Over the past year, a fascinating new trend has emerged in therapy: clients showing up with advice from AI. And not just surface-level tips, some people are having full-blown therapy-like sessions with AI tools such as ChatGPT, Woebot, and Wysa. The question “can AI be your therapist” is becoming increasingly common as people turn to chatbots for venting, coping strategies, and even working through past trauma.
It’s a fascinating shift. And a complicated one. Let’s explore how people are asking “can AI be your therapist,” where artificial intelligence helps, where it falls short, and why human-to-human connection still matters.
AI therapy tools are gaining traction because they’re:
In places like Culver City, Marina del Rey, and Venice, where therapy waitlists can stretch for months, it’s tempting to type “I’m feeling anxious” into a chatbot. And sometimes, the response feels surprisingly helpful.
For more context, see Online Therapy: Benefits, Drawbacks, and How to Get Started.
AI therapy bots do offer real value:
In many cases, some support is better than none. But is AI therapy safe for people struggling with deeper issues like trauma? This is where its limitations show.
Recent research published in NEJM AI found that people with depression experienced a 51% average reduction in symptoms when using properly trained AI therapy chatbots, with improvements comparable to traditional outpatient therapy.
No matter how advanced, AI cannot replace a real therapist. Here’s why:
Related: Technology and Mental Health: How Digital Tools Are Changing Therapy.
At our practice in Culver City, more clients are referencing conversations with AI. Some say it helped them feel heard when no one else was available. Others felt it gave them quick-fix answers that didn’t resonate. Many realized what was missing: real human connection.
Ready to Experience Real Human Connection?
While AI can offer support, nothing replaces the healing power of genuine human understanding.
Browse Our Directory of Qualified Therapists who specialize in:
- ✅ Anxiety & Depression Treatment
- ✅ Trauma Recovery & EMDR
- ✅ Personalized Therapy Approaches
Find a therapist who truly understands your unique needs and can provide the personalized care AI cannot offer.
We’re not anti-AI. In fact, we believe AI can enhance therapy when used intentionally. For example, AI can help clients:
The American Psychological Association recognizes that while AI therapy tools show promise, they must be “grounded in psychological science, developed in collaboration with behavioral health experts, and rigorously tested for safety.”
AI therapy can be a valuable supplement for journaling, mood tracking, or quick coping strategies. But true healing and growth come from being seen by a real person, someone who remembers your story, notices your patterns, and holds space for the parts of you that don’t fit into a prompt.
AI can generate insights, but therapy is more than advice, it’s relationship. Healing often comes through relational repair, something only possible with another human being.
If you’ve been curious about AI therapy, try it out, and notice what’s missing. If you’re craving deeper connection, emotional safety, or a space to be your full, complicated self, that’s where human therapy steps in.
Research from NIH’s National Institute of Mental Health emphasizes that “AI algorithms can be harnessed to comprehensively draw meaning from large and varied data sources” but notes the critical importance of “combining human intelligence with AI” to ensure construct validity and appreciate unobserved factors.
While AI therapy involves using artificial intelligence chatbots like ChatGPT, Woebot, or Wysa to provide mental health support through text-based conversations, AI cannot fully replace human therapists. These tools can deliver CBT techniques, mood tracking, and coping strategies 24/7.
No, AI cannot be your complete therapist. While AI can provide valuable support for basic anxiety management and CBT skills, it lacks the empathy, intuition, and ability to handle complex trauma that human therapists provide.
Using AI as your therapist can be safe for mild to moderate anxiety and depression symptoms when used as a supplement to professional care. However, it should not be the sole treatment for severe mental health conditions or trauma.
The main benefits include 24/7 accessibility, cost-effectiveness, reduced stigma, consistent delivery of CBT techniques, and serving as an entry point for those hesitant about traditional therapy.
AI therapy limitations include inability to read body language, lack of genuine empathy, potential safety concerns in crisis situations, inability to handle complex trauma, and risk of providing inappropriate responses to serious mental health issues.
AI can be beneficial as a supplementary therapist between sessions for mood tracking, journaling, organizing thoughts, and practicing CBT skills, but it should complement, not replace, regular therapy with a human professional.
© Copyright 2007 - 2025 GoodTherapy.org. All rights reserved.The preceding article was solely written by the author named above. Any views and opinions expressed are not necessarily shared by GoodTherapy.org.