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Stress Therapists

12,112 licensed therapists specializing in stress

Updated

Looking for a stress therapist? Our directory features 12,112 licensed mental health professionals specializing in stress. Whether you need in-person or online sessions, you can find qualified stress specialists across FL, TX, CA and more states. Compare profiles, check insurance coverage, and find the right therapist for your needs.

Photo of Charity Sophus, LCSW - therapist in Calvert, TX

Charity Sophus

LCSW

Calvert, TX

I am a Licensed Clinical Social Worker specializing in children and families, with experience across all ages. I have spent over five years advocating for indiv...

Addictions ADHD Anger management +10
Waitlist 3+ yrs

Showing 1,897-1,920 of 12,112 results

Stress Therapy at a Glance

12,112

Therapists

100%

Offer Telehealth

52

States Covered

100%

Diverse Providers

Often Treated Alongside Stress

Percentage of stress therapists who also treat each area

Understanding Stress

Stress is the body and mind's reaction to demands and challenges, ranging from normal manageable stress to chronic overwhelming stress affecting health and functioning. While some stress is normal and even motivating, chronic stress from work, relationships, finances, health, or multiple sources accumulates and taxes physical and mental health. Therapy helps you understand your stress sources, build resilience and coping skills, make changes reducing unnecessary stress, and develop practices that restore nervous system balance.

Therapy for stress involves identifying your primary stress sources and which are changeable, building concrete stress management skills, addressing unhelpful stress responses, making practical changes where possible, improving work-life balance, building practices that calm your nervous system, and developing resilience. You'll often reduce actual stressors while building greater capacity to handle unavoidable stress. Many people find that addressing stress provides relief and prevents more serious mental health problems.

When seeking stress management support, look for therapists experienced with stress and burnout, trained in stress reduction approaches like mindfulness, and comfortable with both individual coping and practical life changes. Ask about their approach to stress management and whether they work on both internal resilience and external stressor reduction. The right fit means finding someone who helps you make meaningful changes while building sustainable coping.

How to Get Started With Stress Therapy

1

Browse & Filter

Search our 12,112 stress specialists. Filter by state, insurance, telehealth, and language.

2

Compare Profiles

Review credentials, treatment approaches, fees, and availability. 100% offer online sessions for flexible scheduling.

3

Reach Out

Contact your chosen therapist directly. Many offer a free initial consultation to ensure a good fit before committing.

Evidence-Based Treatment for Stress

Chronic stress dysregulates the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, leading to prolonged elevation of cortisol and other stress hormones. This affects immune function, sleep, metabolism, and mental health. Research shows that chronic stress accumulates from multiple sources and requires both reduction of stressors and development of resilience. The American Psychological Association emphasizes that stress management is critical for both mental and physical health.

Evidence-based stress approaches include cognitive-behavioral therapy addressing stress-maintaining thoughts and behaviors, acceptance and commitment therapy building values-aligned living despite stress, mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) calming the nervous system, relaxation training and biofeedback, and practical problem-solving addressing changeable stressors. Boundary-setting work addresses overcommitment. Meaning-making helps people find purpose within difficult circumstances.

Treatment typically involves assessment of stress sources, learning specific stress reduction techniques (relaxation, breathing, mindfulness), addressing thoughts amplifying stress, making practical changes to reduce unnecessary stressors, improving boundaries and work-life balance, and developing daily or regular stress management practice. Progress involves decreased physical stress symptoms, better sleep and energy, improved mood, and greater sense of control.

Research shows that stress management interventions improve physical health markers (blood pressure, cortisol), mental health, and overall wellbeing. People who engage in consistent stress management practices report sustained improvements in stress levels, health, and functioning. Many organizations now recognize stress management as essential for employee wellbeing and productivity.

Most Common Approaches for Stress

Based on treatment methods used by stress therapists in our directory

Finding the Right Stress Therapist

Look for therapists experienced with stress and burnout, trained in evidence-based stress management like CBT for stress or MBSR, and comfortable with both skills training and practical life changes. Ask about their approach to stress management and whether they address both your stress response and your stressors. Understanding that some stress requires external change shows appropriate perspective.

Key questions include: What's your approach to stress management? Do you teach specific techniques? How do you help people make practical changes? Have you worked with [your situation-work stress, caregiving stress, multiple stressors]? Do you teach mindfulness or relaxation? How do you balance teaching coping with supporting actual stressor reduction? A good stress therapist should address both internal and external aspects.

Telehealth is excellent for stress management therapy, particularly for learning and practicing stress reduction techniques in your own space. Mindfulness, relaxation, and breathing techniques all work well via video.

Red flags include therapists who suggest stress is entirely your responsibility without acknowledging legitimate stressors, those without specific stress training, or those who minimize stress's impact. Avoid practitioners who focus only on coping without addressing changeable stressors or who suggest stress management should be brief. Be cautious of anyone suggesting your stress is unusual or that healthy people don't experience significant stress.

Frequently Asked Questions About Stress Therapy

How many stress therapists are available?

Our directory lists 12,112 licensed therapists specializing in stress across 52 states. 100% offer telehealth sessions, so you can connect with a specialist from anywhere.

What therapy approaches are used for stress?

Common therapeutic approaches for stress include Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (7,210 therapists), Client-Centered Therapy (6,183 therapists), Solution-Focused Therapy (5,801 therapists), Motivational Interviewing (4,708 therapists), Mindfulness Therapy (4,611 therapists). Each approach has different strengths, so discuss with your therapist which method best fits your situation.

What other issues do stress therapists commonly treat?

Stress therapists frequently also specialize in Anxiety (100%), Depression (89%), Self esteem (84%), Coping with life changes (77%), Relationship issues (77%). This overlap means your therapist can address multiple concerns in a holistic treatment plan.

Can I do online stress therapy?

Yes. 12,112 therapists in our directory (100%) offer online stress 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 stress therapist?

Start by filtering our 12,112 stress 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 stress therapists who speak languages other than English?

Yes. Our directory includes stress therapists who speak Spanish (2) and more. Use the Language filter to find a therapist who speaks your preferred language.