cognitive or behavioral patterns are driving a client's symptoms.
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CBT sessions follow a consistent structure of agenda-setting, skill-building, and homework, using techniques like thought records, cognitive restructuring, behavioral activation, and exposure.
What is CBT?
The origins of CBT started in the 1960s with psychiatrist Aaron Beck as he developed cognitive therapy, which later merged with behavioral therapy and formalized CBT in the 1970s. It’s rooted in the idea that unhelpful or negative thoughts underpin the negative emotions and behavioral patterns that are part of many mental health disorders. CBT helps clients to identify their patterns and then reorient towards new thoughts and behaviors, which in turn change how they feel and reduce their symptoms.
CBT is a very structured treatment process with repeatable processes and a similar outline for each session. The intervention can be used across a variety of mental health disorders including depression, anxiety, PTSD, substance use disorders, OCD, eating disorders, and insomnia.
It’s most beneficial when the thoughts or behaviors of the client seem to be the core driver of their disorder (i.e. catastrophic thoughts, extensive worry, avoidant behaviors). CBT is effective when problems are well defined and the client has capacity to do related homework.
Cognitive intervention ideas
Cognitive interventions follow the idea that if a client can change their negative thought patterns, their symptoms are likely to follow. Here are a few intervention examples.
Thought records and monitoring
A thought record is typically where CBT starts. It helps clients to break down their thoughts, emotions, behaviors and outcomes in specific life situations. Many thought records will include space to identify thought distortion patterns in their thinking, evaluate their thoughts, and develop new alternative thoughts. These new thoughts can create a shift in mood or behaviors that can be tracked in many thought records. This is particularly useful for clients who have not yet developed much insight into their challenges.
Cognitive restructuring
After clients have identified their negative thought patterns, there is a process of questioning and changing those thoughts called cognitive restructuring. The goal is to challenge unhelpful thinking patterns and replace the thoughts with more neutral, balanced, and helpful thoughts. This restructuring tends to have a helpful impact on the symptoms of a variety of mental health disorders.
This can be brought about by worksheets, Socratic questioning methods that help facilitate the client’s processing, thought-challenging methods such as evaluating the evidence, and guiding the client towards developing some alternative thoughts.
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Behavioral intervention ideas
Behavioral strategies focus on helping the client develop new, adaptive behaviors. Since CBT focuses on the connection between thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, the idea is that if you change what you do, the feelings and thoughts will follow.
Behavioral activation
Behavioral activation (BA) attempts to help clients implement positive actions in their life to help reduce anxiety and depressive symptoms. The new activities can provide pleasure or a sense of accomplishment. With BA, clients learn to schedule and track these activities, including the impact on their mood as they carry out the activities.
Exposure
Exposure is often used with anxiety disorders. It focuses on helping clients to face feared experiences they’ve been avoiding. During exposure therapy, the client and therapist create a structured plan that helps the client face fears in a step-by-step manner. As the client practices these steps, their brain learns that they can participate in the actions and tolerate the distress. Through repeated exposure — a process called habituation — fear tends to diminish over time.
CBT techniques for specific conditions
One of the benefits of CBT is that it has a core structure that can be used with any disorder, but it’s also been tailored and adapted to meet the specific needs of many different disorders.
CBT techniques for depression
Writing a quality treatment plan for depression means including specific techniques. CBT has some techniques and modifications that are specifically targeted at depression.
- Behavioral activation: Often the first-line CBT intervention for depression. Depression can decrease motivation and make people very inactive. BA helps to get momentum moving in the other direction and improving people’s moods. As clients start to implement more activities, they can track how those changes impact their mood.
- Compassion self-talk reframing: Depression can be very rooted in negative self talk and low self worth. Helping clients move their cognitive restructuring towards more kind, compassionate self talk can be very useful.
CBT techniques for anxiety disorders
When working with anxiety, there are some specific CBT interventions that can be included in the treatment plan. These are targeted at specific symptoms of anxiety such as avoidance or overestimating threats.
- Exposure: There are three main forms of exposure therapy: in-vivo, imaginal, and interoceptive. In-vivo is structuring real life experiences for the client, such as going to a social event for someone with social anxiety. Imaginal exposure means using the imagination to picture something that causes fear. This can be great for early steps of exposure therapy or when in-vivo exposure is not possible. Interoceptive exposure is specifically targeted for people who struggle with panic and overestimating the danger of their body sensations. In all these ways, clients can face things they fear and avoid in a structured way in order to reduce their anxiety levels.
- Anxiety-specific cognitive restructuring: This addresses specific catastrophic thinking patterns common in anxiety. The cognitive targets for specific disorders include: fear of uncertainty, overestimation of danger for generalized anxiety disorder, fear of judgment for social anxiety disorder, catastrophic interpretations of bodily sensations of panic disorder, and overestimation of potential harm with specific phobias.
CBT techniques for trauma and PTSD
CBT has been adapted to meet the needs of those struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). These specific protocols were developed to help clients who have experienced traumatic events.
- Prolonged exposure (PE): This is an exposure protocol specifically designed for trauma survivors, as long as the survivors are stable and no longer in the trauma (such as out of an abusive relationship, for example). There is repeated imaginal exposure of the traumatic event or repeated in-vivo exposure of things avoided due to the traumatic event (i.e. a specific stoplight where a car accident happened).
- Cognitive processing therapy (CPT): This intervention helps trauma survivors to identify and reframe maladaptive beliefs related to their traumatic events. Progressive worksheets can be used to help reframe the beliefs. This is sometimes used in conjunction with a written account of the traumatic event.
CBT techniques for ADHD
CBT for ADHD targets the cognitive patterns of shame, self-blame, and negative self-image that often compound executive functioning challenges, while the behavioral component builds concrete coping strategies for time management, organization, and prioritization.
- Organizing and planning techniques: Tools such as breaking down tasks (chunking), scheduling, reminder lists, and visual aids for time management are all used to help make these areas of life easier. These can help take the tasks and responsibilities that can feel so overwhelming and break them into smaller, more manageable (and more memorable) pieces.
- Cognitive restructuring for ADHD: Cognitive restructuring targets the negative self-talk that compounds ADHD challenges, helping clients develop more neutral, adaptive self-assessments. This can reduce the emotional intensity and shift ADHD related behaviors.
Tips for implementing CBT techniques in your practice
CBT's effectiveness depends as much on consistent structure and follow-through as it does on the techniques themselves. These practical considerations can help you implement CBT with fidelity.
- Follow a consistent session structure. CBT works best when sessions follow a predictable format, such as setting a collaborative agenda, reviewing homework from the previous session, learning and practicing skills during the session, and assigning new homework.
- Collaborate with clients. CBT is inherently collaborative, so involve clients in setting goals and determining what to focus on during each session.
- Be clear and specific. Clearly outline session goals, skills being practiced, and homework assignments so both you and the client know what to expect and what to work on between sessions.
- Prioritize follow-through. Intentional follow-up on previously assigned homework or exercises helps reinforce learning and keeps treatment moving forward.
- Document progress consistently. Maintain thorough progress notes to track how treatment aligns with the client’s goals and treatment plan.
- Support your work with evidence-based documentation. Because CBT is considered a gold-standard, evidence-based treatment for many disorders, referencing it in treatment plans and notes can help demonstrate the clinical value of your work.
- Stay mindful of compliance and billing requirements. Clear documentation can also help justify services for insurance billing and protect against potential clawbacks during audits.
- Use tools that streamline administrative work. Platforms like Headway offer note templates, AI-supported documentation, and simplified insurance credentialing and billing so clinicians can spend more time delivering evidence-based care.
Focus more on CBT implementation and less on admin with Headway
CBT's structured, research-backed framework gives clinicians a versatile toolkit, one that can be adapted for depression, anxiety, PTSD, ADHD, and beyond. The techniques outlined here each have deeper protocols worth exploring as you refine your clinical approach.
The challenge is protecting the time and focus that good CBT work requires. Headway handles credentialing, billing, and documentation so you can stay in the clinical work rather than the administrative weeds. Reach out to a practice consultant to learn how Headway can support your practice.
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.
© 2026 Therapymatch, Inc. dba Headway. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
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