Find a Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) Therapist
Explore therapists who focus on Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) and related mood challenges across seasonal changes. Use the listings below to review clinician profiles, therapeutic approaches, and availability to find a good fit.
Browse the listings and contact therapists to set up an initial consultation or learn more about how they work with SAD.
Understanding Seasonal Affective Disorder
Seasonal Affective Disorder, often called SAD, describes a pattern of recurring low mood that appears at particular times of year for some people. For many, symptoms emerge in late fall or winter and ease in spring and summer, though a smaller group experiences low mood during the warmer months. The experience is more than occasional sadness - you may notice persistent low energy, changes in sleep and appetite, or a reduced interest in activities you usually enjoy when the seasons shift.
How someone experiences SAD can vary widely. You might have trouble getting up in the morning, find your concentration slipping, or notice changes in weight and social interest. These shifts can affect work, relationships, and daily routines. While seasonal patterns are common, therapy can help you understand how the seasonal changes interact with your personal history, daily rhythms, and coping resources.
Signs You Might Benefit from Therapy for SAD
If you notice your mood dips at the same time each year, you could benefit from speaking with a therapist who understands seasonal patterns. Recurrent feelings of sadness or hopelessness tied to a season, ongoing low motivation, and withdrawal from social activities are signals that professional support may help. Changes in sleep - either sleeping a lot or insomnia - and shifts in appetite or weight that follow a seasonal pattern are also important to mention during an assessment.
Therapy can be particularly helpful if seasonal changes interfere with your ability to work, maintain relationships, or carry out daily tasks. You may also seek therapy if you have tried adjustments on your own - altering routine, getting more daylight, or exercising - and still feel stuck. A therapist can help you evaluate what has been effective, develop a personalized plan, and coordinate with other health providers if additional interventions are being considered.
What to Expect in Therapy for Seasonal Affective Disorder
Initial sessions typically focus on assessment and understanding your seasonal pattern. Your therapist will ask about when symptoms started, how long they last, and what environmental or lifestyle factors accompany them. You can expect a collaborative conversation that explores sleep, daily schedule, social supports, and how seasonal shifts affect your mood and energy.
As therapy progresses, you and your clinician will set goals that are specific and actionable. Sessions often include in-session planning and skill practice followed by real-world assignments you can try between meetings. You will likely track symptoms and daily routines to detect patterns and measure progress. Therapy is a process - some changes can occur quickly, while others develop over several months as you build new habits and responses to seasonal triggers.
Session Frequency and Duration
Session frequency varies by need and clinician recommendation. Many people start with weekly sessions in the months when symptoms are most intense and adjust frequency as symptoms improve. Typical sessions last between 45 and 60 minutes, and therapists will discuss expected duration of treatment during the first few meetings so you have a roadmap for progress.
Common Therapeutic Approaches for SAD
Cognitive and behavioral approaches are commonly used for seasonal mood difficulties because they focus on changing unhelpful thoughts and behaviors that maintain low mood. Cognitive behavioral therapy helps you identify negative thinking patterns that may intensify during darker months and replace them with more balanced, realistic thoughts. Behavioral activation targets activity patterns, encouraging you to reintroduce rewarding or meaningful activities even when energy is low.
Interpersonal therapy can be helpful when seasonal changes affect your relationships or when social rhythms shift and create stress. This approach examines interpersonal patterns and supports you in strengthening connections and communication. Mindfulness and acceptance-based approaches teach techniques for relating differently to mood and physical sensations, reducing rumination and increasing present-moment awareness.
Therapists who work with SAD may also incorporate practical behavioral changes such as sleep and activity scheduling, light exposure strategies, and planning for seasonal transitions. While some interventions may overlap with other medical recommendations, a therapist will focus on skills, coping strategies, and behavioral adjustments that fit your life and values.
How Online Therapy Works for SAD
Online therapy offers flexible access to clinicians who specialize in seasonal mood patterns. You can connect by video, phone, or messaging depending on the options provided by a clinician. Video sessions often mirror in-person appointments, allowing for face-to-face conversation, guided exercises, and screen-sharing of worksheets or mood-tracking tools. Messaging care can supplement sessions by offering between-session support, homework submission, or brief check-ins.
Many people find online therapy helpful because it removes travel time, allows you to meet with specialists who may be outside your local area, and makes it easier to maintain continuity during seasonal transitions. Before you begin, a therapist will explain their communication practices, session logistics, and how they handle emergencies or urgent concerns. If you prefer in-person meetings for some sessions, many clinicians offer hybrid models - combining online and office-based care as needed.
Practical Tips for Choosing the Right Therapist
Finding the right therapist is a personal process. Look for clinicians who list experience with seasonal mood changes or SAD on their profiles and who describe therapeutic approaches that resonate with you. Consider practical factors such as availability during the months when you expect to need more support, session format, fees, and whether they accept your insurance or offer sliding scale options.
During an initial consultation, ask about their experience working with seasonal patterns and what a typical treatment plan looks like. You can ask how they measure progress and how they coordinate care with other professionals if you are also seeing a primary care provider. Pay attention to how they explain their approach and whether their style feels like a good match for your preferences. Trust your sense of fit - rapport and feeling understood are important for change.
Also consider lifestyle and scheduling factors. If your symptoms cluster in winter months, you may want a therapist who can increase session frequency during that period. If light availability or sleep disruption is a major issue, ask how the therapist integrates daily routine adjustments into treatment. A clinician who is pragmatic and collaborative can help you build a plan that is realistic for your life.
Next Steps
Reaching out to a therapist is a constructive step toward managing seasonal mood changes. Use the profiles below to compare clinicians, read their descriptions, and request an initial consultation. Many professionals offer a brief introductory conversation so you can ask questions and get a sense of fit before committing to regular sessions. With thoughtful support and a plan tailored to your seasonal needs, you can build coping skills and routines that help you move through the year with more predictability and ease.
Find Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) Therapists by State
Alabama
105 therapists
Alaska
16 therapists
Arizona
66 therapists
Arkansas
42 therapists
Australia
101 therapists
California
354 therapists
Colorado
142 therapists
Connecticut
52 therapists
Delaware
11 therapists
District of Columbia
8 therapists
Florida
521 therapists
Georgia
198 therapists
Hawaii
12 therapists
Idaho
52 therapists
Illinois
239 therapists
Indiana
136 therapists
Iowa
41 therapists
Kansas
54 therapists
Kentucky
102 therapists
Louisiana
97 therapists
Maine
34 therapists
Maryland
102 therapists
Massachusetts
82 therapists
Michigan
306 therapists
Minnesota
117 therapists
Mississippi
53 therapists
Missouri
194 therapists
Montana
57 therapists
Nebraska
47 therapists
Nevada
25 therapists
New Hampshire
23 therapists
New Jersey
167 therapists
New Mexico
34 therapists
New York
313 therapists
North Carolina
270 therapists
North Dakota
6 therapists
Ohio
209 therapists
Oklahoma
117 therapists
Oregon
57 therapists
Pennsylvania
253 therapists
Rhode Island
19 therapists
South Carolina
104 therapists
South Dakota
22 therapists
Tennessee
111 therapists
Texas
534 therapists
United Kingdom
1460 therapists
Utah
81 therapists
Vermont
20 therapists
Virginia
123 therapists
Washington
92 therapists
West Virginia
30 therapists
Wisconsin
150 therapists
Wyoming
23 therapists