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Clinical Guide · Borderline Personality

DBT Therapy: What It Is, What to Expect, and How to Find a Therapist

Last reviewed: May 2026 · Editorial standards

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) was developed by Dr. Marsha Linehan specifically for borderline personality disorder, and is now recognized as effective for a wide range of conditions involving emotional dysregulation, self-harm, chronic suicidality, eating disorders, and substance use. Comprehensive DBT is a highly structured treatment requiring specific provider training.

The four skill modules

Comprehensive DBT teaches skills across four modules: Mindfulness — the core of all DBT skills, learning to observe and describe experience without judgment; Distress Tolerance — surviving crises without making them worse, accepting reality as it is; Emotion Regulation — understanding emotions, reducing vulnerability, changing emotional states; Interpersonal Effectiveness — asking for what you need, saying no, maintaining self-respect in relationships.

What comprehensive DBT involves

Full DBT has four components: weekly individual therapy; weekly skills training group (2-2.5 hours, structured like a class); phone coaching (ability to call your therapist between sessions for skills coaching); and therapist consultation team (therapists meet weekly to support each other's work). Many therapists offer "DBT-informed" or skills-only groups — these are useful but not equivalent to comprehensive DBT for severe presentations.

Finding a DBT therapist

Look for therapists who describe their practice as "comprehensive DBT" or who have completed intensive DBT training. The Linehan Institute and Behavioral Tech maintain directories of DBT-trained therapists. Ask specifically: "Do you provide comprehensive DBT with all four components, including phone coaching?" The answer tells you what you're getting.

Sources & further reading
Content is based on peer-reviewed research and clinical guidelines from NIMH, APA, SAMHSA, and specialty professional organizations. Editorial standards →
Frequently asked questions
Standard DBT is typically one year for comprehensive treatment. Skills groups run in cycles of approximately 6 months covering all four modules. Many people continue individual DBT therapy beyond the skills training. Improvement in self-harm behaviors and crisis frequency often occurs within the first few months.
No — DBT is now used for many conditions involving emotional dysregulation: eating disorders, substance use, chronic depression, PTSD, adolescent self-harm, and others. The skills are broadly applicable to anyone wanting to better manage emotions and improve relationships.
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