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Individual Therapy for Addiction

One-to-one, evidence-based care that meets your specific needs— in person or through Virtual IOP.

About Individual Therapy

Individual therapy for addiction is private, one-to-one psychotherapy focused on goals you and your clinician set together. [1] In these individual counseling sessions, you’ll explore the root causes, build coping skills, and develop a personalized treatment plan tailored to your specific needs.

The aim is to understand what’s driving substance use, strengthen day-to-day skills, and support long-term recovery in a space that feels calm and respectful.

How Individual Therapy Works at New Leaf

Individual therapy for addiction takes place weekly (or more often if needed) within our Intensive Outpatient (IOP) and Virtual IOP programs. Sessions are one-on-one with a licensed clinician, and psychiatric Advanced Practice Nurse (APN) support is available when appropriate. We focus on cravings, triggers, relapse prevention, stress, sleep, and mental health symptoms. Each session ends with a clear goal and simple, practical homework for the week.

Between sessions, brief check-ins are available as needed, and session frequency adjusts based on your progress. The environment is calm and private—our second-home atmosphere prioritizes psychological safety so you can speak freely. Over time, we track your progress and adapt your treatment plan to fit real life. The goal is steady skill development, fewer surprises, and a daily strategy that feels natural and sustainable.

Individual vs. Group Therapy

Both play an important role—and together, they’re even more effective. Individual therapy provides privacy and focus. It’s the space to explore root causes, discuss sensitive topics, and build coping tools tailored to you. Group therapy adds connection and practice. [2] In groups, you apply new skills, receive feedback, and realize you’re not alone in your recovery journey.

At New Leaf, your weekly schedule blends one-on-one sessions and group therapy. We also do deliberate “hand-offs,” meaning insights from one setting are brought into the other. For example, a boundary script created in group may become homework in individual counseling; then you practice it back in group. This rhythm builds confidence, accountability, and lasting change.

Core Modalities We Use in Individual Sessions

  • CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy): We map triggers and high-risk moments, reframe negative thought patterns, and test small behavioral shifts—like urge surfing or alternative routines—to make safer choices under stress. [3]
  • DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy): Learn emotion regulation, mindfulness, distress tolerance, and communication skills so you can stay steady during cravings or conflict.
  • Motivational Interviewing (MI): Explore ambivalence, connect change to your values, and set bite-sized goals that feel achievable each week.
  • EMDR (when clinically appropriate): Trauma processing is paced with safety first. We begin only after stabilization skills are established and the timing is right.

Care is coordinated with family therapy, support groups, and, when indicated, medication-assisted treatment (MAT). Your clinician integrates all modalities into a cohesive, adaptive plan that evolves as you grow.

Benefits of Individual Therapy

Individual therapy provides personalized, targeted support for substance use disorders and co-occurring issues such as anxiety, depression, or PTSD. [4] You gain faster insight into underlying patterns and learn coping strategies tailored to your needs and high-risk moments.

It also bridges your progress across the continuum of care—from detox to IOP to aftercare—so you maintain momentum at every stage. Many clients notice measurable improvements in mood, focus, sleep, and overall stability. You leave with clarity, motivation, and tools that support lasting recovery.

What to Expect in Sessions

We combine talk therapy with skills practice. Expect brief assessments, collaborative problem-solving, and a concrete plan for the week. Each session ends with one or two specific actions to try in real life.

You’ll also receive simple homework and short skills logs to track what’s working. Between sessions, we may do brief check-ins and update your treatment plan as needed to ensure care stays aligned with your progress and goals.

Who Does Individual Therapy Help?

Individual therapy supports adults and adolescents working through drug addiction, alcohol addiction, and co-occurring mental health challenges. It’s especially helpful if you want privacy for deeper trauma work or focused support for issues like anxiety, depression, or mood regulation.

It’s also effective for people early in recovery or those maintaining long-term sobriety. Sessions provide a safe space to build coping skills, explore root causes, and develop daily routines that strengthen stability and support ongoing recovery.

Ready to take the first step to recovery?

Reach out now, we’re looking forward to speaking with you and beginning the healing process.

FAQs About Individual Therapy for Addiction

What is individual therapy, and how does it help with substance abuse?

Individual therapy is a one-on-one talk therapy session with a licensed clinician. You set goals together, explore root causes, and learn coping skills for managing cravings, triggers, stress, and sleep disturbances. Sessions are private, paced, and part of your personalized treatment plan in IOP or Virtual IOP.

Individual vs group therapy—how do I know which I need?

Both matter. Individual therapy provides depth and privacy for discussing sensitive topics and developing tailored skills. Group therapy adds practice, peer support, and accountability. At New Leaf, most clients do both. Your clinician helps decide the mix each week, ensuring you receive balanced support.

What techniques are used (CBT, DBT, MI, EMDR)?

We match tools to needs.

  • CBT: map triggers, reframe unhelpful thoughts, plan safer behaviors.
  • DBT: emotion regulation, mindfulness, distress tolerance, communication skills.
  • Motivational Interviewing: resolve ambivalence and set doable steps.
  • EMDR (when ready): paced trauma work after you have stabilization skills.

These methods are evidence-based and integrated into your weekly plan.

Can individual therapy address anxiety and other mental health issues in recovery?

Yes. We treat substance use disorders and co-occurring conditions like anxiety, depression, PTSD, OCD, ADHD, and bipolar disorder. Care is trauma-informed, coordinated with group therapy, family therapy, and, when indicated, medication support within IOP.

How quickly will I see benefits, and how often will we meet?

Many people experience small wins in the first few sessions, such as clearer plans, steadier days, and fewer high-risk moments. Frequency is flexible, typically weekly, with additional sessions as needed. Same-day admissions and a 24/7 hotline make it easy to start; if detox or inpatient care is first required, we arrange a seamless transition and continue your plan afterward.

Start Individual Therapy for Addiction Today

At New Leaf Recovery, anyone, anytime, can start over. If you or a loved one is ready for change, our admissions team is here 24/7 to guide you through every step. We offer same-day admissions and flexible options, including in-person care at our Monmouth County center and Virtual IOP through secure telehealth.

No one is left without support. If detox or inpatient is needed first, we arrange a personal, warm handoff and stay connected. Call our 24/7 admissions team or verify insurance to start individual therapy for addiction with New Leaf Recovery today.

Sources

[1]Yue, H., & Pena, E. (2022, November 11). Addiction psychotherapeutic care. StatPearls – NCBI Bookshelf. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK587365/

[2]Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (US). (2005). 2 Types of groups commonly used in substance abuse treatment. Substance Abuse Treatment: Group Therapy – NCBI Bookshelf. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK64214/

[3] McHugh, R. K., Hearon, B. A., & Otto, M. W. (2010). Cognitive Behavioral therapy for substance use disorders. Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 33(3), 511–525. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2010.04.012

[4] Iqbal, M. N., Levin, C. J., & Levin, F. R. (2019). Treatment for substance use disorder with Co-Occurring Mental Illness. FOCUS the Journal of Lifelong Learning in Psychiatry, 17(2), 88–97. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.focus.20180042