Childhood Anxiety
Choosing the Right Therapy for Childhood Anxiety
Choosing the right therapy for childhood anxiety starts with a proper assessment, then usually points to evidence-based cognitive behavioural therapy with graded exposure for school-age children, or parent-led approaches for younger ones, always tailored to the child and involving parents. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
When worry starts to shrink your child's world, the right therapy gently widens it again — turning fear into brave, doable steps.
In short
The best therapy for childhood anxiety is one that is evidence-based, age-appropriate and built around your individual child. For most anxious children, this means cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) — including gentle, graded exposure to feared situations — delivered by a child therapist who actively involves you, the parent. The 'right' choice depends on your child's age, what they worry about, and how anxiety shows up day to day, so the wisest first step is a proper assessment rather than picking a therapy in isolation.How to choose well
- Start with an assessment, not a label. Anxiety can look like clinginess, tummy aches, sleep trouble, avoidance, anger or perfectionism. A structured evaluation clarifies what your child is actually experiencing and rules out other causes — this is what points you to the right therapy.
- Look for CBT as the front-line approach. For school-age children and teens, cognitive behavioural therapy with graded exposure has the strongest evidence. It teaches children to recognise anxious thoughts, calm their bodies, and face feared situations in small, winnable steps.
- For younger children, choose parent-led approaches. Below roughly 7 years, the most effective work is often done through you — coaching parents to respond to worry in ways that build courage rather than accidentally feeding avoidance.
- Match the therapy to the worry. Separation fears, social anxiety, specific phobias and generalised worry each have tailored techniques — a good therapist adapts the plan, not the other way round.
- Insist on parent involvement and a clear plan. The right therapy has goals you understand, measurable steps, and home practice — not open-ended sessions with no direction.
- Watch for fit. Your child should gradually feel safe with their therapist. Trust and warmth matter as much as technique.
Therapy that works gently expands what your child can do — it never forces or floods them with fear.
When to seek a check sooner
Seek support promptly if anxiety stops your child going to school, sleeping, eating or seeing friends; if it lasts most days for several weeks; if there are panic attacks, frequent unexplained physical complaints, or any talk of self-harm or hopelessness — which needs urgent medical attention the same day.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an app, quiz or online form. From an AbilityScore® assessment, our clinicians build a precise picture of your child's worries and strengths, then shape an evidence-based plan — often behaviour and emotional-regulation therapy with active parent coaching. Explore how we support children's [emotional and developmental wellbeing](/) every step of the way.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (anxiety or fear-related disorders); American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) guidance on childhood anxiety; NICE guidance on anxiety in children and young people; Cochrane reviews on psychological therapies for childhood anxiety.Next step — Unsure which therapy fits your child? Book an assessment with a Pinnacle clinician and get a clear, personalised plan.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch for anxiety that stops school, sleep, eating or friendships; worries lasting most days for weeks; panic attacks or frequent unexplained tummy aches and headaches; and any talk of self-harm or hopelessness, which needs urgent same-day medical attention.
Try this at home
When your child is worried, avoid rushing in to fix or remove the feared thing. Calmly name the feeling ('that feels scary'), express confidence ('I know you can handle this'), and praise small brave steps — this builds courage rather than avoidance.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is CBT really the best therapy for an anxious child?
For school-age children and teenagers, cognitive behavioural therapy with graded exposure has the strongest research evidence. It teaches children to recognise anxious thoughts, calm their bodies and face fears in small, manageable steps. The right version is always tailored to your child's age and worries, which is why a proper assessment comes first.
My child is only 5 — what therapy suits younger children?
For children under roughly 7, the most effective approach is often delivered through parents. Clinicians coach you to respond to worry in ways that build courage and gently reduce avoidance, rather than expecting a young child to do talk-based therapy alone.
Does my child need medication for anxiety?
Most children improve with therapy alone. Medication is only ever considered by a doctor for more severe or persistent anxiety, alongside therapy — never as a first or standalone step. Any such decision is a clinical one made under qualified medical care.
How do I know if therapy is working?
Good therapy has clear goals and home practice, and you should see your child gradually able to do more of what anxiety was holding them back from — school, sleep, friends, new situations. Progress is steady and gentle, never forced.