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ACT Therapy in California: Find a Licensed Therapist

Welcome to the California directory for Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) professionals. All therapists listed here are licensed clinicians who have training in ACT approaches.

Use the listings to review specialties, approaches, and availability to find an ACT clinician who fits your needs.

ACT therapy availability in California - what makes ACT distinctive

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, often called ACT, is widely available to California residents through online sessions with clinicians who emphasize psychological flexibility as the core goal of treatment. Psychological flexibility refers to the ability to contact the present moment more fully and to change or persist in behavior guided by chosen values. In contrast to approaches that focus primarily on changing the content of thoughts, ACT teaches you to relate differently to your internal experiences so you can act in ways that matter to you even when difficult thoughts or feelings appear.

In practice this means ACT clinicians often use experiential exercises, mindfulness practices, and values clarification as central tools. Techniques such as cognitive defusion help you notice thoughts as mental events rather than literal truths, acceptance strategies help you open space for feelings that you cannot immediately control, and values-based planning supports committed action toward a meaningful life. For many people in California, the appeal of ACT is its pragmatic emphasis on living in alignment with personal values rather than striving solely for symptom elimination.

Who typically seeks ACT

People who seek ACT often feel stuck in patterns of avoidance, rumination, or over-engagement with unhelpful thoughts. You might consider ACT if you notice that attempts to control or suppress feelings and thoughts are getting in the way of your relationships, work, or daily routines. ACT is used by people across the lifespan and can be adapted for a wide variety of concerns, from situational stress to longer-standing difficulties.

What ACT can help with

ACT is applied to a broad set of problems because many challenges share a common feature - a tendency to get caught up in unhelpful thought patterns or avoidance behaviors. In California, ACT-trained therapists commonly work with adults and adolescents facing anxiety disorders, where worry and avoidance limit daily functioning. When rumination or repetitive negative thinking dominates your day, ACT offers tools for defusion to reduce the grip of those thoughts.

Depression is another area where ACT can be helpful because it addresses the tendency to withdraw from valued activities. Rather than insisting that you must feel better before taking action, ACT supports small committed steps aligned with your values, which can shift mood over time. For chronic pain or long-term health conditions, ACT reframes pain management so that you may focus on living a meaningful life despite persistent symptoms, using willingness exercises to reduce struggle with sensation.

OCD and trauma-related conditions can also respond well to ACT principles when combined with disorder-specific techniques. For OCD, defusion and willingness work reduce ritualizing and avoidance. For trauma, present-moment awareness and self-as-context approaches can help you notice trauma-related thoughts without being fused to them, allowing you to pursue valued actions even with distress. Professionals trained in ACT tailor the approach to the problem you bring, focusing on decreasing avoidance and increasing flexibility, rather than promising quick cures.

How ACT works in an online format

The experiential, practice-oriented nature of ACT translates effectively to video-based sessions. In an online session you can expect guided mindfulness practices, live defusion exercises, and values clarification activities that are adapted to the digital setting. A therapist may invite you to notice sensations, name thoughts, or complete short experiential tasks during the video call. These practices rely on real-time observation and coaching, which can be done across a screen with only minor adjustments.

Therapists often share worksheets, audio recordings, or brief exercises for you to practice between sessions. Homework is a key part of ACT because the work of building psychological flexibility occurs in the moments you practice skills in everyday life. Many clinicians use screenshare or secure document exchange to provide handouts and values exercises, and they may assign short daily practices to reinforce mindfulness and committed action. Session length and frequency vary, but you should expect a collaborative rhythm of in-session practice and between-session application.

It is important to note that if you are located in California, the clinician working with you must be licensed to practice in California. Licensing rules govern where therapists can treat residents, so when you search for an online ACT clinician for California care, look for a therapist who explicitly lists California licensure. That ensures the clinician is authorized under state regulations to provide mental health services to you as a resident.

How to verify a therapist's license in California

Verifying a clinician's license is a practical step that helps you confirm they are authorized to practice in California. Start by asking the therapist for their license number and the type of license they hold, such as Licensed Clinical Social Worker, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist, Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor, Psychologist, or Physician providing behavioral health care. With that information you can search the appropriate state board to verify status and any public disciplinary history.

California has multiple licensing boards depending on the clinician type. The Board of Behavioral Sciences maintains an online verification system for many counseling and therapy licenses. The California Board of Psychology lists licensed psychologists and their status. For medical providers who offer psychiatric care, the Medical Board of California provides license lookup tools. Each board allows you to search by name or license number to confirm active status, license expiration, and whether any formal actions are recorded.

When reviewing a license entry, pay attention to the current status and expiration date. A clean record with active status indicates the clinician meets state requirements. If you find information you do not understand, contact the licensing board by phone or email for clarification. You can also ask the therapist directly about their training and supervision history if you want more context about their experience with ACT and the populations they serve.

Choosing an ACT therapist in California

Finding the right ACT therapist is about both training and fit. Look for clinicians who indicate ACT-specific training such as workshop completion, supervised ACT practice, or involvement with the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science - often abbreviated as ACBS. Membership in ACBS or participation in recognized ACT intensives suggests ongoing engagement with the ACT community, but it is also helpful to ask about concrete clinical experience with your presenting problem.

In an initial consultation you can ask about how the therapist integrates ACT processes - acceptance, cognitive defusion, present-moment awareness, self-as-context, values, and committed action - into treatment. Request examples of exercises they might use and how they measure progress. Discuss practical concerns such as session frequency, typical length of work, fees, insurance or sliding scale options, and what to expect in the first few sessions. A therapist should be able to describe how they will tailor ACT practices to your goals and offer a sense of collaborative planning.

Consider your preference for online versus in-person work. Many Californians appreciate the convenience and accessibility of video sessions, particularly when living in regions with fewer local ACT specialists. If you prefer occasional in-person contact, ask whether the clinician offers a hybrid model or can recommend local colleagues. Ultimately, choosing a therapist is a personal decision. Trust how you feel after an initial talk - whether the clinician listened well, explained ACT clearly, and proposed a plan that resonates with your values and aims.

By focusing on ACT-specific training, clear licensure verification, and the experiential fit between you and the clinician, you can find an online ACT therapist in California who helps you build greater psychological flexibility and move toward the life you value. Use the directory listings to compare specialties, read professional summaries, and schedule consultations so you can begin exploring ACT-based strategies that align with your goals.

Browse Specialties in California

Mental Health Conditions (22 have therapists)
Life & Relationships (6 have therapists)