play therapy vs behaviour therapy
Play therapy vs behaviour therapy for children
Play therapy uses play — the child's natural language — to help them express feelings, build relationships and grow emotionally at their own pace, and is largely child-led. Behaviour therapy is more structured and adult-guided, breaking specific skills and helpful behaviours into small teachable steps reinforced with encouragement. One supports the inner emotional world; the other builds observable skills. They are not rivals — many children do best when a clinician thoughtfully blends both to fit the child.
When your child laughs through a session or earns a sticker for trying something hard, two different kinds of therapy may be quietly at work — and knowing the difference helps you choose with confidence.
In short
Play therapy uses play — the child's natural language — as the way in, helping a child express feelings, build relationships and make sense of their world at their own pace. Behaviour therapy uses structured, goal-directed techniques to teach specific skills and shape helpful behaviours, usually through clear steps, prompts and positive reinforcement. One leans on a child's inner world and emotional growth; the other leans on observable skills and learning. They are not rivals — many children thrive when both are thoughtfully blended.How they differ — and where they meet
Play therapy is largely child-led. A trained therapist follows the child's play, using toys, role-play, art and stories so the child can work through emotions, anxiety, big life changes or relationship difficulties in a safe, non-judgemental space. The goal is emotional understanding, self-expression and confidence — progress is gentle and unfolds at the child's tempo.Behaviour therapy is largely structured and adult-guided. The therapist breaks a target skill — say, following instructions, communicating a need, reducing meltdowns, or building self-help routines — into small, teachable steps, then uses encouragement and consistent strategies to help the child practise and master each one. Progress is measurable and tracked over time.
In everyday practice the line is rarely rigid. A skilled clinician may weave playful warmth into behavioural goals, or bring gentle structure into play, choosing the blend that fits your child's temperament, communication profile and what you most want to support — whether that is emotional regulation, social connection, daily-living skills or communication.
Which might suit your child
Think less about 'better' and more about 'fit'. Play therapy often suits children working through feelings, worries, trauma or social-emotional growth. Behaviour therapy often suits children building concrete skills, routines and communication, including many neurodivergent children. The most reliable way to know is a developmental review that looks at your whole child — their strengths, their stretch areas and your family's hopes — before any plan is shaped.The Pinnacle way
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, never from an app or form. Our therapists assess how your child plays, communicates and learns, then build an individualised plan that may draw on behaviour therapy, play-based approaches or both together — always starting from a warm [developmental check](/).Trusted sources
The American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren on play as essential to child development and learning; ASHA on family-centred, individualised intervention; NICE guidance on choosing therapy approaches that fit the child and family.Next step — If you are weighing which approach suits your child, book a developmental screen so a clinician can recommend the right blend for them.
What to watch
Notice what your child most needs support with: if it is feelings, worries, social connection or processing change, play therapy may fit; if it is learning specific skills, routines, communication or reducing distressing behaviours, behaviour therapy may fit — and many children benefit from a blend.
Try this at home
At home, you can borrow from both: follow your child's lead in unstructured play to build connection and let feelings surface, and gently celebrate small steps with specific praise ('you waited so well!') to encourage helpful behaviours.
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
Can a child have both play therapy and behaviour therapy?
Yes. Many children benefit from a thoughtful blend — playful warmth can support emotional growth while structured strategies build specific skills. A clinician decides the right mix based on your child's needs and your family's goals.
Is play therapy just playing?
No. Play is the child's natural language, and a trained therapist uses it purposefully — through toys, art, role-play and stories — to help a child express feelings, work through difficulties and build confidence in a safe space.
Which therapy is better for my child?
There is no single 'better' — it depends on fit. Play therapy often suits emotional and social-emotional growth; behaviour therapy often suits building concrete skills and routines. A developmental review helps a clinician recommend the right approach for your child.