You can get symptoms under control and reduce hair-pulling with treatments that target the behavior and the triggers that feed it. Behavioral therapy—especially habit reversal training—offers the strongest evidence for helping you recognize urges, build competing responses, and break the cycle, while medication and supportive strategies can help when needed.
This article covers treatment for trichotillomania, showing practical, evidence based approaches you can try or discuss with a clinician, plus everyday strategies to manage setbacks and maintain progress. You’ll find clear next steps so you can choose treatments that fit your situation and move toward lasting improvement.
Evidence-Based Treatments for Trichotillomania
Treatments for trichotillomania target the behaviors that maintain hair-pulling, teach alternative responses, and address emotional triggers. You will find behavioral skills, acceptance-oriented strategies, and medication options that have the best evidence for reducing pulling and improving daily functioning.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Approaches
CBT for trichotillomania focuses on the links between thoughts, feelings, and pulling behavior. You will work with a therapist to identify triggers (sensory, emotional, situational) and to test unhelpful beliefs that increase urge-driven behavior.
Treatment teaches concrete skills: cue awareness, stimulus control (changing environments or routines), and building competing responses to interrupt pulling sequences.
CBT often integrates emotion-regulation skills drawn from dialectical-behavioral concepts and problem-solving training. Sessions include homework—monitoring logs, practice of competing responses, and graded exposure to urge-provoking situations.
Research shows CBT-based interventions yield larger and more consistent symptom reductions than most medications, especially when delivered by trained clinicians.
Habit Reversal Training
Habit Reversal Training (HRT) is the most well-supported behavioral protocol for trichotillomania. You will learn four core components: awareness training, competing response training, stimulus control, and relaxation or social support.
Awareness training helps you detect pre-pulling sensations and situations. Competing responses teach you to perform a physically incompatible action for 1–3 minutes when an urge occurs.
Stimulus control changes the environment to reduce cues (e.g., covering mirrors, wearing gloves, altering seating). Support elements include family involvement and reinforcement for reduced pulling.
HRT studies show meaningful reductions in pulling frequency and severity, and clinicians often adapt HRT into broader CBT packages to address comorbidity and maintenance factors.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
ACT emphasizes changing your relationship to urges rather than eliminating them. You will practice noticing urges with openness, accepting uncomfortable internal experiences, and choosing actions aligned with your values.
Techniques include mindfulness exercises, cognitive defusion (seeing thoughts as passing events), and values-driven behavioral activation to reduce reliance on pulling for emotional relief.
ACT can be delivered alongside HRT or CBT to target avoidance and shame that sustain pulling. Clinical trials and case series indicate ACT-based strategies improve distress tolerance and functioning, particularly when habitual pulling persists despite standard HRT.
Use ACT tools when you struggle with rigid control strategies or when reducing avoidance and increasing valued activities will support longer-term change.
Medication Options
Medications play a secondary role and are best considered when behavioral treatment is inaccessible, incomplete, or when psychiatric comorbidity requires pharmacologic care. You and your clinician may consider an SSRI, clomipramine, atypical antipsychotics, or other agents depending on symptoms and history.
Evidence for medications is mixed: clomipramine and some SSRIs show variable benefit, while agents like olanzapine or naltrexone have limited and inconsistent support. Side effects and individual response guide selection.
Combine medication with behavioral therapy when you need faster symptom reduction or when co-occurring depression, anxiety, or obsessive-compulsive features complicate treatment.
Monitor response carefully and use stepped-care: start with behavioral therapy, add medication if needed, and reassess regularly for benefits and adverse effects.
Supportive Strategies and Long-Term Management
You will need practical daily tools, reliable social supports, and a clear relapse plan to maintain gains over months and years. Focus on specific habits, resources, and signals that let you act early and stay consistent.
Self-Help Techniques
Use habit-replacement and tracking to reduce pulling frequency. Keep a brief log (time, trigger, mood) for two weeks to identify patterns. Use stimulus control: cover mirrors, wear a bracelet, or use fidget objects when you feel the urge.
Practice habit reversal components at home: awareness training (notice the first urge), competing response (clench fists or squeeze a stress ball for one minute), and short behavioral experiments (delay pulling by 5–10 minutes and note the outcome). Sleep, hydration, and scheduled breaks lower stress that fuels pulling. Try brief mindfulness exercises (3–10 minutes) to observe urges without acting. Reinforce wins with small rewards after pull-free days.
Support Groups and Community Resources
Look for specialized BFRB (body-focused repetitive behavior) groups rather than general mental health support. Online forums (moderated BFRB communities), local support groups, and chapters of national organizations offer shared coping strategies and accountability. Verify moderators or group leaders have BFRB knowledge to avoid unhelpful advice.
Consider peer-led check-ins: daily text or app-based reminders, weekly video meetings, or accountability partners who track goals with you. If cost is an issue, seek low-fee or sliding-scale groups through universities or clinics. Keep a short contact list of 2–3 supportive people you can call when urges spike.
Relapse Prevention Methods
Define clear early-warning signs you can monitor: increased urge frequency, more avoidance of social situations, sleep loss, or rising stress at work or school. Create a stepwise action plan: 1) implement competing responses immediately, 2) increase self-monitoring for 72 hours, 3) contact your therapist or peer support, 4) temporarily intensify structure (scheduled activities, reduced screen time).
Use a written coping toolkit you carry on your phone: brief mindfulness scripts, competing-response steps, emergency contacts, and a short relapse contract with yourself (specific behaviors and consequences). Schedule periodic booster sessions with a clinician or a skills workshop every 3–6 months to refresh techniques and adjust strategies as life changes.