How to choose the right therapist

How to Choose the Right Therapist: A Psychologically Informed Guide

Whether you are struggling with anxiety, relationships, self-esteem, or habits and compulsions, choosing a therapist is less about finding the “best” modality or approach and more about finding the right fit for you. Research consistently shows that while therapeutic approaches matter, the quality of the therapeutic relationship is one of the strongest predictors of outcome (Wampold & Imel, 2015; Norcross & Lambert, 2018).

Below is a clear, evidence-based overview to help you make an informed decision.


1. Start With the Evidence: What Can Actually Predict Change?

Across large meta-analyses:

  • The therapeutic relationship  (collaboration, trust, agreement on goals) strongly predicts outcomes across modalities (Horvath et al., 2011).
  • Different therapies tend to produce similar overall effectiveness for many common difficulties (the “Dodo bird verdict”) (Wampold & Imel, 2015).
  • Specific approaches may show advantages for specific conditions (e.g., CBT for anxiety disorders).

This means:

  • Technique matters.
  • But relationship and fit often matter just as much, maybe even more.


2. Overview of Major Therapy Modalities

Below is a neutral overview of commonly practiced approaches.


Cognitive & Behavioural Approaches

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
Focus: Identifying and restructuring unhelpful thought patterns and behaviours.
Strong evidence base for anxiety, depression, OCD, PTSD (NICE guidelines; Hofmann et al., 2012).

Exposure Therapy
A form of CBT targeting anxiety/OCD through gradual exposure to feared stimuli.
Highly evidence-based for phobias and OCD (Craske et al., 2014).

Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)
Focus: Emotion regulation, distress tolerance, interpersonal effectiveness.
Originally developed for borderline personality disorder; strong evidence base (Linehan et al., 2015).

Schema Therapy
Focus: Longstanding relational and emotional patterns (“schemas”).
Evidence for personality difficulties and chronic depression (Bamelis et al., 2014).


Psychodynamic & Depth Approaches

Psychodynamic Therapy
Focus: Unconscious processes, early relationships, recurring patterns.
Evidence supports effectiveness comparable to CBT in many cases (Shedler, 2010).

Psychoanalysis
More intensive, long-term form of psychodynamic therapy.

Attachment-Based Therapy
Focus: How early relational templates influence present relationships.

Internal Family Systems (IFS)
Focus: “Parts” of the self and internal conflicts.
Emerging but growing evidence base (Schwartz & Sweezy, 2020).


Humanistic & Experiential Approaches

Person-Centred Therapy
Focus: Empathy, unconditional positive regard, authenticity.
Research supports effectiveness, particularly when the therapeutic relationship is strong (Elliott et al., 2013).

Gestalt Therapy
Focus: Present-moment awareness, experiential work.

Emotion-Focused Therapy (EFT)
Focus: Processing and reorganising emotional responses.
Strong evidence in couple therapy (Johnson et al., 2019).

Existential Therapy
Focus: Meaning, responsibility, mortality, freedom.

Transactional Analysis (TA)
Focus: Ego states (Parent–Adult–Child), relational patterns (“transactions”), life scripts, and games.
Used in individual and relational work; evidence base is smaller than CBT but growing, with research supporting effectiveness in depression and personality difficulties (Cornell et al., 2016). TA is recognised within integrative and relational practice, with a growing evidence base.


Trauma-Focused & Integrative Approaches

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing)
Strong evidence for PTSD (WHO, 2013; NICE) but varies by difficulty.

Somatic Experiencing
Focus: Nervous system regulation; emerging evidence base.

Hypnotherapy
Uses guided trance states for focused therapeutic work.
Evidence varies by difficulty; stronger for pain, IBS, phobias (Hammond, 2010).

Integrative Therapy
Combines modalities depending on client needs.
Many modern therapists work integratively rather than purely within one model.


3. How to Decide What’s Right for You

Instead of asking “Which therapy is best?”, consider:

1. What are you struggling with?

  • Anxiety/Panic/OCD → CBT or Exposure may be recommended.
  • Trauma → EMDR or trauma-focused therapy may be recommended.
  • Repeating relationship patterns → Psychodynamic, attachment-based, schema therapy, or TA may be recommended.
  • Emotional overwhelm → DBT or EFT may be recommended.
  • Unwanted habits, compulsions or addictions → CBT, ACT or psychodynamic approaches depending on what’s driving them.

2. How do you prefer to work?

  • Structured and practical? → CBT may be recommended.
  • Explorative and reflective? → Psychodynamic may be recommended.
  • Emotion-focused and relational? → Humanistic/EFT/TA may be recommended.
  • Body-based? → Somatic approaches may be recommended.
  • An approach that doesn’t limit you to one method? → Integrative Therapy might be the one

3. How does the therapist make you feel?

Research suggests your sense of safety, trust, and collaboration predicts outcome (Horvath et al., 2011).


4. Ethical Considerations When Choosing

  • Check professional registration (e.g., UKCP, BACP, HCPC, BABCP, CNHC in the UK).
  • Be cautious of claims like “guaranteed results in 3 sessions.”
  • Therapy should involve collaborative goal-setting, not coercion.
  • No reputable therapist can ethically promise instant cures.


5. A Realistic Perspective

Therapy is rarely linear. Evidence shows:

There is no single “correct” modality for everyone. Fit, formulation, and collaborative work matter.


Key References

  • Bamelis, L. et al. (2014). Schema therapy for personality disorders.
  • Cornell, W. F. et al. (2016). Transactional Analysis in contemporary psychotherapy research.
  • Craske, M. G. et al. (2014). Maximizing exposure therapy.
  • Elliott, R. et al. (2013). Person-centered therapy meta-analysis.
  • Hofmann, S. G. et al. (2012). CBT efficacy review.
  • Horvath, A. O. et al. (2011). Alliance meta-analysis.
  • Johnson, S. (2019). Emotionally Focused Therapy research.
  • Linehan, M. (2015). DBT randomized trials.
  • NICE Guidelines (UK).
  • Shedler, J. (2010). The efficacy of psychodynamic psychotherapy.
  • Wampold, B. & Imel, Z. (2015). The Great Psychotherapy Debate.
  • WHO (2013). Guidelines for the management of PTSD.

If you’re unsure, a brief consultation call can help clarify whether the therapist’s style and approach align with your needs. That collaborative discussion is often more informative than modality labels alone.

Hi, I'm Dana

Integrative Therapist (Psychotherapy & Hypnotherapy), working with anxiety, relationships, habits & compulsions, and the not-enough feeling.

Based in Liverpool, working online across the UK.
D Therapy Hub Dana Baboe Verified by Psychology Today
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