Deciding to seek support is a strong step, and youβre in the right place to find sexual trauma therapists ready to listen and support your healing.
Online therapy offers flexibility, privacy, and convenience – letting you connect from home or a quiet space. Browse the therapists listed below to explore profiles and reach out when you feel ready.








































Sexual trauma can affect every part of life – relationships, sense of safety, self-worth, sexuality, and daily functioning. Finding a therapist who understands the unique needs of survivors can be a vital step toward healing. Online therapy makes it easier to find trauma-informed clinicians who specialize in sexual trauma, offering flexible, private, and compassionate care that meets you where you are.
Sexual trauma includes any unwanted or coerced sexual experience experienced in childhood or adulthood. The effects are complex and varied. People who have experienced sexual trauma may have symptoms such as anxiety, panic, flashbacks, nightmares, avoidance, difficulties with intimacy, shame, changes in mood, or problems with concentration and sleep.
Because sexual trauma often involves a violation of boundaries and trust, many survivors struggle with establishing safety and control in relationships and daily life. Trauma responses can be both psychological and physical, and recovery usually involves addressing emotional wounds and practical coping strategies rather than simply “moving on.”
Survivors commonly look for help to manage distressing memories, reduce triggers, rebuild a sense of safety, and improve relationships and sexual health. Many need support in navigating practical matters like reporting, medical care, or legal proceedings while also wanting confidential, nonjudgmental emotional support.
Some survivors prioritize therapists who are explicitly trauma-informed, have experience working with sexual abuse and assault, and who honor autonomy and consent in the therapeutic process. Others want providers who are affirming of gender, sexual orientation, and cultural background, or who use specialized approaches like somatic therapy to address bodily responses to trauma.
Online therapy expands access to clinicians with specific training in sexual trauma who might not be available locally. For many survivors, the ability to choose a therapist based on expertise, identity, and approach is empowering. Online settings also allow you to stay in a familiar space during sessions, which can feel safer when discussing difficult memories.
Therapists offering telehealth often integrate evidence-based trauma therapies, stabilization skills, grounding techniques, and pacing strategies adapted for remote work. Through video, phone, or secure messaging, therapists can guide breathing, grounding, and resource-building exercises that reduce distress between sessions.
Online therapy increases convenience and reduces barriers such as travel time, transportation costs, and geographic limitations. This can be especially important for survivors who find crowded waiting rooms or clinical settings anxiety-provoking.
Online care also makes it easier to find a therapist who matches your needs – whether that is a provider with a particular cultural competency, gender identity, or specialized trauma training. Being in your own environment can enhance a sense of control and comfort, which helps many people open up at their own pace.
That said, in-person therapy can be preferable for some people depending on their needs, local resources, or comfort level. The most important factor is finding a therapist who is trauma-informed, trustworthy, and a good match for your goals, whether they offer remote, in-person, or hybrid care.
Initial sessions usually involve an assessment where the therapist asks about history, safety, symptoms, and immediate needs. You and the therapist will discuss goals, boundaries, confidentiality, and a safety plan, including what to do if you experience a crisis between sessions.
Early work often focuses on stabilization – learning grounding skills, emotion regulation, and ways to manage triggers. Many therapists incorporate psychoeducation about trauma responses so experiences feel less isolating and more understandable.
As trust and safety build, some survivors choose to process specific memories or experiences using trauma-focused approaches. Therapies commonly adapted for online work include trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy, cognitive processing therapy, EMDR, and somatic or sensorimotor approaches. Pacing is individualized; a skilled therapist will move at a rate that feels manageable and will emphasize consent and choice throughout.
Technical considerations include having a private, comfortable space for sessions, reliable internet, and a backup plan if connection is lost. Your therapist should explain confidentiality limits related to telehealth and require a local emergency contact or plan if you are in crisis.
When searching, look for clinicians who state experience with sexual trauma or assault and who describe trauma-informed practices. Consider their training in evidence-informed approaches and whether they offer the format you prefer, such as video, phone, or secure text communication.
Cultural competency and affirming care matter. If identity factors like gender, race, sexual orientation, or spirituality are important to you, seek a therapist who explicitly welcomes and understands those aspects of your experience. Ask about their experience with dissociation, complex trauma, or co-occurring conditions if those apply to you.
It is reasonable to ask prospective therapists about their approach to pacing, safety planning, and how they handle crises remotely. Also inquire about licensure and telehealth experience, session length and frequency, fees, and cancellation policies so there are no surprises.
Reaching out is a courageous act. You do not need to tell your whole story in the first contact. A brief message or phone call to describe that you are a survivor seeking trauma-informed online therapy is enough to start. Therapists expect to move at the pace that feels safe to you.
If you are nervous about privacy at home, consider options such as using headphones, sitting near a door you can step away from, or scheduling sessions when others are not present. If you are in immediate danger or thinking of harming yourself, contact local emergency services or a crisis line right away; online therapy is not a replacement for emergency care.
Finding the right therapist may take time. Trust your instincts about whether a provider feels respectful, safe, and competent. Small steps – reaching out, asking questions, and trying a session – can begin a process of regaining safety, control, and connection after sexual trauma.
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