Anger management Therapists
1,247 licensed therapists specializing in anger management
Updated
Looking for an anger management therapist? Our directory features 16,080 licensed mental health professionals specializing in anger management. Whether you need in-person or online sessions, you can find qualified anger management specialists across FL, TX, CA and more states. Compare profiles, check insurance coverage, and find the right therapist for your needs.
Showing 1,033-1,056 of 1,247 results
Anger management Therapy at a Glance
16,080
Therapists
100%
Offer Telehealth
68
States Covered
60%
Diverse Providers
Often Treated Alongside Anger management
Percentage of anger management therapists who also treat each area
Top Treatment Approaches for Anger management
Understanding Anger management
Anger is a normal emotion, but when it becomes intense, frequent, or leads to behaviors you regret-like outbursts, aggression, or relationship damage-it's worth addressing with professional help. Unmanaged anger often masks underlying emotions like hurt, fear, or powerlessness, and therapy helps you understand what's really driving your anger and respond more skillfully. Many people find that anger management therapy improves not just their behavior but their relationships, work satisfaction, and self-respect.
Therapy for anger helps you develop emotional awareness so you can recognize anger earlier, understand your specific triggers, and interrupt the escalation cycle before it reaches crisis. You'll learn both in-the-moment techniques for managing intense anger and longer-term strategies for addressing the underlying issues feeding your anger response. A good therapist will work with your unique anger style-whether you're an exploder, imploder, or someone whose anger comes in waves-and develop strategies tailored to you.
When seeking an anger management specialist, look for therapists trained in cognitive-behavioral approaches to anger, trauma-informed practitioners (since anger often relates to past hurts), and those with experience helping people who want to change their patterns. Ask about their approach to accountability-good anger work requires honest acknowledgment of impact-and their methods for building emotional regulation. The right fit is someone who takes your anger seriously while helping you understand and transform it.
How to Get Started With Anger management Therapy
Browse & Filter
Search our 16,080 anger management specialists. Filter by state, insurance, telehealth, and language.
Compare Profiles
Review credentials, treatment approaches, fees, and availability. 100% offer online sessions for flexible scheduling.
Reach Out
Contact your chosen therapist directly. Many offer a free initial consultation to ensure a good fit before committing.
Evidence-Based Treatment for Anger management
Anger regulation involves the amygdala (emotional alarm), prefrontal cortex (rational thinking), and the autonomic nervous system (fight-flight-freeze response). When someone frequently experiences intense anger, it often reflects dysregulation in these systems, frequently rooted in past trauma, ongoing stress, feeling unheard or disrespected, or learned anger patterns from family. Research shows that anger problems often co-occur with anxiety, depression, substance use, or trauma histories.
Evidence-based treatment for anger problems typically combines cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) to identify and change anger-supporting thoughts and behaviors, emotion regulation training to build tolerance for uncomfortable feelings, and assertiveness/communication training to express needs effectively without aggression. Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) helps people accept intense emotions while choosing values-aligned behavior. Trauma-focused approaches are crucial when past trauma underlies present anger.
Therapy progression begins with understanding your anger pattern-your typical triggers, escalation sequence, what you typically do when angry, and the consequences you experience. You then develop awareness of your early warning signs and learn specific techniques for downregulating your nervous system when anger rises. As treatment progresses, you address underlying issues (hurt, shame, powerlessness), improve communication skills, rebuild relationships affected by anger, and develop a life structure that reduces unnecessary stress.
With focused anger management therapy, most people experience significant improvements within weeks-reduced frequency of angry episodes, better control during them, and decreased relationship conflict and regret. Many report that addressing their anger allows genuine intimacy, professional advancement, and improved self-esteem. The research from the American Psychological Association shows that cognitive-behavioral anger treatments have strong evidence for effectiveness.
Most Common Approaches for Anger management
Based on treatment methods used by anger management therapists in our directory
Finding the Right Anger management Therapist
Look for therapists with specific training in anger management or emotion regulation, ideally with certifications or advanced training in CBT or dialectical behavior therapy (DBT). Ask about their experience with your specific situation-whether you're dealing with workplace anger, family conflict, aggression, or explosive episodes. Ensure they're trauma-informed, since unprocessed trauma frequently underlies anger problems.
Important questions include: How do you approach accountability when someone has hurt others with their anger? What specific techniques do you teach? How do you measure progress? Have you worked with people with similar anger patterns? Do you work with couples or families if needed? A skilled anger therapist should balance compassion for your struggle with clear expectations about change.
Telehealth works well for anger management therapy, particularly for people who feel safer or less triggered in their own environment. Ensure your therapist can teach grounding and regulation techniques effectively via video. Having a support system or accountability partner may be especially important for remote anger work.
Red flags include therapists who excuse or minimize anger's impact on others, those without specific anger training who treat it too generically, or those unwilling to directly address harm you've caused. Avoid anyone who validates anger without encouraging change, as this stops short of genuine help. Be cautious of practitioners who only focus on symptom reduction without addressing underlying drivers or relationship repair.
Anger management Resources
Trusted organizations and programs
Frequently Asked Questions About Anger management Therapy
How many anger management therapists are available?
Our directory lists 16,080 licensed therapists specializing in anger management across 68 states. 100% offer telehealth sessions, so you can connect with a specialist from anywhere.
What therapy approaches are used for anger management?
Common therapeutic approaches for anger management include Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (11,847 therapists), Client-Centered Therapy (10,290 therapists), Solution-Focused Therapy (9,656 therapists), Motivational Interviewing (7,901 therapists), Mindfulness Therapy (7,790 therapists). Each approach has different strengths, so discuss with your therapist which method best fits your situation.
What other issues do anger management therapists commonly treat?
Anger management therapists frequently also specialize in Depression (94%), Self esteem (93%), Coping with life changes (87%), Relationship issues (87%), Trauma and abuse (84%). This overlap means your therapist can address multiple concerns in a holistic treatment plan.
Can I do online anger management therapy?
Yes. 16,080 therapists in our directory (100%) offer online anger management therapy via telehealth. This means you can access specialized care from the comfort of your home. Use the "Telehealth Available" filter to find online providers.
How do I choose the right anger management therapist?
Start by filtering our 16,080 anger management specialists by your state, insurance, and preferred session type (online or in-person). Review therapist profiles to check their experience, treatment approaches, and credentials. Many therapists offer a free consultation to ensure a good fit.
Are there anger management therapists who speak languages other than English?
Yes. Our directory includes anger management therapists who speak Spanish (337), Russian (16), Mandarin (16) and more. Use the Language filter to find a therapist who speaks your preferred language.