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ACT Therapy for ADHD: Find a Licensed Therapist

This page features therapists who use Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) to work with ADHD. Explore clinician profiles to find a practitioner whose style, availability, and ACT training match your needs.

Use the listings below to compare specialties, approaches, and booking options so you can connect with an ACT therapist who fits your goals.

Understanding ADHD and how ACT approaches it

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder often shows up as difficulty sustaining focus, managing time, resisting impulses, and following through on goals. Those challenges are commonly accompanied by frustration, shame, and cycles of avoidance that make day-to-day functioning harder. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy approaches these patterns by shifting attention away from trying to eliminate symptoms and toward increasing psychological flexibility - the ability to notice thoughts and feelings without being dominated by them, and to take action guided by personal values. For someone with ADHD, that means learning practical ways to respond when distraction, overwhelm, or impulsive urges arise, rather than trying to battle those experiences directly. ACT does this through a set of interrelated processes - acceptance, cognitive defusion, present-moment awareness, self-as-context, values clarification, and committed action - which together create a framework for more consistent attention, better follow-through, and clearer decision-making. ACT treats symptoms as part of a human response to internal and external demands, and it equips you with skills to live effectively despite them.

How ACT helps with ADHD

ACT targets common unhelpful patterns in ADHD by changing your relationship to internal experiences rather than trying to change thought content. When you have ADHD you may notice a habitual pattern of getting stuck in a thought - I can never focus - followed by avoidance or last-minute rushes. Cognitive defusion techniques teach you to step back from those thoughts so they have less control. You learn to notice the thinking voice as a mental event instead of a directive that must be obeyed. Acceptance practices ask you to allow uncomfortable feelings - boredom, irritation, anxiety - to be present without engaging in impulsive behaviors to remove them. Present-moment awareness, cultivated through brief mindfulness exercises, makes it easier to register task-relevant cues and interrupt automatic distraction. Clarifying values helps you choose what matters most - whether it is doing well at work, being present with family, or completing a creative project - and gives motivation that is not solely driven by short-term urges. Committed action breaks values-based goals into manageable, flexible steps that fit the attention and energy patterns common in ADHD. Over time these processes increase psychological flexibility so that your attention and actions align more consistently with what you value, even when difficult thoughts and feelings arise.

Specific ACT strategies applied to ADHD

Therapists often use short defusion exercises that involve repeating a distracting thought until it loses meaning, or labeling thoughts as "just thoughts" to reduce their pull. Mindfulness practices tailored for ADHD emphasize brief, frequent moments of noticing breath or senses that can be integrated into tasks. Willingness exercises encourage trying out uncomfortable feelings in small doses to test that attention and performance can still continue. Values exercises translate broad goals into concrete, context-sensitive behaviors so you can create prompts and routines that support committed action. These interventions are adapted to the rhythms of ADHD rather than expecting long, uninterrupted practice sessions.

What to expect in ACT therapy for ADHD

A typical ACT therapy journey for ADHD begins with assessment and collaborative goal setting. Early sessions usually focus on building awareness - tracking patterns of attention, impulsivity, and emotional responses - and introducing basic mindfulness and defusion skills that can be practiced between sessions. Your therapist will work with you to identify the situations where ADHD-related difficulties matter most and to clarify values that make change personally meaningful. Middle-phase work often centers on willingness - learning to make space for discomfort - and on translating values into achievable behavioral steps. You might practice brief in-session experiments where you deliberately notice urges and still complete a chosen action, or you may develop environmental cues and routines to scaffold attention.

Later sessions emphasize strengthening committed action and problem-solving around barriers. This can include refining timing strategies, planning for relapse or high-stress periods, and integrating accountability systems that suit your life. Therapy length varies with individual goals and severity of difficulties; many people notice practical improvements within a few months of regular work, while deeper habit change can take longer. Sessions are often experiential - you will practice exercises in real time, reflect on what happened, and adjust strategies to fit your life rather than receiving only cognitive explanations.

Is ACT the right approach for ADHD?

ACT can be a strong fit if you want to reduce the struggle with internal experiences that drive impulsive reactions and inconsistent effort. People who find themselves repeatedly trying to suppress boredom, shame, or rumination may benefit from learning to accept those experiences and to use values-based motivation to guide behavior. ACT is particularly helpful when difficulties are maintained by a cycle of avoidance - for example, putting off tasks to escape anxiety, which then increases stress and makes focus harder. That said, ACT is not the only effective approach. Traditional behavioral strategies and structured cognitive-behavioral techniques can be helpful for organizing tasks and building skills like time management. Mindfulness-based programs share overlap with ACT, especially in training present-moment awareness, while some clinicians integrate ACT with practical skills training when needed.

An ACT therapist might collaborate with other providers or blend methods if you need targeted techniques for executive functioning, or if medications are part of your care plan. The core philosophy of ACT - shifting the function of thoughts and feelings so you can act on values - often complements other interventions. If you prefer an approach that focuses less on changing thought content and more on changing how you relate to internal experience, ACT is worth considering. It works well for people who are ready to commit to experiential practice and to translate values into small, repeatable actions that fit their daily routines.

How to choose an ACT therapist for ADHD

Look for therapists who list specific ACT training and experience with ADHD. Credentials that indicate specialized training might include membership in professional ACT organizations, coursework or certification in ACT principles, and clinical experience using ACT with attention-related difficulties. During an initial consultation call, ask how the therapist applies ACT to ADHD, what kinds of in-session exercises they use, and how they structure between-session practice. You can also ask about how they measure progress and how flexible they are in tailoring exercises to your attention span and life demands. A good consultation will give you a sense of whether the therapist uses experiential methods - such as in-session defusion techniques and values-based action planning - and whether they can adapt pacing and expectations to your needs.

Online therapy can work well for ACT because many exercises are conversational and experiential and translate smoothly to video. Video sessions make it easier to practice mindfulness and behavior experiments in your actual environment, and they allow you to bring real-life contexts into sessions. If you prefer in-person work, consider whether the therapist offers a comfortable environment and opportunities for practical skill rehearsal. Ultimately, fit is crucial - choose a therapist who communicates clearly about ACT’s goals, invites you to try exercises in session, and collaborates with you to design realistic steps that align with your values and attention patterns. That collaborative stance is a strong indicator that ACT will be applied in a way that supports your everyday functioning and long-term priorities.

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