What Is CBT?
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a structured, skills-based form of psychotherapy. [1] It helps you notice unhelpful thoughts and replace them with more useful ones — then practice new actions that support recovery.
The cognitive behavioral model of addiction is simple: thoughts, feelings, and actions feed one another. A trigger sparks a thought. The thought drives a feeling and a craving. The craving pushes a choice. CBT breaks this loop with clear tools and plans.
CBT is an effective treatment for substance use disorders (SUDs). [2] It fits modern addiction treatment because it’s short-term, practical, and evidence-based. You learn coping skills you can use right away. It works well alongside other forms of care, including medical support and group therapy. In short, CBT turns insight into action.
How CBT Helps with Addiction
We start by reframing negative thoughts that fuel drug use or drinking. You learn to challenge the story in your head and choose a different course of action.
Next, we identify high-risk situations and develop clear responses. You’ll build simple “if–then” plans for stress, social pressure, and routine triggers.
We also teach specific cognitive-behavioral interventions for cravings — including urge surfing, paced breathing, delay-and-distract, and grounding.
Finally, we build daily coping strategies that support long-term recovery. Sleep, movement, meals, support calls, and structured routines all play a role. Small actions, repeated consistently, change outcomes.
CBT Techniques for Addiction
- Cognitive restructuring: Spot a thought, test it, and replace it with something more accurate.
- Trigger mapping: Identify people, places, times, and feelings that increase risk.
- Urge surfing: Learn to ride out cravings in waves without acting on them.
- Behavioral activation: Plan healthy actions to lift mood and reduce idle time.
- Skills rehearsal: Practice refusal lines, coping scripts, and problem-solving out loud.
We also provide relapse prevention planning and post-treatment check-ins. You’ll leave with a written plan, early warning signs, and contact information for ongoing support.
Skills training covers sleep hygiene, daily routines, and clear communication. [3] Group therapy sessions include take-home practice to help these skills stick between meetings — core CBT techniques for addiction you can use immediately.
CBT for Alcohol Addiction
CBT targets alcohol use disorders by focusing on cues, rituals, and beliefs. [4] Together, we examine when and why you drink, the routines surrounding it, and thoughts like “I need a drink to relax.” Then, we replace those patterns with healthier, more sustainable alternatives.
You’ll develop new coping and social strategies to protect sobriety — such as refusal skills, alternative wind-down routines, safer meeting environments, and clear boundaries with friends and family.