Also analyzed in: 1 other industry
Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
16
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
67
/ 100
Category-Strong

What the model believes about Daylio without web search.

LLM Authority?
7
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
7
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Daylio from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
67/100
Category-Strong
Quality?
0.68
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.66
Top associations for Daylio
mood-tracking app 4 habit tracking 4 journaling app 3 spotting mood patterns 3 spotting patterns over time 2 low-friction habit tracking 2 quick daily check-ins 2 limited free version 2 limited deep journaling 2 simple mood tracker 2 activity tracking 2 daily mood logging 2 spotting patterns 2 basic self-reflection 2 limited customization 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
mood tracking 2 journaling features 1 coping skills support 1 coping tools for anxiety 1 goal setting 1 journaling tools 1 thought reframing 1 mood tracking 1 guided CBT exercises 1 cognitive behavioral therapy focus 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Daylio is firmly in the model's "self-help cbt app" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Daylio known for?

Daylio is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app. It lets users log their daily mood, activities, and habits quickly, then view patterns and insights over time.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Daylio known for?

Daylio is best known as a mood-tracking and micro-journaling app that helps people log moods, track habits, and spot patterns in their mental well-being over time.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
7/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
12

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best CBT apps for managing anxiety symptoms? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which CBT apps are good for depression support? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for panic attacks? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for social anxiety? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which CBT apps help with negative thoughts? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for sleep anxiety? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for stress management? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which CBT apps are best for beginners? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps with journaling features? #4 not mentioned
discovery Which CBT apps have mood tracking? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for teens? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for adults? #6 not mentioned
discovery Which CBT apps are good for managing overthinking? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for intrusive thoughts? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for building coping skills? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which CBT apps offer structured daily lessons? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps with guided exercises? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for self-esteem? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which CBT apps are best for managing worry? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best CBT apps for relapse prevention? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to the leading CBT app? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a top CBT therapy app? #5 not mentioned
comparison How do the best CBT apps compare for anxiety support? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What is the best alternative to a premium CBT app? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which CBT apps are better for self-guided therapy? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a CBT app with mood tracking? #1 #4
comparison Which CBT apps are best if I want more exercises and less reading? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a CBT app for beginners? #5 #5
comparison How do CBT apps compare on cost and features? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which CBT apps are best alternatives for daily habit building? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I deal with anxiety without seeing a therapist? #4 not mentioned
problem What can I do about constant overthinking? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I manage negative thoughts during the day? #2 not mentioned
problem How can I calm panic attacks at home? #7 not mentioned
problem What helps with social anxiety in everyday situations? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I build better coping skills for stress? #3 not mentioned
problem How can I improve my mood with self-help tools? #1 not mentioned
problem What should I do if I keep worrying too much? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I challenge unhelpful thoughts? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I start CBT exercises on my own? #4 not mentioned
transactional How much do CBT apps cost per month? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there free CBT apps for anxiety? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest CBT app? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do CBT apps have free trials? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which CBT apps are worth paying for? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What CBT apps offer a free version? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much is a premium CBT app subscription? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are CBT apps covered by insurance? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which CBT apps are best value for money? not mentioned #1
transactional Can I get a CBT app for free? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best CBT apps with journaling features? · discovery · recall mode

Here are some of the best CBT apps with journaling features:

  1. Sanvello — Strong CBT tools, mood tracking, thought records, and guided journaling. Good if you want a structured mental health app.
  2. CBT Thought Diary — One of the best pure CBT journaling apps. Excellent for thought records, cognitive distortions, and evidence-based reframing.
  3. MindDoc — Great for mood journaling plus symptom tracking and reflection prompts. More mental-health-monitoring focused, but useful for CBT-style self-awareness.
  4. Daylio — Simple and very good for habit/mood journaling. Less CBT-specific, but strong if you want easy daily logging and patterns over time.
  5. Reflectly — Polished journaling app with guided prompts. Not as CBT-heavy as others, but good for reflective writing and mood check-ins.
  6. Moodnotes — Designed around cognitive bias and thought reframing. A solid CBT-adjacent journaling app if you like guided rethinking prompts.

Best overall for CBT journaling: CBT Thought Diary Best all-around mental health app: Sanvello Best simple mood + journal tracker: Daylio

If you want, I can also rank these by iPhone vs Android, free vs paid, or best for anxiety/depression.

Prompt: What are the best CBT apps for adults? · discovery · recall mode

Here are some of the best CBT apps for adults:

Best overall
  • Wysa — strong CBT-style coaching, mood tracking, guided exercises, and good for anxiety/stress.
  • Woebot — very solid CBT-based chatbot support; simple and easy to use.
Best for anxiety
  • MindShift CBT — excellent for anxiety, panic, and worry; very CBT-focused.
  • Sanvello — good mix of CBT tools, tracking, and coping exercises.
Best for sleep
  • CBT-i Coach — one of the best for insomnia and sleep habits; free and evidence-based.
Best for self-guided journaling
  • Daylio — not pure CBT, but great for mood tracking and pattern recognition.
  • CBT Thought Diary — very CBT-oriented for reframing thoughts.
Best free option
  • CBT-i Coach for sleep
  • MindShift CBT for anxiety

If you want, I can also rank them by price, best for depression vs anxiety, or best for iPhone/Android.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
7/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best self-help CBT apps for anxiety? 0 0/5
What are the top self-help CBT apps for depression? 0 0/5
Which self-help CBT apps are most recommended? 0 0/5
What are the best CBT apps overall? 390 0/5
What are the most popular CBT therapy apps? 0 0/5
Which apps offer CBT exercises for mental health? 0 1/5 6
What are the best apps for CBT-based self-help? 0 2/5 7, 6
What are the top apps for guided CBT techniques? 0 0/5
What are the best mental health apps with CBT tools? 0 0/5
Which self-guided CBT apps are worth trying? 0 0/5
What are the best CBT apps for stress and anxiety? 0 0/5
What are the best CBT apps for emotional wellbeing? 0 0/5
What are the leading CBT app options? 0 0/5
What are the best apps that teach CBT skills? 0 1/5 6
Which CBT apps are good for daily practice? 0 1/5 6
Sample recall responses
Prompt: Which apps offer CBT exercises for mental health? (no web search)

Here are some popular apps that offer CBT-style exercises for mental health:

  • Woebot — guided CBT-based chat tools and mood tracking
  • MoodKit — CBT exercises, thought checking, activity planning
  • Sanvello — CBT tools for anxiety, stress, and depression
  • MindShift CBT — built around CBT for anxiety
  • CBT-i Coach — CBT for insomnia, with sleep tools and exercises
  • Daylio — mood tracking with CBT-style journaling prompts
  • Youper — AI chat plus CBT techniques and mood tracking
  • Headspace — not purely CBT, but has CBT-informed courses for stress/anxiety

If you want, I can also narrow these down by free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or best for anxiety/depression/insomnia.

Iteration: 3 of 5
Prompt: What are the best apps for CBT-based self-help? (no web search)

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps:

  • MoodKit (iOS) — Strongest “pure CBT” app for thought tracking, mood monitoring, and restructuring negative thoughts.
  • Sanvello (iOS/Android) — Good all-around CBT app for anxiety, stress, and low mood; includes tools, tracking, and guided programs.
  • Woebot (iOS/Android) — Chat-based CBT support; helpful for quick check-ins and coping exercises.
  • MindShift CBT (iOS/Android) — Great for anxiety, worry, panic, and social anxiety; very practical and easy to use.
  • CBT Thought Diary (iOS/Android) — Good if you want a straightforward thought record and CBT journaling app.
  • CBT-i Coach (iOS/Android) — Best if your main issue is insomnia; built around CBT for sleep.
  • Daylio (iOS/Android) — Not strictly CBT, but excellent for mood tracking and identifying triggers/patterns.

Best picks by need

  • Best overall CBT self-help: Sanvello
  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best for thought records/journaling: CBT Thought Diary
  • Best for sleep: CBT-i Coach
  • Best chat-style support: Woebot

If you want, I can also rank these for free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or anxiety vs depression vs insomnia.

Iteration: 3 of 5

Also analyzed in Daylio in 1 other industry

This page covers Daylio in Self-Help & CBT Apps. The model also evaluates it against the industries below, with their own prompts and competitor sets. Click any industry for the matching report.

What to do next Recommendations for Daylio

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Defend retrieval position

You score 12 on recall but only 0 on retrieval (gap of +12.4). Training-data authority is outpacing your current web footprint. Publish fresh, well-cited content to keep search-augmented responses including your brand.

Close the fragility gap

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 2:20 AM

All 210 AI responses for Daylio

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is Daylio known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app. It lets users log their daily mood, activities, and habits quickly, then view patterns and insights over time.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is best known as a mood-tracking and micro-journaling app that helps people log moods, track habits, and spot patterns in their mental well-being over time.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app that helps people log their daily moods, activities, and habits to spot patterns in their mental well-being.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app that lets people log their daily moods and activities to spot patterns and improve mental well-being.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app that helps people log their mood, habits, and daily activities with minimal effort.

What are Daylio's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio’s main strengths are its very low-friction mood tracking, clean interface, strong habit/activity logging, useful charts and trends, and good privacy-focused journaling for people who want quick self-reflection without much writing. It’s especially good for consistency and spotting patterns over time.

Its main weaknesses are that it can feel too simple for users who want deep journaling, therapy-style insights, or advanced mental health analysis. Customization and reporting are somewhat limited, and some useful features are behind the paid version. It also isn’t a substitute for professional mental health support.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio’s main strengths are its simplicity, fast daily logging, strong mood/activity tracking, useful charts and insights, and low-friction habit building. It’s also highly approachable for people who want self-reflection without heavy journaling.

Main weaknesses: it can feel too lightweight for users who want deep journaling, advanced mental-health features, or detailed customization. Some of the more useful features are behind a paid tier, and the insights are limited by the simplicity of the input model.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio’s main strengths are its simplicity, fast mood logging, strong visual stats, and low-friction habit tracking. It’s easy to use daily, works well for people who don’t want to write long journal entries, and its charts can make patterns in mood and habits easy to spot. The app is also generally well-liked for being flexible, private-feeling, and good for building consistency.

Its main weaknesses are that it can feel limited for users who want deeper journaling, advanced analytics, or more customization. The free version is fairly basic, and some useful features are behind a paywall. It’s also best for quick check-ins rather than rich reflection, so power users may outgrow it.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio’s main strengths are its simplicity, fast daily mood logging, attractive interface, strong habit/activity tracking, and useful charts for spotting patterns over time. It’s good for people who want a low-friction mental wellness tracker without having to write long journal entries.

Its main weaknesses are that it can feel too basic for users who want deeper journaling, more advanced analytics, or richer mental-health insights. Some features are behind a paid tier, and the app’s value drops if you don’t use it consistently. It also isn’t a substitute for professional mental-health support.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio’s main strengths are its simplicity, fast daily mood logging, clean interface, useful stats/trends, and low-friction habit tracking. It’s good for people who want quick self-monitoring without writing long journal entries.

Main weaknesses: it can feel limited for deeper journaling or therapy-style reflection, many useful features are behind a paid plan, and the insights may be too basic for users who want more advanced mental health analysis or customization.

Who should use Daylio? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is best for people who want a simple, low-effort mood tracker/journal—especially if you like tapping a few icons instead of writing long notes. It can help people build self-awareness, spot mood patterns, and keep a consistent daily log.

People who may want to avoid it include those who need a clinical mental health tool, crisis support, or detailed therapy-grade records. It may also feel too lightweight for users who want deep journaling, advanced analytics, or highly customizable tracking. If tracking emotions closely is triggering or obsessive for you, it may not be a good fit either.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is best for people who want a simple, low-effort mood and habit tracker, especially if they like quick check-ins, spotting patterns, and using journaling without a lot of writing. It can be a good fit for beginners, busy people, and anyone who wants basic self-reflection.

People who may want to avoid it are those who need a full-featured mental health tool, detailed journaling, therapy-style guidance, or crisis support. It may also not suit users who prefer very rich note-taking, highly customizable analytics, or a more private/offline workflow than the app provides.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is best for people who want a simple, low-friction mood tracker or micro-journal—especially if they like spotting patterns, building habits, or logging mental health without writing long entries. It can also help people who want a private personal reflection tool.

People who may want to avoid it: anyone looking for in-depth therapy, crisis support, or a full-featured mental health app with live coaching; people who don’t want to track feelings regularly; and users who may find mood logging too triggering or obsessive.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is best for people who want a simple mood-and-habit tracker, especially if they like quick daily check-ins, basic self-reflection, and spotting patterns over time.

It may not be a good fit for people who need deep journaling, therapist-level mental health support, or highly customizable analytics. Also avoid relying on it alone if you’re dealing with severe depression, self-harm thoughts, or a crisis—professional help is more appropriate.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is best for people who want a simple mood tracker / mini journal, especially if they like quick daily check-ins, habit tracking, and spotting mood patterns over time.

Use it if you:

  • want a low-effort journaling app
  • are tracking mood, habits, sleep, anxiety, or routines
  • like charts, streaks, and progress summaries
  • want more self-awareness without writing long entries

Avoid it if you:

  • need a full therapy or mental-health treatment tool
  • want deep journaling, free-form note-taking, or long reflections
  • need crisis support or urgent help
  • are looking for highly advanced clinical features or collaboration with a provider
How does Daylio compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is a strong choice if you want a simple, low-friction mood tracker. Compared with its main competitors, it stands out for:

  • Simplicity: very quick daily logging with emoji/mood entries and activities.
  • Habit tracking: stronger built-in habit stats than many basic mood apps.
  • Privacy: generally more privacy-friendly than social/journal-style apps.
  • Design: clean, easy to use, low effort to maintain.

Where competitors may be better:

  • MindDoc / Moodpath: more clinically oriented mental-health check-ins and assessments.
  • Journey / Day One: better for long-form journaling and writing.
  • Bearable: more detailed tracking of symptoms, meds, sleep, and health correlations.
  • Reflectly: more guided journaling and reflection prompts, but less data-centric.
  • Stoic: broader mental wellness tools and journaling, often with more coaching-style features.

Overall: Daylio is best for fast mood + habit tracking, but less powerful if you want deep journaling, therapy-like guidance, or very granular health analysis.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is usually stronger than most competitors at being very fast, simple, and habit-friendly. Its main edge is ultra-low-friction mood tracking with customizable activities, stats, and reminders—great for people who want quick check-ins without writing a full journal entry.

Compared with competitors:

  • Journey / Day One: better for polished journaling and rich entries; Daylio is better for quick mood logging and behavior tracking.
  • Reflectly / MindDoc / Wysa: more guided, reflective, or therapy-oriented; Daylio is simpler and less clinical.
  • Bearable / eMoods: more detailed health and symptom tracking; Daylio is easier and more lightweight.
  • Moodpath-style apps: more assessment-focused; Daylio is better for day-to-day self-monitoring.

Pros: very easy to use, good visuals, strong customization, good for spotting patterns. Cons: less depth for long-form journaling, therapy features, or complex mental-health tracking.

Bottom line: if you want the easiest app for consistent mood tracking, Daylio is one of the best. If you want deeper journaling or clinical tracking, some competitors are stronger.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is best known as a lightweight mood-tracking app with a very simple diary-first workflow: log your mood, activities, and notes in a few taps, then get trends and charts. Compared with its main competitors:

  • Journey / Day One: these are stronger as polished journaling apps. They’re better for long-form writing, photos, and rich journaling, while Daylio is faster and more focused on habit/mood analytics.
  • Bearable: more powerful for symptom tracking, especially for mental/physical health correlations, medication, sleep, and detailed inputs. Daylio is simpler and easier to stick with, but less granular.
  • Moodnotes / Reflectly: these lean more into guided reflection and CBT-style prompts. Daylio is less therapeutic and more data-driven.
  • Stoic / MindDoc-style apps: these often offer more wellness coaching, exercises, or mental-health guidance. Daylio is more of a self-monitoring tool than a treatment/support app.
  • eMoods / similar bipolar trackers: these are more clinically oriented and detailed for specific conditions. Daylio is broader and more user-friendly, but not as specialized.

Overall, Daylio’s edge is simplicity, speed, and visual insights. Its weakness versus competitors is depth: it offers less advanced journaling, coaching, and condition-specific tracking.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is generally the simplest, fastest mood-tracking app: it focuses on quick daily check-ins, activity tags, charts, and light journaling. Compared with main competitors:

  • Moodfit: more feature-rich for mental wellness (goals, exercises, CBT-style tools), but less minimal than Daylio.
  • Bearable: better for tracking lots of factors like symptoms, sleep, meds, and correlations; more powerful, but more complex.
  • MindDoc: stronger for mental-health screening and guided support; less casual and more clinically oriented.
  • Reflectly / Stoic: more journaling- and reflection-focused; prettier/ more guided, but usually less efficient for pure mood tracking.

Overall: Daylio wins on ease of use and habit-building; competitors win on deeper insights, wellness tools, or clinical support.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Daylio is strongest for fast, low-friction mood tracking. Compared with competitors, it’s usually:

  • Simpler than Journey or Day One: those are more full-featured journaling apps; Daylio is quicker and more focused on mood + habits.
  • More structured than Reflectly or Moodnotes: those lean more into guided reflection and mental wellness prompts, while Daylio is more lightweight and habit-oriented.
  • Better for consistency than text-heavy journals: because you can log a mood in seconds without writing.
  • Less expressive than traditional journaling apps: it has fewer advanced writing, formatting, and long-form entry features.

Best fit: people who want an easy daily mood tracker with habit insights. Less ideal if you want a rich diary or deep guided therapy-style journaling.

What do people typically complain about with Daylio?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain that Daylio’s free version is pretty limited, the premium subscription feels pricey, and some useful features are locked behind paywall. Others mention wanting more customization and deeper analytics, occasional notification/reminder issues, and that exporting or sharing data isn’t as flexible as they’d like.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Daylio is too limited in the free version, the mood/activity tracking can feel repetitive, customizations and analytics aren’t as deep as some want, and the premium pricing can feel high for what it offers. Some also mention occasional syncing/export frustrations and that it’s more of a habit tracker than a full journaling app.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Daylio is too limited behind a paywall, especially for advanced stats, exports, and customization. Others mention occasional sync/backup issues, reminders not being flexible enough, and that the insights can feel shallow if you want more than quick mood tracking.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Daylio feels repetitive, the free version is too limited, some useful features are locked behind premium, and the insights/reporting can feel basic. Others mention occasional sync/export issues and that the mood/activity tracking can become tedious to maintain.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Daylio can feel too limited for detailed journaling, the premium version is needed for some useful features, customization is somewhat restricted, and the app can be a bit repetitive or clunky when logging lots of entries. Some also mention export/backup and cross-device syncing issues.

What is a typical self-help cbt app known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical self-help CBT app is known for guided exercises based on cognitive behavioral therapy, such as tracking thoughts and moods, challenging negative thinking, setting goals, and building coping skills through short daily activities.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical self-help CBT app is known for guided exercises to challenge negative thoughts, mood tracking, journaling, coping tools, and short lessons based on cognitive behavioral therapy.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical self-help CBT app is known for guided exercises based on cognitive behavioral therapy, such as mood tracking, thought reframing, journaling, goal setting, and coping tools for anxiety, stress, or depression.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical self-help CBT app is known for structured tools to help users manage thoughts and feelings—like mood tracking, guided exercises, thought records, behavior activation, and coping strategies based on cognitive behavioral therapy.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical self-help CBT app is known for guided tools based on cognitive behavioral therapy, such as thought records, mood tracking, journaling, exercises to challenge negative thoughts, goal setting, and short lessons or reminders to build healthier habits and coping skills.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best CBT apps for managing anxiety symptoms? discovery 70/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for anxiety:

  • Sanvello — Strong CBT tools, mood tracking, guided programs for anxiety/stress, and solid daily check-ins.
  • Woebot — Uses CBT-style chat coaching; good for quick support and thought reframing.
  • Wysa — AI-guided CBT exercises, anxiety tools, and a calm, easy-to-use interface.
  • MindShift CBT — Built specifically for anxiety; great for worry, panic, social anxiety, and coping strategies.
  • Headspace — Not pure CBT, but excellent for anxiety with guided meditations and some CBT-informed tools.
  • BetterHelp app — If you want access to a therapist plus self-help features, though it’s more counseling than app-based CBT.

Best overall for anxiety CBT: MindShift CBT Best for daily self-help: Sanvello Best chat-style support: Woebot or Wysa

If you want, I can also rank these by free vs paid, best for panic, or best for social anxiety.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want CBT-first apps for anxiety, these are the strongest picks I’d start with:

  1. MindShift CBT — best free all-around choice. It’s built around CBT tools like thought journaling, fear ladders, guided meditations, and progress tracking, and Anxiety Canada still describes it as free and available on iOS/Android. (apps.apple.com)
  2. Clear Fear — best for teens/young people. Stem4 says it uses a CBT framework to reduce anxious thoughts/behaviors, and it’s aimed at ages 11–19. (clearfear.co.uk)
  3. Anxiety Coach — best simple CBT exposure app. ADAA describes it as a self-help app for fears and worries that helps you list feared activities, make a plan, track anxiety, and review progress. (adaa.org)
  4. Woebot — best chatbot-style support. Woebot says it uses CBT-based conversations plus mood tracking/journaling, but access is currently limited to U.S. users with an access code or through a study/provider/employer partner. (woebothealth.com)
  5. Headspace — best if you want CBT plus mindfulness. Headspace says it now offers CBT-based anxiety exercises/programs in addition to meditation tools, but it’s more of a broader mental wellness app than a pure CBT app. (headspace.com)

My short ranking:

If you want, I can also narrow these down by free only, iPhone vs Android, or panic/social anxiety/GAD specifically.

Which CBT apps are good for depression support? discovery 70/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Good CBT-based apps for depression support include:

  • Sanvello — CBT tools, mood tracking, coping plans; solid all-around option.
  • MoodTools — free, simple CBT-style depression support, thought diary, safety plan.
  • Wysa — AI-guided CBT exercises, mood check-ins, stress/depression support.
  • Woebot — CBT-based chat support; very user-friendly for daily check-ins.
  • MindShift CBT — more anxiety-focused, but helpful CBT tools if depression overlaps with worry.
  • CBT Thought Diary / Thought Diary — good for tracking thoughts and reframing them.
  • Deprexis — structured, evidence-based digital program for depression; often used with clinician involvement.

If you want the best quick picks:

  • Best overall: Sanvello
  • Best free option: MoodTools
  • Best chatbot style: Woebot or Wysa
  • Most structured program: Deprexis

If you want, I can also narrow these down by free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or best for severe depression vs mild symptoms.

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Good CBT-style apps for depression support include:

  • MoodTools — the most directly depression-focused option I found. It includes a PHQ-9 depression questionnaire, a Thought Diary, and a Safety Plan. (moodtools.org)
  • Woebot — a CBT-based chat app that says it helps manage mood and depression symptoms, but it’s currently limited for new U.S. users who have a study, provider, employer, or partner access code. (woebothealth.com)
  • Happify — broader than depression, but it uses CBT-based activities for negative thoughts, stress, and low mood. (happify.com)

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. best free apps only,
  2. best apps with therapist support, or
  3. best apps for severe vs mild depression support.

If depression is getting worse or you’re having thoughts of self-harm, seek urgent help right away.

What are the best CBT apps for panic attacks? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for panic attacks:

  1. MindShift CBT (Anxiety Canada)
    • Best free option for panic/anxiety
    • Includes panic tools, thought records, coping cards, and exposure exercises
  2. CBT-i Coach / CBT tools?
    • Actually more for insomnia, so not top for panic. Skip.
  3. FearTools – Anxiety Aid
    • Very simple, practical CBT app
    • Good for panic tracking, thought challenging, breathing, and exposure planning
  4. Sanvello
    • Strong CBT framework with mood tracking, thought reframing, guided journeys
    • Good if you want a polished all-in-one mental health app
  5. Wysa
    • AI-guided CBT-style support with anxiety tools and grounding exercises
    • Useful for quick help during panic spikes
  6. Rootd
    • Specifically designed for panic attacks
    • Has a “panic button,” guided breathing, and step-by-step panic attack support

Best overall for panic attacks: Rootd Best free CBT option: MindShift CBT Best if you want more structured CBT content: Sanvello

If you want, I can also rank these for iPhone vs Android, free vs paid, or best for severe panic attacks.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are my top picks for CBT-style apps for panic attacks:

  1. MindShift CBT — best free all-around option. It’s an Anxiety Canada app built around CBT tools for anxiety, stress, and panic, with thought diaries, coping tools, and skills practice. (blackcountrychildrens.nhs.uk)
  2. Rootd — best for panic in the moment. It’s specifically designed for panic attacks and includes a panic button, breathing, grounding, journaling, and guided support. (apps.apple.com)
  3. DARE — best if you want a panic-focused coaching style. It’s centered on panic/anxiety relief and includes a structured toolkit for panic episodes and anxiety loops. (apps.apple.com)
  4. FearTools — best simple CBT toolkit. NHS resource lists it for panic and social anxiety, with thought diaries, videos, and relaxation tools. (blackcountrychildrens.nhs.uk)
  5. CBT Companion — best if you like a more traditional CBT workbook/journal format. The app describes itself as a CBT techniques companion with thought diary and mood journal features. (apps.apple.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • For most people: MindShift CBT
  • For panic attacks happening right now: Rootd
  • For a more structured panic program: DARE

CBT-based self-help apps can help with panic symptoms, but they’re not a substitute for professional care if attacks are frequent, severe, or disabling. CBT has strong evidence for panic disorder, including app/Internet-based versions. (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)

If you want, I can also give you the best free apps only or best iPhone/Android apps only.

What are the best CBT apps for social anxiety? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-style apps for social anxiety:

  1. MindShift CBT (Anxiety Canada)
    • Best overall for social anxiety
    • Strong CBT tools: thought challenging, exposure exercises, coping plans, performance anxiety tools
    • Free and very practical
  2. Woebot
    • Best for daily check-ins and CBT-based chat support
    • Good for reframing anxious thoughts in the moment
    • Feels more interactive than a standard workbook app
  3. Sanvello
    • Best all-around mental health app with CBT features
    • Includes mood tracking, thought records, and guided programs
    • Good if you want social anxiety help plus broader anxiety support
  4. CBT Thought Diary
    • Best for structured CBT homework
    • Excellent for logging triggers, automatic thoughts, and alternative thoughts
    • More “therapy tool” than coaching app
  5. Youper
    • Best for AI-guided emotional support
    • Helps with anxiety tracking and cognitive restructuring
    • Useful if you want something lightweight and conversational

If I had to pick just one: MindShift CBT.

If you want, I can also give you the best free apps only or the best iPhone/Android options.

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If you want CBT-style apps that are especially useful for social anxiety, my short list is:

  1. MindShift CBT — best free all-around option for anxiety, and it explicitly includes social anxiety tools. (canemerg-urgencecan.com)
  2. Woebot — best if you like a structured CBT chatbot; it’s built from CBT/IPT/DBT elements and is meant to help with mood and anxiety symptoms. (woebothealth.com)
  3. Wysa — best for a gentler chatbot + exercises approach; it offers CBT tools, mood tracking, and evidence-based self-help content. (wysa.com)
  4. oVRcome — best if your social anxiety is strongly driven by avoidance and you want exposure practice in VR. (ovrcome.io)
  5. Anxiety Challenger — best if you’re already in therapy and want help planning and tracking exposure exercises. (anxietychallenger.org)

My pick:

If you want, I can also give you a top 3 for iPhone vs Android, or a “best free only” list.

Which CBT apps help with negative thoughts? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A few solid CBT-style apps for negative thoughts:

  • MoodKit — good for identifying and challenging negative thinking with CBT tools.
  • Woebot — chat-based CBT support, good for quick thought reframing.
  • MindShift CBT — especially useful for anxiety and “what if” thoughts.
  • CBT Thought Diary — very direct for tracking thoughts, evidence, and alternative thoughts.
  • Youper — AI-guided CBT-style mood check-ins and thought tracking.
  • Sanvello — CBT tools for negative thoughts, stress, and mood patterns.

If you want the simplest pick:

  • MoodKit for structured CBT,
  • Woebot for conversational support,
  • MindShift CBT if anxiety-driven thoughts are the main issue.

If you want, I can also rank these by best free option, best for anxiety, or best for beginners.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are a few CBT-style apps that are especially good for negative thoughts / thought reframing:

  • MindShift CBT — built around CBT for anxiety and “thinking traps”; helps you challenge worries and develop more balanced thoughts. (anxietycanada.com)
  • Woebot — a chat-based mental health app that uses CBT tools to help you identify and manage thoughts and emotions, including thought-challenging. (woebothealth.com)
  • CBT Thought Diary — a guided journal app with CBT exercises, reflections, and personalized guidance for tracking and restructuring thoughts. (cbtthoughtdiary.com)
  • MoodTools / CBT Thought Diary — same app family; focused on CBT journaling and mood tracking. (cbtthoughtdiary.com)

If you want, I can also narrow these down by:

  1. free vs paid,
  2. best for anxiety vs depression, or
  3. iPhone vs Android.
What are the best CBT apps for sleep anxiety? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For sleep anxiety, the best CBT-style apps are usually CBT-I apps (CBT for insomnia), since they target the worry/conditioning loop around sleep.

Best picks
  1. Sleepio
    • Best overall for structured CBT-I
    • Strong for nighttime worry, sleep scheduling, and reducing “trying to sleep”
    • Evidence-backed, but usually paid
  2. CBT-i Coach
    • Best free option
    • Built with clinicians/research support
    • Good for sleep diary, relaxation tools, and CBT-I tracking
    • Less polished than commercial apps, but solid
  3. Somryst
    • Best if you want a more formal, prescription-style CBT-I program
    • Designed for chronic insomnia with a clinical approach
    • Usually more expensive and may require eligibility
  4. Shuti
    • Good CBT-I program for insomnia and sleep anxiety
    • Focuses on stimulus control, sleep restriction, and cognitive tools
If your sleep anxiety is more “worry/rumination” than insomnia
  • Headspace or Calm can help with wind-down and anxiety reduction, but they’re not true CBT apps
  • Better as add-ons than primary treatment
My quick recommendation
  • Best overall: Sleepio
  • Best free: CBT-i Coach
  • Best clinical-grade: Somryst

If you want, I can also rank them by price, iPhone/Android availability, or best for falling asleep vs. staying asleep.

retrieval Not mentioned

If your main issue is sleep anxiety (worrying about sleep itself), the best-fit apps are usually CBT-I (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia) apps, plus one anxiety-focused add-on.

Top picks:

  1. SleepioRx — a CBT digital treatment for insomnia with video/audio lessons; good if you want a more structured program. (bighealth.com)
  2. Insomnia Coach — free, self-help, CBT-I-based, with a weekly training plan, sleep diary, relaxation tools, and personalized feedback. (mobile.va.gov)
  3. CBT-i Coach — best if you’re already working with a therapist; it’s meant to supplement CBT-I care and includes sleep diary, routines, relaxation, and reminders. (ptsd.va.gov)
  4. Stellar Sleep — a CBT-I sleep psychology app aimed at insomnia tied to stress/anxiety. (stellarsleep.com)
  5. Mindfulness Coach — not a sleep app per se, but helpful if anxiety is the thing keeping you awake. (mobile.va.gov)

Quick take:

  • Best free option: Insomnia Coach. (mobile.va.gov)
  • Best if you have a clinician: CBT-i Coach. (ptsd.va.gov)
  • Best “serious” structured program: SleepioRx. (bighealth.com)
  • Best for sleep anxiety specifically: pair a CBT-I app with Mindfulness Coach. (mobile.va.gov)

If you want, I can narrow this to free apps only, iPhone-only, or best for non-Veterans.

What are the best CBT apps for stress management? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for stress management:

  1. Wysa
    • Best for: quick CBT check-ins and stress relief
    • Why: AI-guided CBT exercises, mood tracking, breathing tools, and human coach add-on
    • Good if you want: something easy to use daily
  2. Sanvello
    • Best for: structured CBT programs
    • Why: CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and stress/anxiety support
    • Good if you want: a more “program-like” experience
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Best for: anxiety and stress coping skills
    • Why: built around CBT techniques, with thought reframing, exposure tools, and coping statements
    • Good if you want: a free, straightforward CBT app
  4. MoodKit
    • Best for: classic CBT self-help
    • Why: strong CBT worksheets, mood tracking, and action planning
    • Good if you want: a more therapist-style CBT app
  5. CBT-i Coach
    • Best for: stress that’s affecting sleep
    • Why: CBT tools focused on insomnia, sleep scheduling, and relaxation
    • Good if you want: help with sleep-driven stress
  6. Headspace
    • Best for: stress management with CBT-adjacent tools
    • Why: mindfulness-first, but includes practical stress reduction and mental health exercises
    • Good if you want: a polished, beginner-friendly app

Best overall picks:

  • Wysa for daily stress support
  • Sanvello for structured CBT
  • MindShift CBT for free, practical coping tools

If you want, I can also narrow these down by free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or best for work stress.

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If you want CBT-style stress management, these are my top picks:

  • MindShift CBT — probably the most directly CBT-focused stress/anxiety app; Anxiety Canada says it uses scientifically proven CBT strategies for relaxation, coping, and thinking traps. It was still a standout evidence-based option, though Anxiety Canada said its site wouldn’t be updated after Apr 30, 2025 and remained accessible until Mar 2026. (anxietycanada.com)
  • MoodMission — a very practical CBT app for stress, low mood, and anxiety; it’s built around “missions” you can do when stressed or overwhelmed. (moodmission.com)
  • Happify — good if you want short CBT-based exercises plus mindfulness/positive-psychology tools for stress. (happify.com)
  • Headspace — not pure CBT, but it does have a CBT Mood and Anxiety program and is strong for daily stress reduction. (headspace.com)
  • Calm — also not pure CBT, but useful if your stress is more about calming your body, sleep, and immediate relief. (calm.com)

My quick ranking for stress management:

  1. MindShift CBT
  2. MoodMission
  3. Headspace
  4. Happify
  5. Calm

One important note: Woebot used to be a major CBT chatbot, but Woebot Health says the Woebot app was retired on June 30, 2025, so I wouldn’t pick it now for new users. (woebothealth.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this to best free apps or best iPhone/Android apps.

Which CBT apps are best for beginners? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For beginners, the best CBT apps are usually the ones that are simple, guided, and don’t overwhelm you:

  1. Woebot
    • Very beginner-friendly
    • Chat-based CBT exercises
    • Good if you want short, daily support
  2. MindShift CBT
    • Great for anxiety
    • Clear CBT tools like thought logs, coping cards, and exposure guidance
    • Easy to navigate
  3. MoodTools
    • Free and straightforward
    • Good for tracking mood and using basic CBT worksheets
    • Best if you want something simple and practical
  4. Sanvello
    • More polished and structured
    • Includes CBT, mood tracking, and guided journeys
    • Good if you want an app that grows with you
  5. MoodMission
    • Very easy to start with
    • Gives “missions” based on how you’re feeling
    • Good for action-oriented beginners

Best overall for beginners: MindShift CBT or Woebot. Best free option: MoodTools.

If you want, I can also rank them by anxiety, depression, or free vs paid.

retrieval Not mentioned

For beginners, I’d start with:

  1. MindShift CBT — best overall beginner pick for anxiety. It’s free, built around CBT, and focuses on simple tools like relaxing, thinking differently, and taking small action steps. (apps.apple.com)
  2. Wysa — best if you want a chat-style, very guided experience. It uses CBT/DBT-style exercises and mindfulness, which can feel easier than a blank journal. (apps.apple.com)
  3. FreeCBT — best if you want a bare-bones thought record app with minimal clutter. It’s designed for CBT exercises and is available on iOS/Android. (apps.apple.com)
  4. TellMe — best if you want a modern CBT journaling app. It walks you step-by-step through cognitive restructuring and emotion tracking. (tellmecbt.com)

Skip Woebot for now: Woebot Health says the Woebot app was retired on June 30, 2025. (woebothealth.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this down to free only, iPhone only, or best for anxiety vs depression.

What are the best CBT apps with journaling features? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT apps with journaling features:

  1. Sanvello — Strong CBT tools, mood tracking, thought records, and guided journaling. Good if you want a structured mental health app.
  2. CBT Thought Diary — One of the best pure CBT journaling apps. Excellent for thought records, cognitive distortions, and evidence-based reframing.
  3. MindDoc — Great for mood journaling plus symptom tracking and reflection prompts. More mental-health-monitoring focused, but useful for CBT-style self-awareness.
  4. Daylio — Simple and very good for habit/mood journaling. Less CBT-specific, but strong if you want easy daily logging and patterns over time.
  5. Reflectly — Polished journaling app with guided prompts. Not as CBT-heavy as others, but good for reflective writing and mood check-ins.
  6. Moodnotes — Designed around cognitive bias and thought reframing. A solid CBT-adjacent journaling app if you like guided rethinking prompts.

Best overall for CBT journaling: CBT Thought Diary Best all-around mental health app: Sanvello Best simple mood + journal tracker: Daylio

If you want, I can also rank these by iPhone vs Android, free vs paid, or best for anxiety/depression.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the best CBT apps with solid journaling features:

  • MindShift CBT — best for anxiety-focused CBT; includes thought journals, coping cards, and daily mood tracking. (healthline.com)
  • MoodKit — best for structured mood + journaling; lets you log mood, tag activities, and add optional journal notes with strong pattern tracking. (moodkit.co)
  • Moodnotes — best for CBT-style reflection; a psychologist-designed journal with thinking-trap identification, mood tracking, and photo notes. (spark.mwm.ai)
  • CBT Thought Diary App — best for classic thought records; uses the ABC model and includes historical insights + PDF export. (apps.apple.com)
  • TellMe — best for simple, private CBT journaling; guides you through notice → challenge → replace and keeps entries on-device. (tellmecbt.com)
  • Happify — best if you want CBT plus activities; includes journals, journaling prompts, games, and guided meditations. (healthline.com)

If you want the shortest recommendation: MindShift CBT for anxiety, MoodKit for mood tracking, and CBT Thought Diary App for dedicated CBT journaling. (apps.apple.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by free, best iPhone, or best for anxiety.

Which CBT apps have mood tracking? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A few CBT-style apps with mood tracking:

  • Sanvello — mood tracker, thought journaling, CBT tools, coping exercises
  • Wysa — mood check-ins, CBT coaching, journaling
  • Woebot — mood check-ins plus CBT-based chat exercises
  • MindDoc — strong mood tracking, symptom journaling, CBT-informed self-help
  • CBT Thought Diary — classic CBT thought records with mood tracking
  • MoodTools — mood tracking + CBT-based tools for depression

If you want, I can narrow these down by best free app, best iPhone/Android app, or best for anxiety vs depression.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — several CBT-focused apps include mood tracking. Good options include:

  • Moodnotes — CBT-based mood tracker and journal. (spark.mwm.ai)
  • Clarity: CBT Self Help Journal — includes daily check-ins and mood tracking. (thinkwithclarity.com)
  • Journal 4U: CBT & Mood Tracker — explicitly offers mood tracking and mood trend analysis. (apps.apple.com)
  • Daily Journal: CBT Mood Log — includes CBT thought records and mood tracking. (apps.apple.com)
  • Mood Journal: CBT AI tracker — mood tracking plus self-reflection. (apps.apple.com)
  • TellMe — CBT Journaling App — includes emotion tracking. (tellmecbt.com)
  • MoodStead — combines CBT tools with daily tracking. (moodstead.com)
  • MOOD Tools app — includes daily mood tracking and an interactive mood journal. (mood.org)

If you want, I can narrow these down to free apps, iPhone vs Android, or best for anxiety/depression.

What are the best CBT apps for teens? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the better CBT-style apps for teens:

  • MindShift CBT — Free, teen-friendly, focused on anxiety, worry, and coping skills. Good simple CBT tools.
  • Woebot — Chatbot-based CBT support; helpful for mood tracking and thought-challenging. Best for older teens.
  • SparkRx — Designed for teens with depression symptoms; CBT-based and made with youth in mind.
  • Smiling Mind — More mindfulness than pure CBT, but has excellent teen programs for stress and emotional regulation.
  • Sanvello — CBT tools, mood tracking, and coping exercises; solid all-around option.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Strong for tracking thoughts, reframing distortions, and practicing CBT exercises.

Best overall for teens with anxiety: MindShift CBT Best for depression-focused support: SparkRx Best all-purpose CBT app: Sanvello

If you want, I can also narrow these down by free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or anxiety vs depression.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the best CBT-ish apps for teens I’d start with:

  1. MindShift CBT — best for anxiety. It’s a free, evidence-based CBT app from Anxiety Canada with tools for worry, panic, and thought-challenging. The App Store lists it as Ages 9+. (apps.apple.com)
  2. Woebot for Adolescents — best for chat-style support. Woebot’s teen version is intended for ages 13–17 and is meant to work alongside clinical care; Woebot Health says it’s an evidence-based tool for teens with anxiety/depression symptoms. (woebothealth.com)
  3. Headspace for Teens — best if the teen wants a gentler mindfulness + CBT mix. Headspace says it has CBT-based exercises, and its teen offer is for U.S. ages 13–17 through partner signup. (headspace.com)

If I had to pick one:

  • Anxiety-focused: MindShift CBT.
  • Teen-friendly conversational support: Woebot.
  • Stress/sleep/mindfulness with some CBT: Headspace. (anxietycanada.com)

If you want, I can also rank them by free vs paid, best for social anxiety, or best for parents to use with teens.

What are the best CBT apps for adults? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT apps for adults:

Best overall
  • Wysa — strong CBT-style coaching, mood tracking, guided exercises, and good for anxiety/stress.
  • Woebot — very solid CBT-based chatbot support; simple and easy to use.
Best for anxiety
  • MindShift CBT — excellent for anxiety, panic, and worry; very CBT-focused.
  • Sanvello — good mix of CBT tools, tracking, and coping exercises.
Best for sleep
  • CBT-i Coach — one of the best for insomnia and sleep habits; free and evidence-based.
Best for self-guided journaling
  • Daylio — not pure CBT, but great for mood tracking and pattern recognition.
  • CBT Thought Diary — very CBT-oriented for reframing thoughts.
Best free option
  • CBT-i Coach for sleep
  • MindShift CBT for anxiety

If you want, I can also rank them by price, best for depression vs anxiety, or best for iPhone/Android.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the best CBT apps for adults by use case:

  • MindShift CBT — best for general anxiety; it’s a free app from Anxiety Canada with CBT-based tools, and it’s available on iOS and Android. (anxietycanada.com)
  • Woebot — best for chat-style CBT support; it’s an AI mental health ally using CBT/DBT/IPT-based techniques, available 24/7. (woebothealth.com)
  • CBT-i Coach — best for insomnia if you’re doing CBT-I with a clinician; it’s a free VA app with a sleep diary, reminders, and personalized feedback. (ptsd.va.gov)
  • Insomnia Coach — best for self-guided sleep help if you’re not in CBT-I treatment; the VA says it’s for people managing sleep problems on their own. (ptsd.va.gov)
  • MoodMission — best for quick CBT-informed exercises; it gives tailored “missions” based on how you’re feeling and says those missions come from scientific research. (moodmission.com)
  • MindDoc — best for mood tracking + reflective CBT-style learning; it offers daily check-ins, mood tracking, and evidence-based tools. (minddoc.com)

If you want just one pick:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Insomnia: CBT-i Coach / Insomnia Coach
  • Need something conversational: Woebot

If you want, I can narrow this to free apps only, iPhone/Android, or apps best for anxiety vs depression.

Which CBT apps are good for managing overthinking? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A few solid CBT-style apps for overthinking / rumination:

  • Wysa — good for quick CBT thought-checks and guided exercises; easy to use for “I can’t stop thinking.”
  • Woebot — strong on CBT-based chat coaching and mood check-ins; good for catching thought spirals.
  • MindShift CBT — one of the best for anxiety-driven overthinking; has tools for worry, thinking traps, and coping plans.
  • CBT Thought Diary — very practical if you want to track triggers, thoughts, and evidence-for/against them.
  • Sanvello — broader app with CBT tools, mood tracking, and guided programs; good if you want more structure.
  • Feeling Good by David Burns — based on classic CBT ideas; good for challenging negative thoughts directly.

If you want the best for overthinking specifically, I’d start with:

  1. MindShift CBT
  2. CBT Thought Diary
  3. Wysa

If you tell me iPhone or Android and whether you want free, chatbot-based, or more clinical, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

retrieval Not mentioned

Good CBT-style apps for overthinking:

  • MindShift CBT — great for anxiety spirals, worry challenges, and coping tools. It’s free and built around anxiety management. (anxietycanada.com)
  • Wysa — good if you want guided chat + CBT exercises to reframe negative thoughts. It’s positioned as evidence-based and has lots of self-help tools. (wysa.com)
  • Woebot — best for short, conversational CBT check-ins when you’re stuck in rumination. It uses CBT-based tools in chat form. (woebothealth.com)
  • MoodTools — useful if you like journaling your thoughts. Its “Thought Diary” is specifically designed to identify distorted thinking patterns. (moodtools.org)

If I had to pick one for overthinking, I’d start with MindShift CBT. If you like chatting with an app, try Wysa or Woebot. (wysa.com)

If you want, I can also give you a free-only shortlist or iPhone/Android recommendations.

What are the best CBT apps for intrusive thoughts? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for intrusive thoughts:

  1. Wysa
    • Good for: quick CBT exercises, thought reframing, anxiety/intrusive-thought check-ins
    • Why it stands out: guided CBT chat tools, mood tracking, very easy to use
  2. Woebot
    • Good for: structured CBT conversations and journaling around distressing thoughts
    • Why it stands out: strong CBT style, especially for catching and challenging thought patterns
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Good for: anxiety, overthinking, intrusive thoughts tied to worry
    • Why it stands out: built specifically around CBT tools like thought records, coping statements, and exposure-style strategies
  4. CBT Thought Diary
    • Good for: detailed thought tracking and cognitive restructuring
    • Why it stands out: more “classic CBT” than chat-based apps; great if you want to log triggers and challenge thoughts manually
  5. Youper
    • Good for: mood tracking plus CBT/ACT-based tools
    • Why it stands out: helpful for noticing patterns and practicing reframing in a low-friction way

Best overall for intrusive thoughts:

  • MindShift CBT if you want straightforward CBT tools
  • Wysa if you want the easiest daily support
  • CBT Thought Diary if you want the most hands-on thought work

If your intrusive thoughts are intense, frequent, or feel unsafe, it’s best to use an app alongside a licensed therapist. If you want, I can also rank these for OCD-style intrusive thoughts vs general anxiety.

retrieval Not mentioned

If intrusive thoughts feel OCD-like (repetitive, sticky, urge-to-reassure/neutralize), the best apps are usually ERP-focused, not just generic CBT. My top picks:

  • NOCD — best overall for intrusive thoughts/OCD; it connects you with OCD specialists and ERP tools. (apps.apple.com)
  • OCD.app — best self-guided CBT option for intrusive thoughts; it’s built around short CBT micro-sessions and reframing. (ocd.app)
  • MindShift CBT — best free general CBT app for anxiety spirals/overthinking; it’s a free CBT app from Anxiety Canada. (apps.apple.com)
  • CBT Thought Diary — best for thought records and challenging distorted thoughts. (cdn.ymaws.com)
  • Woebot — good if you want a chat-based CBT-style coach for thought spirals. (woebothealth.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can also narrow this to free apps only, iPhone only, or apps that do ERP specifically.

What are the best CBT apps for building coping skills? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-style apps for building coping skills:

  1. CBT-i Coach (free, VA/NIH)

Best if your coping goals include stress, mood, and sleep routines. Very practical, skills-based.

  1. Woebot

A chat-based CBT app that teaches coping tools through guided conversations. Good for quick daily check-ins.

  1. Sanvello

Strong for CBT exercises, mood tracking, thought reframing, and coping plans. One of the most established options.

  1. MindShift CBT

Designed for anxiety coping skills: worry tools, thinking traps, exposure exercises, and relaxation techniques. Very user-friendly.

  1. CBT Thought Diary

Best for structured thought records and cognitive restructuring. Good if you like writing things down.

  1. Happify

More broad than pure CBT, but it has CBT-inspired exercises for stress and resilience.

  1. MoodMission

Good for choosing short “missions” based on how you feel; useful for building coping habits in the moment.

Best picks by goal:

  • Anxiety coping skills: MindShift CBT
  • Thought records / journaling: CBT Thought Diary
  • Daily guided support: Woebot
  • More complete CBT toolkit: Sanvello
  • Sleep + coping routines: CBT-i Coach

If you want, I can also narrow this to free apps, iPhone/Android, or best apps for anxiety vs depression.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want CBT-first apps for coping skills, my top picks are:

  1. CBT Companion — best for structured CBT skill-building: thought records, diary cards, reminders, and exercises you can practice and share with a clinician. (apps.apple.com)
  2. CBT Thought Diary — best for challenging negative thoughts and tracking patterns; it’s built around thought and emotion tracking. (apps.apple.com)
  3. MoodMission — best for “what do I do right now?” coping: it gives short, evidence-based missions and uses CBT-style exposure for fears/anxieties. (moodmission.com)
  4. Headspace — best if you want CBT plus calming tools; its anxiety program is rooted in CBT, alongside breathing, grounding, and mindfulness. (headspace.com)
  5. Sanvello — a good all-around CBT-based option for stress/anxiety coping skills, though access/features can vary by plan. (public.providerexpress.com)

A couple of notes:

  • Woebot is not a current pick; Woebot Health says the app was retired on June 30, 2025. (woebothealth.com)
  • MindShift CBT was a strong free option, but Anxiety Canada says its site stopped being updated on April 30, 2025 and remained accessible only until March 2026, so I wouldn’t rely on it now. (anxietycanada.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to best free apps, best for anxiety, or best for thought-challenging.

Which CBT apps offer structured daily lessons? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A few CBT-style apps with structured daily lessons:

  • Woebot – short, daily chatbot-guided CBT lessons and check-ins.
  • Wysa – daily CBT exercises, thought reframing, and guided self-help modules.
  • Sanvello – structured CBT “journeys” and daily mood/tools practice.
  • Happify – daily activity tracks built around CBT and positive psychology.
  • MindShift CBT – more exercise-based than lesson-based, but has structured CBT tools for anxiety.

If you want the most clearly daily-lesson-like, I’d start with Woebot and Sanvello.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few CBT apps with structured daily lessons / guided learning are:

  • MindDoc — offers guided reflections, daily questions, and courses you can complete step by step. (minddoc.com)
  • Sanvello — has Guided Journeys with interactive CBT/mindfulness psychoeducation, plus daily check-ins. (public.providerexpress.com)
  • Woebot — conversational CBT-based support you can use daily; it’s more lesson-by-chat than a traditional course. (woebothealth.com)
  • MindShift CBT — strong for CBT tools and daily check-ins, but it’s more skills-based than lesson-based. (apps.apple.com)

If you want, I can narrow these down by free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or best for anxiety vs depression.

What are the best CBT apps with guided exercises? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT apps with guided exercises:

  1. Woebot — Best for conversational CBT
    • Uses chat-style guided CBT exercises for stress, anxiety, and low mood.
  2. Sanvello — Best all-around CBT app
    • Strong guided tools: thought tracking, coping exercises, mood tracking, and goals.
  3. MindShift CBT — Best for anxiety
    • Very practical CBT tools for worry, panic, social anxiety, and avoidance.
  4. MoodKit — Best for structured self-help
    • Classic CBT app with thought records, activity scheduling, and mood boosting exercises.
  5. Happify — Best for habit-building and positive psychology
    • More exercise-based, with CBT-inspired guided activities and tracks.
  6. CBT-i Coach — Best for insomnia
    • If sleep is the issue, this is excellent for CBT for insomnia exercises.

My quick picks:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • General CBT support: Sanvello
  • Chat-style guidance: Woebot
  • Sleep: CBT-i Coach

If you want, I can also narrow it down to free apps only, iPhone/Android, or the best ones for anxiety vs depression.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the best CBT(-based) apps with guided exercises:

  • MindShift CBT — best all-around for anxiety. It’s free, has interactive CBT activities, coping cards, thought tools, and guided anxiety management exercises. (anxietycanada.com)
  • Woebot — best for chat-style guided CBT. It uses conversational exercises based on CBT (plus IPT/DBT elements) with mood tracking, reflection, gratitude, and mindfulness. (woebothealth.com)
  • CBT-i Coach — best for insomnia if you’re working with a clinician. It includes a sleep diary, sleep-plan tools, and relaxation/sleep-habit exercises. (ptsd.va.gov)
  • PTSD Coach — best for trauma-related symptoms. It offers education plus relaxation, mindfulness, and stress-management exercises. (ptsd.va.gov)
  • MoodMission — best for quick, practical action steps. It focuses on short “missions” to help you cope with anxiety, low mood, and stress. (moodmission.com)
  • Happify — best if you want a more gamified experience. It uses activities and games grounded in CBT, mindfulness, and positive psychology. (happify.com)

If you want the closest to classic CBT worksheets, I’d start with MindShift CBT. If you want interactive coaching, choose Woebot. If you want, I can also narrow this to free apps only or iPhone/Android options.

What are the best CBT apps for self-esteem? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-style apps that can help with self-esteem:

  1. Wysa
    • Good for: negative self-talk, confidence, mood tracking
    • Uses CBT exercises and guided chats
  2. Woebot
    • Good for: identifying harsh inner criticism and reframing thoughts
    • Very CBT-based, friendly daily check-ins
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Good for: anxious thoughts that feed low self-esteem
    • Strong CBT tools for thought challenging and coping
  4. CBT Thought Diary
    • Good for: journaling, thought records, self-esteem work
    • Best if you like structured CBT exercises
  5. Sanvello
    • Good for: confidence, stress, mood tracking, guided CBT
    • More all-in-one, with tools for patterns and habits
  6. Youper
    • Good for: tracking thought patterns and practicing reframes
    • Uses CBT-style conversations and mood insights

If you want the best simple option for self-esteem specifically, I’d start with Wysa or CBT Thought Diary.

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best free CBT apps, or
  • the best apps for self-esteem plus anxiety.
retrieval Not mentioned

Best picks for CBT-based self-esteem work:

  1. CBT Thought Diary — best overall for self-esteem/self-talk. It’s built around thought records, journaling, and challenging distorted thinking, which maps well to low self-esteem. (cbtthoughtdiary.com)
  2. MoodTools — best free option. It includes a Thought Diary, depression screening, and a safety plan; the app explicitly says it uses cognitive therapy principles to identify distorted thinking. (moodtools.org)
  3. MindShift CBT — best for anxiety-driven self-esteem issues (social anxiety, overthinking, avoidance). It’s a free CBT app focused on changing thinking patterns and facing anxiety. (apps.apple.com)
  4. Clarity: CBT Self Help Journal — good if you want a simple CBT journaling app for imposter syndrome/self-esteem challenges. (apps.apple.com)
  5. Mindsy / Moodi — worth a look if you want a more self-love/low-self-esteem angle. Their store pages explicitly mention low self-esteem and self-love. (apps.apple.com)

Quick note: Woebot used to be a strong CBT-style option, but the company says the app was retired on June 30, 2025. (woebothealth.com)

If you want, I can also give you:

  • best free apps only
  • best iPhone/Android options
  • best apps specifically for social anxiety + self-esteem
Which CBT apps are best for managing worry? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best CBT-style apps for worry/anxiety:

  1. Wysa
    • Strong for worry management, CBT exercises, thought reframing, and guided check-ins.
    • Good if you want a friendly, low-pressure app.
  2. Sanvello
    • One of the best-known CBT apps for anxiety/stress.
    • Includes mood tracking, coping tools, and structured CBT lessons.
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Specifically designed for anxiety and worry.
    • Great if you want practical CBT strategies for rumination, overthinking, and exposure-style tools.
  4. Woebot
    • Chat-based CBT support for anxious thoughts and worry spirals.
    • Best for quick, daily support and guided reframing.
  5. CBT-i Coach
    • Best if worry is heavily tied to poor sleep.
    • More sleep-focused, but useful for nighttime rumination.

Best overall for worry: MindShift CBT or Sanvello Best chatbot-style option: Woebot Best gentle all-around app: Wysa

If you want, I can also rank these for iPhone/Android, free vs paid, or most evidence-based.

retrieval Not mentioned

If your main goal is worry management, my short list is:

  1. MindShift CBT — best free, anxiety-focused CBT app. Built by Anxiety Canada, it’s specifically aimed at anxiety/worry and uses CBT tools. (anxietycanada.com)
  2. Luma (formerly WorryTree) — best for catching and writing down worries. It’s built around the “WorryTree” technique, with add-worry, uncertainty, and journaling tools. (worry-tree.com)
  3. Wysa — best if you like a chat-based CBT coach. It offers evidence-based CBT tools, mood tracking, and 24/7 support. (wysa.com)
  4. Moodfit — best all-around tracker if worry is tied to mood, sleep, habits, or rumination. It includes CBT tools, journaling, and anxiety tracking. (getmoodfit.com)

If you want the most direct research on worry, a trial of MyMoodCoach found significant improvements in worry and rumination versus waitlist controls. (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)

My pick:

  • Free + straightforward: MindShift CBT
  • Worry journaling/spirals: Luma
  • Chatty support: Wysa

If you want, I can narrow this to iPhone-only, free only, or best for generalized anxiety vs intrusive thoughts.

What are the best CBT apps for relapse prevention? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for relapse prevention (especially for anxiety/depression management, habit tracking, and early warning sign monitoring):

  1. MoodKit
    • Strong CBT tools: thought records, mood tracking, activity planning
    • Best for: structured self-help and catching patterns early
  2. CBT Thought Diary
    • Very CBT-forward: cognitive distortions, thought challenging, journaling
    • Best for: people who want a classic CBT worksheet-style app
  3. Sanvello
    • Includes CBT exercises, mood tracking, coping tools, and relapse-prevention style check-ins
    • Best for: ongoing maintenance and stress/anxiety management
  4. MindShift CBT
    • Great CBT tools for anxiety, worry, and avoidance cycles
    • Best for: relapse prevention when anxiety is the main trigger
  5. Woebot
    • Chat-based CBT support with mood check-ins and coping prompts
    • Best for: quick daily support and habit reinforcement
  6. MoodTools
    • Simple, free CBT-oriented app with thought diary and mood tracking
    • Best for: a no-frills option

Best overall for relapse prevention: Sanvello or MoodKit Best free option: MoodTools Best for anxiety relapse prevention: MindShift CBT

If you want, I can also rank these by free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or for depression vs anxiety.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are the strongest CBT-style apps I’d look at for relapse prevention / maintenance, depending on the problem you’re trying to stay ahead of:

  • MindShift CBT — best all-around for anxiety relapse prevention. It’s built on CBT principles, includes self-monitoring, thought-challenging, goal setting, and coping tools, and Anxiety Canada describes it as a free evidence-based app for anxiety prevention/treatment. (anxietycanada.com)
  • Woebot — best for daily CBT check-ins. It uses CBT-based conversations, mood/anxiety tools, and is designed for frequent use as a self-care supplement, not a replacement for care. (woebothealth.com)
  • MoodMission — best for quick “I’m starting to slip” interventions. It’s CBT-based, gives tailored missions for low mood/anxiety, and explicitly says the goal is to prevent everyday mood disturbances from becoming bigger problems. (moodmission.com)
  • Insomnia Coach — best for sleep-relapse prevention if sleep is your trigger. VA says it’s based on CBT-I and includes a five-week training plan plus sleep-habit tools. (mobile.va.gov)
  • CBT-i Coach — best if you’re already in CBT-I with a clinician and want a companion app to keep routines and homework on track. VA says it’s for use with a provider, not as self-care. (mobile.va.gov)
  • CPT Coach — best for PTSD relapse prevention / maintenance while in Cognitive Processing Therapy. It helps with worksheets, symptom tracking, reminders, and is meant to be used with a clinician. (ptsd.va.gov)

My quick pick:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Daily maintenance: Woebot
  • “Crisis-lite” coping: MoodMission
  • Sleep-related relapse: Insomnia Coach

If you want, I can narrow this to iPhone vs Android, free-only, or apps with the best evidence.

What are the best alternatives to the leading CBT app? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you mean CBT-based mental health apps, the best alternatives are:

  • Wysa — strong AI-guided CBT exercises, very polished and easy to use
  • MindShift CBT — excellent for anxiety, especially if you want practical tools
  • Sanvello — good all-around CBT, mood tracking, and guided programs
  • MoodTools — simple, free, and solid for depression-focused CBT support
  • Youper — AI chat + CBT-style check-ins, good for daily support
  • Happify — more wellness-focused, with CBT-inspired activities

Best pick by use case:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • AI chat support: Wysa or Youper
  • Depression tools: MoodTools
  • Most complete platform: Sanvello

If you want, I can also rank them by free features, privacy, or iPhone/Android.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean Woebot, it was retired on June 30, 2025, so the best alternatives now are: (woebothealth.com)

  • Wysa — best all-around CBT-style chatbot app; offers evidence-based self-help, CBT exercises, and optional human coaching. (wysa.com)
  • MindShift CBT — best free option for anxiety; built by Anxiety Canada and focused on CBT tools for worry, panic, and coping skills. (anxietycanada.com)
  • CBT-i Coach — best if your main issue is insomnia; it’s a free VA app for people doing CBT-I with a clinician. (ptsd.va.gov)
  • PTSD Coach — best if your goal is trauma/PTSD symptom management; free and made by the VA National Center for PTSD. (ptsd.va.gov)
  • ACT Coach — a strong alternative if you’re open to ACT instead of pure CBT. (ptsd.va.gov)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Wysa
  • Best free: MindShift CBT
  • Best for sleep: CBT-i Coach

If you want, I can narrow these to free only, iPhone/Android, or most evidence-based.

What are the best alternatives to a top CBT therapy app? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-style therapy app alternatives, depending on what you want:

  • Sanvello — best all-around CBT app for mood tracking, guided lessons, and coping tools.
  • CBT Thought Diary — best for structured thought records and classic CBT exercises.
  • Woebot — best for chatbot-style support and quick daily check-ins.
  • MindShift CBT — best for anxiety and worry management.
  • Daylio — best for simple mood tracking with low effort.
  • Headspace — best if you want CBT-informed mindfulness plus meditation.
  • BetterHelp — best if you want actual licensed therapy, not just self-guided CBT.
  • Talkspace — another strong option for therapist-based support with messaging.

If you want, I can narrow this to:

  1. best free apps,
  2. best for anxiety, or
  3. best for real therapy with a person.
retrieval Not mentioned

If you want CBT-style app alternatives, the best current picks are:

  • MindShift CBT — best free, structured CBT for anxiety/stress. Anxiety Canada describes it as a free, evidence-based self-help app using CBT strategies. (apps.apple.com)
  • Wysa — best if you want a chat-style CBT companion plus tools and coaching options. Wysa says it uses evidence-based techniques like CBT, goal setting, and emotional acceptance. (wysa.com)
  • Rootd — best for panic attacks/anxiety “SOS” support. Its app store listing says it includes a panic button and CBT-based techniques for immediate relief. (apps.apple.com)
  • Happify — best if you prefer games/activities over a chat interface. Happify markets itself as science-based activities and games. (happify.com)
  • CBT-i Coach — best for insomnia specifically. The VA says it’s a CBT-I companion app for people working on sleep with a provider or improving sleep habits. (mobile.va.gov)

One note: Woebot’s consumer app was retired on June 30, 2025, and Sanvello’s App Store developer page currently shows no apps available, so they’re not the safest “go-to” recommendations right now. (bhbusiness.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best free options, best for anxiety, or best for depression.

How do the best CBT apps compare for anxiety support? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here’s a practical comparison of the top CBT-style apps for anxiety support:

| App | Best for | Strengths | Watch-outs | |---|---|---|---| | MindShift CBT | Anxiety-specific help | Built around CBT tools for worry, panic, phobias, and coping plans; simple and focused | Less polished than some competitors | | Sanvello | All-around anxiety + mood tracking | CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, community features | Some of the best content is behind paywall | | Woebot | Quick, conversational CBT check-ins | Chat-based CBT coaching feels easy and engaging | Not as deep for structured anxiety work | | CBT Thought Diary | Thought records and self-monitoring | Excellent for identifying triggers, thoughts, and distortions; very CBT-pure | Interface is more functional than friendly | | Moodfit | Tracking + habits + CBT tools | Great if you want anxiety support plus sleep, exercise, and habit tracking | CBT content is broader, not anxiety-only | | Happify | Stress reduction and resilience | More upbeat, game-like, easy to stick with | Less rigorous CBT feel than others |

Best picks
  • Best overall for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best for structured CBT exercises: CBT Thought Diary
  • Best for an app that feels supportive and modern: Sanvello
  • Best for “talking through” anxiety moments: Woebot
My quick recommendation

If your main goal is anxiety relief, start with MindShift CBT. If you want something broader with tracking and more features, choose Sanvello. If you like journaling and analyzing anxious thoughts, go with CBT Thought Diary.

If you want, I can also rank them by free features, iPhone/Android quality, or best for panic attacks vs general anxiety.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here’s the short version: for anxiety support, the best CBT app depends on how much structure you want. My top picks are MindShift CBT for a free, straightforward anxiety toolkit; Clarity for the strongest all-in-one journaling + tracking experience; Woebot if you want a guided chatbot and can get access; Wysa if you want CBT tools plus optional human support; and MoodMission if you want quick, action-based “do-this-now” missions. (anxietycanada.com)

Quick compare

  • MindShift CBT — best free, anxiety-focused CBT app; built by Anxiety Canada, free, and aimed at worry, panic, phobias, and social anxiety. (anxietycanada.com)
  • Clarity — best for self-guided CBT journaling; includes thought reframing, mood tracking, guided exercises, and AI journaling; core features are free, Pro is $60/year. (thinkwithclarity.com)
  • Woebot — best if you want a CBT-style chat experience; it uses CBT/IPT/DBT elements, is available 24/7, but new U.S. users need a study or access code from a partner/provider/employer. (woebothealth.com)
  • Wysa — best for a gentler chatbot + broader support; it offers self-help exercises inspired by CBT and also routes into referral/human-care options through employer/partner products. (wysa.com)
  • MoodMission — best for immediate coping when you’re spiraling; it gives 5 tailored, evidence-based “missions,” is CBT-based, and its main features are kept free with optional paid add-ons. (moodmission.com)

Best choice by goal

If you want, I can turn this into a top 3 list for iPhone, Android, or free-only apps.

What is the best alternative to a premium CBT app? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best overall alternative: Wysa It’s the closest all-purpose substitute for a premium CBT app: CBT tools, mood tracking, guided exercises, and a decent free tier.

Good alternatives by need:

  • MindShift CBT — best free CBT app for anxiety
  • Sanvello — best for structured CBT + mood tracking
  • MoodKit (iPhone) — best for classic CBT self-help
  • Woebot — best if you want an AI chat-style coach

If you tell me iPhone or Android and whether you want free, cheap, or therapist-backed, I can narrow it to one best pick.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want a free, strong CBT-style alternative, I’d pick MindShift CBT first. It’s an Anxiety Canada app built around CBT-based tools for anxiety, and it’s free. (anxietycanada.com)

If your main issue is sleep/insomnia, the better choice is Insomnia Coach (or CBT-i Coach if you’re doing CBT-I with a clinician). VA says Insomnia Coach is free and for self-guided sleep support, while CBT-i Coach is meant to be used with a provider. (myhealth.va.gov)

I’d avoid Woebot as a recommendation right now, because Woebot Health says the Woebot app was retired on June 30, 2025. (woebothealth.com)

If you tell me whether you want help with anxiety, depression, or sleep, I can narrow it to the best one.

Which CBT apps are better for self-guided therapy? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you want self-guided CBT, the best-known apps are:

  1. Woebot
    • Best for: quick daily CBT-style check-ins, mood tracking, thought reframing
    • Why it’s good: very easy to use, conversational, good for building CBT habits
    • Downside: more “coach/chatbot” than full therapy program
  2. Wysa
    • Best for: anxiety, stress, sleep, journaling, CBT exercises
    • Why it’s good: strong self-help tools, structured CBT modules, polished app
    • Downside: some features are behind a paid plan
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Best for: anxiety specifically
    • Why it’s good: straightforward CBT tools, exposures, coping strategies, thought tracking
    • Downside: less broad than some newer apps
  4. CBT-i Coach
    • Best for: insomnia / sleep problems
    • Why it’s good: built around CBT for insomnia, practical and evidence-based
    • Downside: mainly for sleep, not general mental health
  5. Sanvello
    • Best for: anxiety/depression with guided programs
    • Why it’s good: structured CBT content, mood tracking, tools for stress
    • Downside: the best features usually require subscription
My quick picks
  • For general self-guided CBT: Wysa
  • For anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • For sleep: CBT-i Coach
  • For a more interactive/chat style: Woebot

If you want, I can also give you a “best free CBT apps” list or rank them by anxiety, depression, or insomnia.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want self-guided CBT, the best picks are usually:

  1. MindShift CBT — best overall for anxiety/panic/worry. It’s free, CBT-based, and built for self-help. (apps.apple.com)
  2. MoodGYM — best if you want a structured CBT course rather than an appy feel. It’s a long-standing CBT training program for depression/anxiety. (moodgym.com.au)
  3. Wysa — best if you like an AI chat + CBT exercises style. It offers self-help tools, CBT techniques, and guided support. (wysa.com)
  4. Woebot — best if you want a conversation-based CBT coach. It uses CBT, IPT, and DBT-style conversations, but access may require a code. (woebothealth.com)
  5. SilverCloud — best if you want the most therapy-like CBT program, especially if you can access it through a clinician or employer. It’s designed as guided self-help and 6–8 week CBT programs. (silvercloud.amwell.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Anxiety/panic: MindShift CBT
  • Depression + anxiety course: MoodGYM
  • Chatbot style: Wysa or Woebot
  • Most structured / clinical: SilverCloud (apps.apple.com)

Also, the NHS says guided self-help based on CBT principles is one of the recommended options for anxiety and depression. (england.nhs.uk)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best free apps, best iPhone apps, or best for anxiety vs depression.

What are the best alternatives to a CBT app with mood tracking? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some strong CBT/mood-tracking alternatives:

  • Daylio — very good mood tracking with quick logging, charts, and journaling.
  • Moodfit — strong all-in-one option for mood tracking, CBT-style tools, habits, and exercises.
  • Sanvello — structured self-help with CBT, anxiety tools, and mood tracking.
  • Reflectly — journaling-focused, good if you want mood check-ins plus prompts.
  • Bearable — excellent for tracking mood alongside symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers.
  • MindDoc — more clinical-feeling mood monitoring with mental health assessments and tracking.
  • CBT Thought Diary — if you still want CBT specifically, this is one of the better dedicated options.
  • eMoods — simple and effective, especially for tracking mood patterns over time.

If you want the best fits by use case:

  • Best overall: Moodfit
  • Best simple mood tracker: Daylio
  • Best for detailed symptom tracking: Bearable
  • Best CBT-style alternative: Sanvello

If you want, I can narrow it down to free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or an app with the least journaling.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want CBT + mood tracking alternatives, these are the strongest picks:

  • MindDoc — best if you want the closest “mental health check-in” style app: daily questions, mood tracking, pattern insights, and guided courses. (minddoc.com)
  • Moodfit — best all-in-one option: mood journal, CBT tools, breathwork, gratitude, activity tracking, and PHQ-9/GAD-7 tracking. (apps.apple.com)
  • Wysa — best if you prefer a chat-based CBT assistant: it uses CBT-based techniques and includes mood monitoring and daily check-ins. (wysa.com)
  • Daylio — best for simple, low-friction mood tracking and journaling; it’s more tracker than CBT app. (daylio.net)
  • Headspace — best if you want stress/anxiety support with CBT-based exercises plus meditation and sleep tools. (headspace.com)

Quick pick:

  • Closest to CBT + tracking: MindDoc or Moodfit
  • Easiest mood tracker: Daylio
  • Most conversational: Wysa

If you want, I can narrow this to free apps, iPhone, or apps best for anxiety/depression.

Which CBT apps are best if I want more exercises and less reading? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you want more exercises and less reading, the best CBT-style apps are usually:

  1. Wysa
    • Strong on chat-based exercises, mood check-ins, guided CBT tools
    • Good for quick interactions and less “article” content
  2. MindShift CBT
    • Very exercise-oriented
    • Built around thought records, coping cards, exposure tools, and anxiety exercises
    • Minimal fluff
  3. Woebot
    • More conversational practice than reading
    • Uses short CBT prompts, reframing, and mood tracking
  4. CBT Thought Diary
    • Great if you want to actually do CBT worksheets digitally
    • Thought logs, distortions, evidence-for/against, behavior experiments
  5. Sanvello
    • Mix of tools, but the guided exercises are the best part
    • Less dense than many mental health apps

Best pick for least reading: MindShift CBT or CBT Thought Diary. Best pick for most interactive/chatty feel: Wysa or Woebot.

If you want, I can also narrow this down by anxiety, depression, or OCD, since the best app changes a bit by use case.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want more exercises and less reading, I’d start with:

  1. MindShift CBT — best for quick CBT tools: thought challenges, fear ladders, belief experiments, coping statements, and relaxation exercises. (apps.apple.com)
  2. Woebot — more of a chat-style CBT app, so it tends to feel more like guided back-and-forth than reading lessons. It includes CBT-based tools like mindfulness, cognitive restructuring, and behavioral activation. (woebothealth.com)
  3. CBT Companion — good if you want structured homework-style exercises and therapist-style worksheets rather than long articles. (apps.apple.com)
  4. CBT Self-Care Journal — has several named CBT exercises (ABC, Socratic questioning, decatastrophizing, core beliefs, fact-checking) and lots of prompts. (apps.apple.com)
  5. MindFlow / CalmMind — both emphasize short, personalized CBT exercises and quick check-ins. (apps.apple.com)

Best pick:

  • Most exercise-heavy: MindShift CBT
  • Least reading / most guided: Woebot
  • Most worksheet-like: CBT Companion

If you want, I can narrow this to free apps only or iPhone/Android only.

What are the best alternatives to a CBT app for beginners? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you’re new to CBT, the best alternatives are usually simpler, more guided tools:

Best beginner-friendly alternatives
  • Moodnotes — great for learning thought tracking without feeling clinical.
  • Sanvello — offers guided self-help, mood tracking, and coping tools.
  • MindShift CBT — very beginner-friendly, especially for anxiety.
  • Woebot — chatbot-style support that feels less overwhelming.
  • Daylio — super simple mood journal if you want low effort tracking.
Non-app options that work well
  • The Feeling Good Handbook by David Burns — one of the most popular CBT self-help books.
  • Mind Over Mood by Greenberger & Padesky — very structured and beginner-friendly.
  • CBT Thought Record worksheets — simple printable tools if you prefer paper.
  • Headspace or Calm — better if you want stress reduction before jumping into CBT-style work.
Best pick by goal
  • Easiest start: Daylio
  • Most CBT-like: Mind Over Mood
  • For anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • For gentle guidance: Moodnotes or Sanvello

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for anxiety, depression, or overthinking.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want something easier than a CBT app for a beginner, I’d start with:

  1. UCLA Mindful — best for simple guided meditation; it has basic meditations, short videos, and a timer, and it’s free. (uclahealth.org)
  2. Headspace — best all-around beginner option if you want guided mindfulness plus sleep tools and a very structured intro. (headspace.com)
  3. Calm — best if your main goal is stress relief and you want beginner-friendly meditation programs. (calm.com)
  4. Insight Timer — best if you want lots of free guided meditations and beginner playlists with more variety. (insighttimer.com)
  5. Daylio — best if you’d rather track mood and habits than do therapy-style exercises; it’s a simple mood diary/journal app. (daylio.net)

My pick for most beginners: UCLA Mindful if you want free and simple, or Headspace if you want the smoothest guided experience. (uclahealth.org)

If you want, I can narrow it down to free only, anxiety, depression, or no-therapy/journaling only.

How do CBT apps compare on cost and features? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here’s a quick comparison of popular CBT-style mental health apps:

| App | Cost | Best features | |---|---:|---| | Wysa | Free basic; premium usually ~$15–$20/mo | CBT chat exercises, mood tracking, guided self-help, optional human coaching | | Woebot | Often free or employer/health-plan access | CBT-based chatbot, quick check-ins, mood tools, very low friction | | Sanvello | Free basic; premium often ~$9–$15/mo | CBT lessons, mood tracking, community tools, coping exercises | | MindShift CBT | Free | Strong CBT tools for anxiety, thought tracking, coping cards, no subscription | | Happify | Free limited; premium often ~$15–$30/mo | Structured activities, CBT/positive psych exercises, games, habit building | | BetterHelp | ~$65–$100+/week | Live licensed therapist messaging/video, not a pure CBT app but more clinical support | | Talkspace | ~$70–$120+/week | Therapist access, can be paired with CBT-focused treatment |

Best value: MindShift CBT (free) or Wysa (low-cost, good balance). Best for guided CBT exercises: Sanvello or Happify. Best if you want a therapist: Talkspace or BetterHelp.

If you want, I can narrow this down by anxiety, depression, sleep, or budget.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here’s the quick take:

| App | Cost | Best features | |---|---|---| | MindShift CBT | Free | Thought journal, fear ladder, guided meditations, progress tracking, community forum. (apps.apple.com) | | Wysa | Freemium; App Store lists options like $9.99/mo or $74.99/yr, plus coach add-ons. (apps.apple.com) | | Woebot | Not generally sold direct to consumers; new users need a study, provider, employer, or partner access code. (woebothealth.com) |

Feature-wise:

  • MindShift CBT is the most straightforward “pure CBT” app: self-guided tools for anxiety, panic, and thought reframing. (apps.apple.com)
  • Wysa is broader: CBT + DBT + mindfulness, with optional human support/coaching. (apps.apple.com)
  • Woebot is the most chatbot-like: daily conversational check-ins using CBT, plus some IPT/DBT elements, available 24/7. (woebothealth.com)

Best value:

  • Lowest cost: MindShift CBT.
  • Most tools/support: Wysa.
  • Most structured conversational CBT: Woebot. (apps.apple.com)

If you want, I can also rank them by best for anxiety, panic, journaling, or therapist-style coaching.

Which CBT apps are best alternatives for daily habit building? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best CBT-style apps for daily habit building:

  • Woebot — great for quick daily check-ins, thought reframing, and mood-based habit support.
  • Wysa — strong for CBT tools, guided journaling, and repeatable daily exercises.
  • Sanvello — good mix of CBT, mood tracking, and structured habit routines.
  • MindShift CBT — simple, practical CBT exercises; best if you want low-friction daily use.
  • Youper — AI-guided CBT conversations plus tracking; good for consistency.

If you want habit-building first, CBT second, these pair well:

  • Fabulous — best for routines and behavior change.
  • Habitica — best if gamification keeps you engaged.
  • Streaks — best for simple daily streak tracking.

Best overall for CBT + daily habits: Wysa Best for quick daily support: Woebot Best for routines: Fabulous

If you want, I can also narrow it to free apps, iPhone/Android, or apps best for anxiety vs procrastination.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want CBT apps that also help build daily habits, my best picks are:

  1. Moodfit — best all-around for habit building. It explicitly focuses on building/restoring daily habits, has customizable goals/notifications, CBT thought records, and weekly reports. (getmoodfit.com)
  2. Happify — best for short daily practice. It offers CBT-based exercises/games and recommends just a few minutes each day to build new patterns. (happify.com)
  3. Clarity: CBT Self Help Journal — best for daily check-ins + journaling. It includes daily check-ins, mood tracking, and guided CBT journaling. (thinkwithclarity.com)
  4. MindShift CBT — best if your habits are tied to anxiety/panic. It includes thought journals, daily check-ins, progress tracking, and CBT tools. (apps.apple.com)
  5. Woebot — best if you like a chat-based coach. It uses CBT-based conversations and is designed for daily self-care practice. (woebothealth.com)
  6. MindDoc — best for mood + routine awareness. It supports daily mood tracking and structured courses/exercises. (minddoc.com)

Quick pick:

  • For habits: Moodfit
  • For quick daily CBT practice: Happify
  • For thought journaling: Clarity
  • For anxiety support: MindShift CBT

If you want, I can narrow this to free apps only or iPhone vs Android.

How do I deal with anxiety without seeing a therapist? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

You can do a lot on your own. A simple plan:

  • Cut stimulants: reduce caffeine/energy drinks, nicotine, and weed if they worsen anxiety.
  • Use a breathing tool: try Headspace, Calm, or Breathwrk for guided breathing.
  • Move daily: 20–30 min of brisk walking, cycling, or a home workout helps a lot.
  • Sleep basics: same wake time, dark/cool room, no screens 1 hour before bed.
  • Reduce rumination: set a 10-minute “worry time,” write worries down, then stop.
  • Grounding for spikes: 5-4-3-2-1 senses exercise or hold something cold.
  • Routine exposure: avoid avoiding. Make a list of feared situations and tackle the easiest first.
  • Track patterns: use Daylio or a notes app to log triggers, sleep, caffeine, and symptoms.
  • Use calming aids: some people like a weighted blanket from YnM or Baloo Living.

If you want a book-based approach, The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook by Edmund Bourne is a solid self-help choice.

If your anxiety is causing panic attacks, stopping you from working, or you’re having thoughts of harming yourself, get urgent help right away. If you want, I can make you a 7-day no-therapist anxiety plan.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few practical ways to manage anxiety on your own:

  • Breathe slowly: Try 4 seconds in, 6 seconds out for 2–5 minutes.
  • Move your body: A brisk 10–20 minute walk helps burn off stress.
  • Limit caffeine/nicotine: Both can make anxiety worse.
  • Sleep basics: Same bedtime, less scrolling before bed, dark/cool room.
  • Name the fear: Write down: “What am I worried will happen?” Then ask, “How likely is it?”
  • Break tasks down: Anxiety grows when everything feels vague. Make the next step tiny.
  • Grounding: Use 5-4-3-2-1 (5 things you see, 4 feel, 3 hear, 2 smell, 1 taste).
  • Reduce avoidance: Do the small thing you’re avoiding, even imperfectly.
  • Use routines: Regular meals, movement, and a simple daily plan.
  • Talk to someone you trust: You don’t need a therapist to not do this alone.

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. a 10-minute anxiety reset, or
  2. a week-long self-help plan.

If your anxiety is causing panic attacks, stopping you from functioning, or includes thoughts of hurting yourself, get urgent help right away.

What can I do about constant overthinking? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Constant overthinking is often a habit loop, and the goal is to interrupt it—not “solve” every thought.

Try this:

  • Name it: “I’m overthinking right now.” Labeling helps create distance.
  • Set a worry window: 10 minutes a day to write worries down, then stop.
  • Write it out: Use a notebook like The Five Minute Journal or a simple Moleskine and split page into:
    • What I know
    • What I’m assuming
    • Next action
  • Use a grounding reset: 5-4-3-2-1 senses exercise or slow breathing (inhale 4, exhale 6).
  • Reduce triggers: Too much caffeine, doomscrolling, and lack of sleep make it worse.
  • Choose one next step: Overthinking usually wants certainty; action beats rumination.
  • Move your body: A 10–20 minute walk can break the loop fast.

Helpful apps:

  • Headspace or Calm for guided breathing/mindfulness
  • Moodnotes for tracking thought patterns

If this is daily, affecting sleep/work, or tied to anxiety, therapy—especially CBT—can help a lot. If you want, I can give you a 5-minute “stop overthinking” routine.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few things usually help:

  • Name the loop: “I’m ruminating, not solving.”
  • Set a worry window: 10–15 minutes/day to think/write it out.
  • Write the next action: turn vague thoughts into one small step.
  • Ground your body: slow breathing, walk, shower, stretch.
  • Limit triggers: caffeine, doomscrolling, and late-night thinking.
  • Use a rule: if you’ve thought it through 3 times, decide or defer.
  • Sleep + routine: overthinking gets worse when you’re tired.

If it’s constant, distressing, or affecting work/sleep, therapy—especially CBT or ACT—can be very effective.

If you want, I can give you a 2-minute technique for stopping a thought spiral in the moment.

How do I manage negative thoughts during the day? problem 30/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

A simple way to manage negative thoughts during the day:

  • Notice it: “I’m having a negative thought.”
  • Question it: “Is this a fact, or a fear?”
  • Replace it: Use a more balanced line like, “This is hard, but I can handle the next step.”
  • Shift your body: 5 slow breaths, a short walk, stretch, or get water.
  • Limit triggers: Cut back on doomscrolling and stressful notifications.
  • Write it down: A quick thought dump can help get it out of your head.

Helpful products:

  • Moodnotes (app) for tracking thought patterns
  • Daylio (app) for mood journaling
  • Headspace or Calm for short guided resets
  • A simple notebook like Moleskine for thought dumps

If you want, I can give you a 2-minute “in-the-moment” script for when a negative thought hits.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few practical ways:

  • Notice it, don’t argue with it. Say: “I’m having the thought that ___.”
  • Ground yourself. Take 3 slow breaths and name 5 things you see.
  • Challenge the thought. Ask: “Is this a fact, or a fear?”
  • Replace with a balanced line. Example: “This is hard, but I can handle the next step.”
  • Redirect your attention. Do one small task for 5 minutes.
  • Limit rumination windows. If needed, set a later “worry time.”
  • Use movement. A short walk or stretch helps break the loop.
  • Reduce fuel. Sleep, caffeine, and doomscrolling can worsen it.

If the thoughts feel constant, overwhelming, or include self-harm, please tell someone you trust or contact a mental health professional right away. If you want, I can give you a 30-second reset routine for when negative thoughts hit.

How can I calm panic attacks at home? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are a few things that can help during a panic attack at home:

  1. Slow your breathing
    • Inhale through your nose for 4
    • Exhale slowly for 6–8
    • Repeat for a few minutes

Try the Calm app or Headspace if guided breathing helps.

  1. Ground yourself

Use the 5-4-3-2-1 method:

  • 5 things you see
  • 4 you feel
  • 3 you hear
  • 2 you smell
  • 1 you taste
  1. Remind yourself: “This will pass.”

Panic attacks feel dangerous, but they usually peak and fade within minutes.

  1. Relax your body
    • Drop your shoulders
    • Unclench your jaw
    • Press your feet into the floor
    • Hold something cold, like an ice pack or a cold can
  2. Reduce stimulation
    • Sit in a quiet room
    • Dim lights
    • Put on soft music or white noise

Loop Quiet or Bose QuietComfort earbuds/headphones can help if noise is a trigger.

  1. Avoid making it worse
    • Don’t keep checking your pulse repeatedly
    • Avoid caffeine, nicotine, alcohol, and weed during a panic episode

For ongoing support at home, some people find:

  • Weighted blanket: YnM Weighted Blanket
  • Breathing aid: The Breathing App
  • Journal app: Daylio for tracking triggers

Get urgent help now if this feels like chest pain, trouble breathing, fainting, or if it’s your first episode and you’re not sure it’s panic. If you want, I can also give you a 1-minute panic attack script to follow step by step.

retrieval Not mentioned

Here are a few things that often help during a panic attack at home:

  • Slow your breathing. Try breathing in gently through your nose, then out more slowly through your mouth for a few minutes. Don’t force deep breaths; just make the exhale longer. (leicspart.nhs.uk)
  • Ground yourself. Name 5 things you can see, 4 you can feel, 3 you can hear, 2 you can smell, and 1 you can taste. This can pull attention back to the present. (kentcht.nhs.uk)
  • Loosen tension. Unclench your jaw, drop your shoulders, and relax your hands. (kentcht.nhs.uk)
  • Remind yourself what it is. Panic attacks can feel terrifying but usually pass after several minutes. (nimh.nih.gov)
  • Change the setting if you can. Sit somewhere quiet, sip water, or hold something soft/cold. (keepingwellnwl.nhs.uk)

Get urgent help now if this is your first episode, you have chest pain, trouble breathing that doesn’t ease, fainting, or you think it could be something medical rather than panic. In the U.S., call 911 for emergency symptoms. If you’re in immediate mental health crisis or thinking of harming yourself, call or text 988. (nhs.uk)

If you want, I can also give you a 1-minute panic attack script to read during an attack.

What helps with social anxiety in everyday situations? problem 590/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A few things help a lot with everyday social anxiety:

  • Slow breathing: try a 4-second inhale, 6-second exhale for 2–3 minutes.
  • Prepared phrases: keep 2–3 “default” lines ready, like “How’s your day going?” or “That makes sense.”
  • Start small: brief low-stakes interactions first (cashier, neighbor, coworker).
  • Shift focus outward: pay attention to the other person, not how you’re coming across.
  • Limit caffeine: it can make anxiety feel worse.
  • Practice exposure: repeat the same situation until it feels less intense.
  • Sleep/exercise: even 20 minutes of walking helps lower baseline anxiety.

Useful products/apps:

  • Headspace or Calm for guided breathing and anxiety exercises
  • The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook by Edmund Bourne
  • L-theanine supplements are popular for calm focus, but check with a doctor first if you take meds

If it’s affecting work, relationships, or daily life a lot, CBT therapy is one of the most effective treatments for social anxiety.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few things help most with everyday social anxiety:

  • Slow breathing: inhale 4, exhale 6 for a minute.
  • Grounding: notice 5 things you see, 4 feel, 3 hear.
  • Lower the goal: aim to be “present,” not perfect.
  • Small exposures: brief chats, short errands, asking one question.
  • Prepared scripts: “How’s your day going?” “What do you recommend?”
  • Reduce self-focus: pay attention to the other person, not your inner critic.
  • Body basics: sleep, exercise, less caffeine, regular meals.
  • Afterward, don’t review harshly: note one thing that went okay.

If you want, I can give you:

  1. a 30-second in-the-moment strategy, or
  2. a plan for work/school/social events.
How do I build better coping skills for stress? problem 590/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

A good way to build coping skills is to practice a few reliable tools before you’re overwhelmed.

1) Start with one “reset” skill

Pick one and use it daily:

  • Box breathing: inhale 4, hold 4, exhale 4, hold 4
  • 5-4-3-2-1 grounding: name 5 things you see, 4 feel, 3 hear, 2 smell, 1 taste
  • Short walk: 10 minutes without your phone
2) Label the stress

Ask:

  • What am I feeling?
  • What triggered it?
  • What do I need right now?

Even writing one sentence helps reduce mental load.

3) Make a coping menu

Create 3 options for different levels of stress:

  • Low: tea, music, stretch
  • Medium: journal, shower, walk
  • High: call someone, leave the room, breathe, use a guided meditation
4) Use tools that make it easier

Good options:

  • Headspace or Calm for guided breathing/meditation
  • Daylio for mood tracking
  • The Five Minute Journal for quick daily reflection
  • Wysa for AI-guided coping exercises
5) Protect the basics

Stress tolerance improves a lot with:

  • sleep
  • regular meals
  • movement
  • less caffeine if you’re anxious
6) Reframe the thought

Try:

  • “This is hard, but temporary.”
  • “I can handle the next 10 minutes.”
  • “I don’t need to solve everything right now.”
7) Practice when calm

Coping skills work best when they’re automatic. Rehearse them daily for 2–5 minutes.

If stress is affecting sleep, work, relationships, or causing panic most days, it may help to talk with a therapist—CBT is especially good for coping skills.

retrieval Not mentioned

A good way to build coping skills is to make them small, repeatable, and specific.

Try this:

  • Notice your triggers: What kinds of stress hit you hardest?
  • Name the feeling: “I’m overwhelmed,” “I’m anxious,” “I’m frustrated.”
  • Use a reset tool: slow breathing, a short walk, cold water on your hands, or stepping away for 5 minutes.
  • Break the problem down: ask, “What’s the next small step?”
  • Build recovery habits: sleep, movement, food, sunlight, and less doomscrolling.
  • Practice before you need it: coping skills work better when they’re already familiar.
  • Talk to someone: a friend, family member, therapist, or support group.

A simple starter plan:

  1. Pick one stress skill.
  2. Practice it once a day.
  3. Use it in a real stressful moment.
  4. Adjust based on what actually helps.

If you want, I can give you:

  • a 5-minute daily coping routine
  • coping skills for anxiety
  • coping skills for work stress
  • coping skills for overthinking
How can I improve my mood with self-help tools? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

A few self-help tools that can genuinely help mood:

  • Mood tracking app: Daylio or Bearable — log mood, sleep, exercise, and triggers so you can spot patterns.
  • CBT / thought reframing: Moodnotes or Woebot — useful for catching negative thought loops and replacing them with more balanced ones.
  • Guided meditation: Headspace or Calm — good for stress, rumination, and winding down.
  • Exercise support: Nike Training Club or FitOn — even 10–20 minutes can help mood.
  • Light therapy lamp: Verilux HappyLight or Carex Day-Light Classic Plus — especially helpful if low mood is worse in winter.
  • Sleep support: Dodow or Sleep Cycle — better sleep often improves mood fast.
  • Journaling: a simple notebook like Leuchtturm1917 or Moleskine — try “3 good things,” gratitude, or brain-dump journaling.

Simple routine to start:

  1. Track mood daily for 2 weeks.
  2. Add one short walk or workout.
  3. Do 5 minutes of meditation.
  4. Write one thought that’s bothering you, then challenge it.
  5. Keep a consistent sleep/wake time.

If your mood is low most days for 2+ weeks, or you’re having thoughts of harming yourself, please reach out to a mental health professional or crisis line right away.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few self-help tools that often help mood:

  • Mood tracking app: notice patterns and triggers.
  • Guided meditation app: helps calm stress fast.
  • CBT journaling prompts: challenge negative thoughts.
  • Exercise tracker: even a 10–20 minute walk can help.
  • Sleep tools: alarms, wind-down timers, white noise.
  • Breathing apps: for quick resets during overwhelm.
  • Gratitude journal: write 3 small positives daily.

Simple starter plan:

  1. Track mood once a day.
  2. Walk 10 minutes.
  3. Do 5 minutes of breathing or meditation.
  4. Write one thought and one kinder reframe.
  5. Keep a consistent sleep time.

If you want, I can recommend specific apps and a 7-day mood-improvement routine.

What should I do if I keep worrying too much? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you keep worrying too much, try this:

  • Name the worry: “This is anxiety, not a fact.”
  • Set a worry window: 10–15 minutes a day to write worries down, then stop.
  • Use a reset tool: slow breathing, a short walk, or grounding (5 things you see, 4 feel, 3 hear, 2 smell, 1 taste).
  • Cut reassurance loops: avoid repeatedly checking messages, news, or symptoms.
  • Sleep/caffeine check: too little sleep and too much caffeine can make worry worse.
  • Talk it out: a friend, family member, or therapist can help break the loop.

Helpful apps/products:

  • Headspace or Calm for guided meditation
  • The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook by Edmund Bourne
  • Moodnotes for tracking anxious thoughts

If worry is happening most days, affecting sleep/work, or causing panic, it’s a good idea to talk to a therapist or doctor. If you ever feel like you might hurt yourself, call emergency services or a crisis line right away.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you keep worrying too much, try this:

  • Pause and name it: “I’m worrying right now.”
  • Ask: “Is this a real problem I can act on, or just a maybe?”
  • Do one small action if it’s real.
  • Set a worry window: 10–15 minutes later in the day.
  • Ground yourself: slow breathing, walk, cold water, or 5-4-3-2-1 senses.
  • Reduce fuel: less caffeine, doomscrolling, and late-night overthinking.
  • Write it down: getting it out of your head helps.

If the worry is constant, affects sleep, or makes daily life hard, talking to a therapist or doctor could really help.

If you want, I can also give you a 2-minute calm-down routine for right now.

How do I challenge unhelpful thoughts? problem 40/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A simple way is to slow the thought down and test it:

  1. Name the thought
    • “I’m going to fail.”
    • “They don’t like me.”
    • Write it down.
  2. Ask: what’s the evidence?
    • What facts support it?
    • What facts don’t?
  3. Look for a more balanced thought
    • Instead of: “I always mess up.”
    • Try: “I messed up this time, but I’ve handled things well before.”
  4. Check for common thinking traps
    • All-or-nothing thinking
    • Mind reading
    • Catastrophizing
    • Overgeneralizing
  5. Ask what you’d say to a friend
    • Use that same tone with yourself.
  6. Do one small action
    • Send the email, take the walk, start for 5 minutes.
    • Action helps reduce the thought’s power.

A quick template:

  • Thought:
  • Evidence for:
  • Evidence against:
  • More balanced thought:

If you want, I can give you a 1-minute version of this or help you challenge a specific thought.

retrieval Not mentioned

A simple way is to question the thought like a detective:

  1. Name it

“I’m having the thought that I always mess things up.”

  1. Check the evidence

What facts support it? What facts don’t?

  1. Look for a more balanced thought

“I made a mistake, but I’ve handled lots of things well too.”

  1. Ask what you’d tell a friend

You’re usually kinder and more realistic with other people.

  1. Test it in real life

Do one small action that the thought says you can’t do.

Quick questions to use:

  • Is this 100% true?
  • Am I jumping to the worst conclusion?
  • Is there another explanation?
  • Will this matter in a week?

If you want, I can also give you a 1-minute CBT worksheet or help challenge a specific thought. If your thoughts are about self-harm or you feel unsafe, call emergency services or a crisis line right now.

How can I start CBT exercises on my own? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

You can start CBT on your own with a simple routine:

1) Track thoughts

Use a notebook or app and write:

  • Situation
  • Emotion (0–100)
  • Automatic thought
  • Evidence for / against it
  • More balanced thought
  • New emotion rating
2) Try a thought record

Example:

  • Situation: “Boss didn’t reply”
  • Thought: “I’m in trouble”
  • Evidence against: “He’s busy; no criticism yet”
  • Balanced thought: “I don’t know yet. I’ll follow up.”

This is the core CBT skill.

3) Do behavioral experiments

Test your beliefs with small actions.

  • If you think “I’ll embarrass myself,” try asking one question in a meeting.
  • Predict outcome, do it, then compare.
4) Use activity scheduling

If you feel low, plan 1–3 small activities daily:

  • 10-minute walk
  • Shower
  • One chore
  • One enjoyable thing
5) Practice exposure for avoidance

Make a fear ladder from easiest to hardest and work up gradually.

Good self-help CBT books
  • Mind Over Mood by Dennis Greenberger and Christine Padesky
  • Feeling Good by David Burns
  • The CBT Workbook for Mental Health by Williams & Penman
Helpful apps
  • Daylio for mood tracking
  • Stoic for journaling
  • CBT Thought Diary for thought records

If you want, I can give you a 7-day beginner CBT plan you can start today.

retrieval Not mentioned

You can start with a few simple CBT-style exercises on your own:

  1. Track a situation
    • Write down: what happened, what you felt, and what you did.
  2. Catch the thought
    • Ask: What went through my mind right then?
    • Example: “They didn’t reply, so they must be mad at me.”
  3. Check the evidence
    • What supports that thought?
    • What facts go against it?
  4. Make a more balanced thought
    • Replace the extreme thought with something fairer.
    • Example: “They may be busy; I don’t actually know why they haven’t replied.”
  5. Test it in real life
    • Try a small action that checks the thought.
    • Example: send one message, wait, and see what happens.
  6. Behavioral activation
    • If you feel low or stuck, schedule one small useful or enjoyable activity each day.
  7. Graded exposure
    • If you avoid something, make a tiny step list from easiest to hardest and practice gradually.

A simple daily template:

  • Situation:
  • Thought:
  • Feeling (0–100):
  • Evidence for:
  • Evidence against:
  • Balanced thought:
  • New feeling (0–100):

If you want, I can give you:

  • a 1-week CBT plan, or
  • a fillable thought record template.
How much do CBT apps cost per month? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

CBT apps usually cost $0–$60/month, depending on the app and whether it’s a self-help tool or includes therapist support.

Examples:

  • Woebot: often free or low-cost, depending on plan/region
  • Wysa: around $10–$30/month for premium options
  • MindShift CBT: free
  • Headspace: about $13/month (more meditation-focused, some CBT-style tools)
  • Calm: about $15/month (less CBT-specific)

If you want, I can give you a best CBT apps by price list.

retrieval Not mentioned

CBT apps are often free, and paid ones are usually around $2–$15/month. For example, MindShift CBT is free, Clarity / CBT Thought Diary shows a $9.99 monthly pro mode on its paywall, and one review notes a $1.99/month Android subscription for Clarity. (apps.apple.com)

If you want, I can list the cheapest CBT apps right now.

Are there free CBT apps for anxiety? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes — there are some free CBT-based apps for anxiety, though many are freemium (free core tools, paid extras).

A few good options:

  • MindShift CBT — free, CBT-based, designed for anxiety
  • Woebot — free chatbot-style support using CBT techniques
  • Feeling Good: Positive Mindset — includes CBT-style exercises; free tier may be limited
  • CBT Thought Diary — free basic use for tracking thoughts and reframing them
  • Smiling Mind — free mindfulness app, not pure CBT but helpful for anxiety

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best free CBT app for iPhone/Android, or
  2. a short list of apps specifically for panic, social anxiety, or generalized anxiety.
retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — a few decent free CBT-style apps for anxiety are:

  • MindShift CBT — free, anxiety-focused, and based on CBT. (anxietycanada.com)
  • FreeCBT — a free CBT journaling app for iOS/Android. (github.com)
  • What’s Up? — free and uses CBT/ACT tools for anxiety and stress. (namiwla.org)
  • Anxiety Test & Relief — free app with CBT exercises and GAD-7 screening. (apps.apple.com)

One note: Woebot is not a free option for new users anymore; the company says the app was retired on June 30, 2025. (woebothealth.com)

If you want, I can narrow these to iPhone vs Android or best for panic attacks vs general anxiety.

What is the cheapest CBT app? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

The cheapest CBT app is usually MindShift CBT by Anxiety Canada — it’s free.

Other low-cost options:

  • CBT Thought Diary — free basic version
  • Woebot — often free or low-cost depending on current access
  • Sanvello — has a free tier, paid premium for more features

If you want, I can also list the best free CBT apps by use case (anxiety, depression, panic, journaling).

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want the cheapest CBT-style app, the best bet is a free app:

  • MindDoc: basic version is free; the paid MindDoc Plus unlocks more content. (static.minddoc.com)
  • Woebot: a CBT-based mental health chatbot/app; access is offered through the app, and some deployments have been free. (woebothealth.com)
  • Wysa: has free conversations/basic support, with premium features available separately. (wysa.com)

So, cheapest = the free tier of MindDoc, Woebot, or Wysa depending on your region and what’s currently available. (static.minddoc.com)

If you want, I can rank the cheapest 5 CBT apps by price.

Do CBT apps have free trials? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—many CBT apps offer free trials or free tiers.

Examples:

  • Wysa — free version available; premium features may have a trial depending on promo.
  • MindShift CBT — free app, no trial needed.
  • Sanvello — often has a free version and premium trial options.
  • Woebot — free/basic access; some features may be limited.
  • CBT Thought Diary — free basic app; paid upgrade available.

If you want, I can list the best CBT apps with free trials right now for iPhone or Android.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—many CBT apps offer free trials or free tiers, but it depends on the app.

Common patterns:

  • Free trial: full access for 7–30 days
  • Freemium: basic tools free, premium features paid
  • Insurance/employer access: sometimes free through a provider

If you want, I can list specific CBT apps and which ones currently offer free trials.

Which CBT apps are worth paying for? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you want CBT-style apps that are actually worth paying for, I’d shortlist these:

  • Sanvello — best all-around CBT toolkit: mood tracking, thought records, coping tools, guided journeys.
  • Wysa — best if you want a chat-based CBT coach plus optional human coaching.
  • MindDoc — best for mood tracking + patterns over time; solid for self-monitoring.
  • CBT Thought Diary — best for classic CBT worksheets/thought challenging.
  • Moodnotes — great for reframing negative thoughts; especially good on iPhone.
  • Sleepio — worth it if your main issue is insomnia; it’s CBT-I, which is very effective.

My quick take:

  • Best value: CBT Thought Diary or Moodnotes
  • Best full program: Sanvello
  • Best if you like AI/chat support: Wysa
  • Best for sleep: Sleepio

If you tell me iPhone vs Android and whether you want thought records, anxiety help, or sleep, I can narrow it to 1–2 best picks.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — but I’d keep it selective. My short list:

  • MoodMission — worth paying for if you want structured CBT-style exercises for anxiety/low mood. It’s evidence-based, and the App Store shows paid plans plus add-on “missions”/expeditions. (moodmission.com)
  • CBT Companion: Therapy Journal — worth it if you like journaling + homework-style CBT tools. It has a free tier, but the paid plan unlocks more, and the App Store lists monthly or 6‑month pricing. (apps.apple.com)
  • Mindsy / CBT thought-diary apps — only worth paying for if you specifically want a thought diary and prefer a premium, app-first workflow; otherwise there are cheaper or free alternatives. (apps.apple.com)

Not worth paying for:

  • MindShift CBT — free, evidence-based, and Anxiety Canada says it has over 1.5M lifetime downloads. (anxietycanada.com)
  • CBT-i Coach — free and best if your main issue is insomnia, not general CBT. VA says it’s for CBT-I and sleep tracking. (mobile.va.gov)
  • Woebot — I would not pay for it now; Woebot Health says the app was retired June 30, 2025. (woebothealth.com)

Bottom line: if you want to pay for one, I’d start with MoodMission. If you want, I can give you a “best paid CBT app for anxiety / depression / insomnia” shortlist.

What CBT apps offer a free version? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A few CBT-based apps with free versions:

  • MoodTools — free core app; includes CBT thought diary, safety plan, and depression tracking.
  • Wysa — free basic chat-based support; some CBT tools are free, premium unlocks more.
  • Sanvello — free version with mood tracking, guided journeys, and coping tools.
  • MindShift CBT — free app focused on anxiety and CBT strategies.
  • CBT Thought Diary — free basic version for tracking thoughts and doing CBT exercises.
  • Feeling Good — has free CBT exercises/content, with optional paid upgrades.

If you want, I can also narrow these down by:

  • best free app for anxiety
  • best for depression
  • best iPhone/Android options
retrieval Not mentioned

Here are some CBT(-style) apps that offer a free version or are free to use:

  • MindShift CBT — free anxiety-management app from Anxiety Canada. (anxietycanada.com)
  • Clarity — free to download; core CBT features are “free forever,” with a paid Pro tier for extras. (thinkwithclarity.com)
  • CBT-i Coach — free VA app for CBT for insomnia; meant to be used with a provider. (mobile.va.gov)
  • Insomnia Coach — free, stand-alone CBT-I self-care app. (mobile.va.gov)
  • FreeCBT — open-source CBT app for iOS and Android. (github.com)
  • CBT Companion: Therapy Journal App — has a free version with CBT psychoeducation, mood tracking, and thought-challenging tools. (apps.apple.com)

If you want, I can narrow these down by anxiety, depression, insomnia, or journaling.

How much is a premium CBT app subscription? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Premium CBT app subscriptions usually run about $8–$30/month.

Examples:

  • Moodnotes: around $4.99/month or annual option
  • Wysa: typically $10–$15/month for premium features
  • MindDoc: often $20+/month depending on plan
  • Sanvello: premium plans vary, often $8–$15/month with annual billing

If you want, I can list the best CBT apps by price or by features.

retrieval Not mentioned

It varies by app, but a premium CBT app is often around $5–$10/month or $30–$70/year. For example, CBT Companion lists $9.99/month or $49.99 every 6 months, and CBT Thought Diary lists $29.99/year. Some CBT apps are one-time purchase instead of a subscription. (apps.apple.com)

If you want, I can also name the cheapest CBT apps or compare CBT vs therapy apps.

Are CBT apps covered by insurance? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Sometimes, but usually not directly.

  • Most CBT apps aren’t billed like normal medical care, so many insurance plans don’t automatically cover them.
  • Some plans do cover digital mental health programs if they’re prescribed by a doctor, offered through an employer, or part of a behavioral health benefit.
  • Coverage is more common for therapy platforms than standalone self-help apps.

Examples:

  • Wysa, Woebot, Headspace Care (formerly Ginger), Big Health’s Daylight/Sleepio — coverage varies by insurer/employer.
  • AbleTo and Lyra Health are often employer/insurance benefits rather than out-of-pocket apps.

Best next step: Check:

  1. your insurance portal for “digital mental health” or “behavioral health apps”
  2. your employer benefits
  3. the app’s site for “insurance accepted” or “in-network

If you want, I can help you find CBT apps that are most likely to be covered by your specific insurance plan.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually not for a general CBT app, but sometimes yes if the app is a prescription digital therapeutic or otherwise included in your plan’s behavioral health/pharmacy benefits. Marketplace plans must cover mental/behavioral health services like counseling and psychotherapy, but they don’t automatically cover every mental-health app. (healthcare.gov)

For example, CMS has a billing code for prescription digital behavioral therapy (including CBT-like digital therapies), and says payers may choose whether to cover and pay for these products. FDA has also cleared some prescription digital CBT apps/devices, but FDA clearance does not by itself guarantee insurance coverage. (cms.gov)

Best next step: check your insurer’s formulary/benefits or ask: “Is this specific CBT app covered, and does it require a prescription or prior authorization?” (healthcare.gov)

If you want, I can help you check a specific app and insurance plan.

Which CBT apps are best value for money? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best value CBT apps, in my view:

  1. CBT Thought Diary
    • Best overall value
    • Strong CBT worksheets, thought records, mood tracking
    • Usually a one-time purchase / low cost compared with subscriptions
  2. MindShift CBT
    • Best free option
    • Solid CBT tools for anxiety, panic, and stress
    • Very good if you want no subscription
  3. Wysa
    • Best for guided support
    • CBT-style chat + exercises
    • Free tier is useful; paid version is decent if you like AI-guided coaching
  4. Sanvello
    • Best if your insurance covers it
    • Good CBT content, mood tracking, and guided programs
    • Can be expensive out of pocket, so value is best with coverage
  5. Woebot
    • Best for quick daily check-ins
    • CBT-based chatbot style
    • Good value if you use it consistently, but less like a full CBT course

If you want the cheapest good setup:

  • MindShift CBT + CBT Thought Diary

That combo gives you solid tools without a subscription.

If you tell me whether you want anxiety, depression, OCD, or sleep, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 apps.

retrieval Mentioned

Best value for money, in my view:

  1. Daylio — best if you want a cheap habit/mood tracker with CBT-ish reflection. It has a free unlimited version, and premium is $4.99 on the App Store. (daylio.net)
  2. CBT Companion — good if you want more structured CBT exercises and journaling. It’s $9.99/month or $49.99 every 6 months on iPhone. (apps.apple.com)
  3. Wysa — worth it if you want a more guided AI-supported CBT-style app. Pricing is less consumer-simple, but Wysa states $50 per employee per year for team plans and emphasizes self-guided CBT exercises; availability for individual users can depend on access codes or partners. (wysa.com)

Skip unless you really want premium CBT depth:

  • CBT Thought Diary / Clarity — App Store pricing shown is much higher in some regions, including USD 83.99 for Pro Mode in one listing, so it looks worse on value than Daylio or CBT Companion. (apps.apple.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best budget: Daylio
  • Best overall value for CBT structure: CBT Companion
  • Best guided support: Wysa (apps.apple.com)

If you want, I can also rank them for anxiety, depression, or journal-style CBT specifically.

Can I get a CBT app for free? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes — there are free CBT-style apps.

Good free options:

  • MindShift CBT (Anxiety Canada) — for anxiety, worry, and stress
  • MoodTools — CBT tools for depression support
  • CBT-i Coach — for insomnia / sleep (from the VA)
  • Woebot — if available in your region, it offers CBT-style support

If you want, I can also recommend:

  • best free CBT app for anxiety
  • best for depression
  • best for sleep
retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — there are free CBT apps. Good options include FreeCBT (an open-source thought diary), MindShift CBT (free anxiety-management app from Anxiety Canada), and CBT-i Coach (free, but intended for insomnia CBT with a clinician). (apps.apple.com)

If you want, I can narrow it down by iPhone/Android and whether you want anxiety, depression, or sleep help.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best self-help CBT apps for anxiety?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps for anxiety:

  1. Sanvello
    • Strong CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and coping exercises.
    • Good if you want a polished all-in-one anxiety app.
  2. MindShift CBT
    • Built specifically for anxiety by Anxiety Canada.
    • Very practical: worry logs, thought challenges, breathing, and exposure-style tools.
    • Great free option.
  3. Woebot
    • Chat-based CBT support with mood check-ins and coping skills.
    • Best if you like a conversational, guided style.
  4. CBT-i Coach (from the VA)
    • Mainly for insomnia, but helpful if anxiety is tied to sleep.
    • Evidence-based and free.
  5. Feeling Good: Positive Mindset
    • Based on CBT principles from David Burns’ work.
    • Good for thought reframing and self-help exercises.
  6. Headspace
    • Not pure CBT, but offers anxiety-focused courses, mindfulness, and stress reduction.
    • Best as a supplement if you want a calmer, easier daily practice.

Best picks overall:

  • Best free CBT app: MindShift CBT
  • Best all-in-one paid app: Sanvello
  • Best chat-style support: Woebot

If you want, I can also rank them for free apps only, iPhone/Android, or apps best for panic attacks vs generalized anxiety.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps for anxiety:

Top picks
  1. MindShift CBT (Anxiety Canada)
    • Best free CBT app for anxiety
    • Uses thought challenges, coping tools, exposure exercises, and worry tracking
    • Strong choice if you want a straightforward, no-fuss app
  2. Woebot
    • Chat-based CBT support
    • Good for daily check-ins, reframing anxious thoughts, and mood tracking
    • Feels more conversational than worksheet-style apps
  3. Sanvello
    • CBT tools for anxiety, stress, and mood
    • Includes guided exercises, tracking, and some community features
    • Good all-around option if you want a polished app
  4. CBT Thought Diary
    • Best for structured CBT journaling
    • Great for identifying triggers, automatic thoughts, and evidence-based reframing
    • Better if you like writing things out
  5. MoodMission
    • CBT/behavioral activation app for anxiety and low mood
    • Gives you short “missions” based on how you feel
    • Very practical and action-oriented
If you want just one
  • Best free: MindShift CBT
  • Best conversational: Woebot
  • Best for journaling: CBT Thought Diary

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best free apps only
  • best iPhone/Android options
  • or a ranked list based on your anxiety type (worry, panic, social anxiety, health anxiety).
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps for anxiety:

  1. MindShift CBT (Anxiety Canada)
    • Best free, anxiety-focused CBT app
    • Includes thought reframing, exposure tools, worry tracking, and coping cards
  2. Woebot
    • Best for guided CBT-style coaching
    • Uses chat-based CBT exercises for anxiety and stress
  3. Sanvello
    • Best all-around CBT app for anxiety + mood
    • Offers mood tracking, CBT tools, guided journeys, and community features
  4. FearTools - Anxiety Aid
    • Best simple, no-frills option
    • Good for thought records, exposure, relaxation, and panic tools
  5. CBT-i Coach
    • Best if anxiety is tied to insomnia
    • More sleep-focused, but useful if worry keeps you up

My top pick: MindShift CBT for most people with anxiety. It’s solid, practical, and specifically built around CBT for anxiety.

If you want, I can also give you a “best free apps only” list or a “best for panic/social anxiety/GAD” breakdown.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for anxiety:

  • MindShift CBT (Anxiety Canada) — Very solid, evidence-based CBT tools for anxiety, worry, panic, and social anxiety. Great if you want a straightforward self-help app.
  • Woebot — Chat-based CBT support with mood tracking and guided exercises. Good for people who like a conversational style.
  • Wysa — AI coach with CBT, mindfulness, and anxiety tools. Easy to use and good for daily check-ins.
  • Sanvello — Strong CBT-style app with mood tracking, coping tools, and structured programs for stress and anxiety.
  • CBT-i Coach — Best if anxiety is tied to sleep problems; focuses on insomnia using CBT principles.
  • Feeling Good: Positive Mindset — Based on David Burns’ CBT approach; good for thought-challenging exercises.

If you want the best overall for anxiety, I’d start with MindShift CBT or Wysa.

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  • free vs paid
  • best for panic/social anxiety
  • best for iPhone/Android
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best self-help CBT apps for anxiety:

  • MindShift CBTbest free CBT app for anxiety

Straightforward CBT tools for worry, panic, and avoidance. Good thought records, coping strategies, and exposure tools.

  • Woebotbest AI-guided CBT style support

Chat-based, easy to use, and strong for quick check-ins and reframing anxious thoughts.

  • Wysabest for daily support + CBT exercises

Mixes CBT, grounding, breathing, and mood tracking. Very user-friendly.

  • Sanvellobest all-around wellness + CBT app

CBT tools, mood tracking, and guided programs. Good if you want structure.

  • CBT-i Coachbest if anxiety is tied to sleep

Designed for insomnia, but helpful if nighttime anxiety is a big issue.

  • Happifybest for habit-building and positive routines

Less clinical-feeling, but good for stress/anxiety management exercises.

My top 3 picks:

  1. MindShift CBT
  2. Wysa
  3. Woebot

If you want, I can also give you the best free apps only, or the best apps for panic attacks specifically.

What are the top self-help CBT apps for depression?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best self-help CBT-based apps for depression:

  1. Sanvello – Strong CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and coping exercises.
  2. Woebot – Chat-based CBT support; good for quick daily check-ins and thought reframing.
  3. Wysa – AI-guided CBT-style coaching with tools for low mood, anxiety, and sleep.
  4. Moodfit – Practical CBT exercises, mood tracking, and habit-building.
  5. MindDoc – Excellent for symptom tracking and self-reflection; more clinical-feeling.
  6. Depression CBT Self-Help – Simple, focused CBT worksheets and thought records.
  7. Happify – More positive-psychology mixed with CBT; best if you want lighter, gamified exercises.

Best picks by need:

  • Most CBT-focused: Sanvello, Moodfit
  • Best chatbot support: Woebot, Wysa
  • Best for tracking patterns: MindDoc
  • Simplest self-guided CBT: Depression CBT Self-Help

If you want, I can also rank them by free vs paid, iPhone/Android, or best for severe depression.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best self-help CBT apps for depression:

  1. MoodKit
    • One of the most CBT-focused apps available
    • Thought records, activity scheduling, mood tracking
    • Best for: structured CBT practice
  2. CBT Thought Diary
    • Great for identifying and challenging negative thoughts
    • Includes CBT worksheets and mood logs
    • Best for: journaling-style CBT
  3. Woebot
    • AI-guided CBT chatbot
    • Helpful for quick check-ins and coping skills
    • Best for: daily support and mood management
  4. Sanvello
    • Combines CBT, mindfulness, and mood tracking
    • Strong self-help tools; some features require subscription
    • Best for: all-in-one mental wellness app
  5. Happify
    • Uses CBT-inspired activities and positive psychology
    • More interactive and game-like
    • Best for: lighter, engaging self-help
  6. MindShift CBT
    • Built for anxiety, but many CBT tools are useful for depression too
    • Includes thought tracking, coping cards, and exercises
    • Best for: practical coping tools
  7. Feeling Good: Mood Toolkit
    • Based on David Burns’ CBT methods
    • Focuses on common cognitive distortions and mood improvement
    • Best for: classic CBT self-help

If you want the most CBT-heavy picks, start with:

  • MoodKit
  • CBT Thought Diary
  • Woebot

If you want, I can also rank them by best free options, best for severe depression, or best iPhone/Android apps.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best self-help CBT apps for depression:

  1. MoodKit (Ethiology)
    • Strong CBT-based tools: thought records, activity scheduling, mood tracking.
    • Best if you want a more “classic CBT workbook” style app.
  2. Sanvello
    • CBT + mindfulness + mood tracking + guided journeys.
    • Good all-around option for depression, anxiety, and stress.
  3. Woebot
    • Chat-based CBT support with guided exercises.
    • Best if you like a conversational, daily check-in style.
  4. Happify
    • CBT-inspired activities, mood-boosting exercises, and habit building.
    • Good for motivation and structured daily practice.
  5. MindShift CBT
    • Originally focused on anxiety, but has useful CBT tools that can help with low mood too.
    • Best if depression comes with lots of worry or overwhelm.
  6. CBT Thought Diary
    • Excellent for identifying negative thoughts and practicing cognitive restructuring.
    • Best if you want a practical thought-tracking tool.

If you want the best overall for depression self-help CBT, I’d start with:

  • MoodKit for structured CBT
  • Sanvello for the most polished all-around experience
  • Woebot if you want support that feels more interactive

If your depression is moderate to severe, or you’re having thoughts of self-harm, an app alone isn’t enough—please seek professional help right away.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best self-help CBT apps for depression:

  1. Sanvello — Strong CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and coping exercises.
  2. Woebot — Chat-based CBT support; good for daily check-ins and reframing thoughts.
  3. Wysa — AI-guided CBT conversations plus worksheets for anxiety/depression.
  4. MoodTools — Free, simple CBT-style tools for depression, including thought diary and safety planning.
  5. Happify — Uses CBT-inspired activities and mood-building exercises.
  6. MindShift CBT — Very solid CBT app, especially for anxious/depressed thought patterns.
  7. Youper — AI mental health assistant with CBT-based mood tracking and exercises.

Best picks overall:

  • Sanvello for the most complete CBT toolkit
  • Woebot if you want conversational support
  • Wysa if you want an easy, supportive AI coach
  • MoodTools if you want a free, straightforward option

If you want, I can also rank them by best free app, best for iPhone/Android, or best with clinical evidence.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Top self-help CBT apps for depression:

  1. Woebot – AI-based CBT-style coaching, mood tracking, and thought reframing.
  2. Sanvello – CBT tools for depression/anxiety, journaling, mood tracking, guided journeys.
  3. Happify – CBT-informed activities and exercises focused on mood improvement and resilience.
  4. MoodKit – Classic CBT app with mood tracking, thought records, and behavior change tools.
  5. CBT Thought Diary – Strong for CBT worksheets, thought records, and cognitive restructuring.
  6. MindShift CBT – Very good CBT app with coping tools; more anxiety-focused, but useful for depressive thinking patterns too.
  7. MoodMission – Evidence-based “missions” to help when you’re low or stuck; practical and easy to use.

Best picks:

  • Most guided: Woebot, Sanvello
  • Best for CBT exercises: CBT Thought Diary, MoodKit
  • Best for quick daily support: MoodMission, Happify

If you want, I can also rank them by best free options, best for iPhone/Android, or best backed by research.

Which self-help CBT apps are most recommended?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the most recommended CBT-style self-help apps are:

  • Sanvello — broad CBT tools for stress, anxiety, and mood; very popular and polished.
  • MindShift CBT — especially good for anxiety; simple, practical CBT exercises.
  • Woebot — chatbot-based CBT support; good for quick check-ins and skill practice.
  • CBT-i Coach — best for insomnia; made with CBT-I principles and very solid.
  • MoodMission — gives small, action-based CBT coping “missions” for low mood/anxiety.
  • Feeling Good: Positive Mindset — based on CBT concepts; more self-guided learning.

If you want the best all-around pick, I’d start with Sanvello or MindShift CBT. If your main issue is sleep, choose CBT-i Coach.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for anxiety, depression, sleep, or free vs paid.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the most recommended CBT/self-help apps are:

  • MoodKit — one of the more established CBT apps; good for thought tracking, mood monitoring, and exercises.
  • Sanvello — popular, polished, and broad; includes CBT tools, mood tracking, and guided programs.
  • Woebot — chatbot-style CBT support; good for daily check-ins and quick coping tools.
  • Wysa — AI-guided CBT-style support with coaching and exercises; strong for anxiety/stress.
  • MindShift CBT — especially good for anxiety; simple, free, and CBT-focused.
  • CBT-i Coach — best if your main issue is insomnia/sleep.

If you want the best all-around pick, I’d start with Sanvello or Wysa. If you want the best free anxiety-focused option, try MindShift CBT. If you want sleep help, use CBT-i Coach.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for anxiety, depression, sleep, or free features.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A few of the most commonly recommended CBT-based self-help apps are:

  • Woebot — very strong on CBT-style guided conversations and mood check-ins.
  • Wysa — good for CBT tools, journaling, and anxiety support.
  • Sanvello — one of the more established apps for CBT, mood tracking, and guided programs.
  • MindShift CBT — especially good for anxiety and worry.
  • CBT Thought Diary — great if you want a straightforward CBT thought-record app.
  • MoodKit — solid CBT-focused mood and behavior tools.
  • MoodGym — more “course-like,” with classic CBT exercises.

If you want the best free/low-cost options, start with MindShift CBT, Woebot, and Wysa. If you want the most structured CBT practice, try CBT Thought Diary or MoodKit.

If you want, I can narrow these down by anxiety, depression, or insomnia.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A few CBT-based self-help apps are most often recommended:

  • MoodKit — one of the most CBT-pure apps; great for thought tracking, mood logging, and behavioral activation.
  • MindShift CBT — especially good for anxiety and panic; very practical and easy to use.
  • Sanvello — broad CBT tools for stress, anxiety, and depression; polished and popular.
  • CBT-i Coach — best if insomnia is the main issue; built around CBT for insomnia.
  • Woebot — CBT-style conversational coaching; good for quick daily check-ins.
  • Happify — more skills-based and positive-psychology flavored, but includes CBT-style exercises.

If you want the most “classic CBT” feel, start with MoodKit or MindShift CBT. If you want, I can also rank them by best for anxiety, depression, or sleep.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A few of the most commonly recommended self-help CBT apps are:

  • Sanvello – strong all-around CBT tools for anxiety, stress, and mood tracking.
  • MindShift CBT – especially good for anxiety; very user-friendly and free in many regions.
  • Woebot – chatbot-style CBT support; good for quick daily check-ins.
  • CBT Thought Diary – best if you want structured thought records and journaling.
  • MoodTools – solid free option for depression-focused CBT exercises.
  • Youper – blends CBT-style tools with mood tracking and AI-guided conversations.

If you want the best overall picks:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Depression/self-guided journaling: CBT Thought Diary or MoodTools
  • Most polished all-around: Sanvello

If you tell me your goal—anxiety, depression, panic, or stress—I can narrow it to the top 2.

What are the best CBT apps overall? 390/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

The best CBT apps overall are usually these:

  1. CBT-i Coach — best for insomnia / sleep-focused CBT
    • Free, well-known, and structured
    • Good if your main issue is sleep
  2. Woebot — best for daily CBT-style support
    • Chat-based, easy to use, very accessible
    • Good for mood tracking and coping skills
  3. MoodKit — best for classic CBT journaling and thought work
    • Strong on mood tracking, thought records, and behavior activation
    • Feels more like a real CBT workbook app
  4. Sanvello — best all-around CBT + anxiety/stress
    • Good toolkit: mood tracking, coping tools, guided exercises
    • One of the most polished mainstream options
  5. MindShift CBT — best for anxiety
    • Practical CBT tools specifically for worry, panic, and phobias
    • Free and very straightforward
  6. Youper — best for AI-guided self-help
    • Good conversational CBT-style exercises
    • Useful if you like a more interactive app
My quick picks
  • Overall best: Sanvello
  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best for sleep: CBT-i Coach
  • Best for structured CBT exercises: MoodKit

If you want, I can also rank the best free CBT apps or the best CBT apps for anxiety/depression/sleep specifically.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall CBT apps, in my view:

  1. CBT Thought Diary — best for pure CBT tracking
    • Strong thought records, cognitive distortions, mood tracking, and homework-style exercises.
  2. MoodKit — best overall for structured CBT tools
    • Very practical, especially for self-help, behavior activation, and daily mood work.
  3. MindShift CBT — best for anxiety-focused CBT
    • Great if your main issue is anxiety, panic, or worry.
  4. Woebot — best for guided, conversational CBT
    • Feels like a coach; good for quick check-ins and CBT-style reframing.
  5. Sanvello — best all-around wellness + CBT app
    • Mixes CBT, mood tracking, community features, and coping tools.

If you want just one pick: MoodKit for general CBT, or MindShift CBT if anxiety is the main goal.

If you want, I can also rank the best free CBT apps specifically.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best CBT apps overall:

  1. Woebot — Best overall for guided CBT-style support
    • Chat-based, very easy to use
    • Strong for thought reframing, mood check-ins, and coping tools
  2. MindShift CBT — Best free CBT app
    • Built specifically around CBT for anxiety
    • Great tools for worry, panic, and avoidance
  3. Sanvello — Best for structured self-help
    • CBT, mood tracking, guided journeys, and coping exercises
    • More polished “all-in-one” mental health app
  4. CBT Thought Diary — Best for classic CBT journaling
    • Excellent for thought records, cognitive distortions, and triggers
    • Best if you want a very CBT-first experience
  5. Youper — Best AI-powered CBT coaching
    • Fast conversational support with CBT-style exercises
    • Good for daily emotional check-ins
  6. Happify — Best for habit-building and positive psychology plus CBT
    • More wellness-oriented, but includes CBT-based activities
    • Good if you want something lighter and more gamified

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Woebot
  • Best free: MindShift CBT
  • Best for journaling: CBT Thought Diary
  • Best all-in-one paid app: Sanvello

If you want, I can also rank the best CBT apps for anxiety, depression, or insomnia specifically.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best CBT apps overall I’d look at:

  1. Woebotbest overall for guided CBT
    • Strongest “CBT-style coach” feel
    • Fast, conversational, easy to stick with
  2. Wysabest for anxiety + daily check-ins
    • Good CBT-based tools, grounding, thought reframing
    • More flexible if you want self-guided support
  3. Sanvellobest all-around structured CBT app
    • Mood tracking, CBT lessons, coping tools
    • Good if you want a more traditional app experience
  4. MindShift CBTbest free CBT app for anxiety
    • Especially solid for worry, panic, and stress
    • Simple and practical
  5. CBT-i Coachbest CBT app for sleep
    • Specifically for insomnia using CBT-I
    • Very effective if sleep is the main issue

If you want one pick, I’d start with Woebot or Wysa. If you want, I can also give you the best CBT apps by goal (anxiety, depression, insomnia, free, or therapist-supported).

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Best CBT apps overall:

  1. Wysa
    • Best all-around for CBT-style self-help
    • Strong mood tracking, guided CBT chats, anxiety tools, and solid UX
  2. Sanvello
    • Best for structured CBT programs
    • Good mix of CBT, mindfulness, mood tracking, and community features
  3. MindDoc
    • Best for mood tracking + CBT exercises
    • Great if you want to log symptoms and get personalized insights
  4. MoodMission
    • Best for quick CBT-based coping tasks
    • Very practical for anxiety, stress, and low mood
  5. Woebot
    • Best chatbot-style CBT support
    • Good for short, conversational CBT check-ins
  6. CBT-i Coach
    • Best for CBT for insomnia
    • Excellent if sleep is the main issue

My top pick overall: Wysa Best for sleep: CBT-i Coach Best structured program: Sanvello

If you want, I can also give you the best free CBT apps or the best CBT apps for anxiety specifically.

What are the most popular CBT therapy apps?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the most popular CBT-based apps are:

  • Woebot — AI-guided CBT-style support for mood tracking, reframing thoughts, and quick check-ins.
  • Sanvello — Very popular for CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and peer support.
  • MindShift CBT — Great for anxiety; uses CBT exercises, thought records, and coping tools.
  • CBT-i Coach — Best known for CBT for insomnia; free app from the VA/DoD.
  • MoodTools — CBT-oriented app for depression, with thought diary and safety planning tools.
  • Feeling Good: Positive Mindset — CBT-based self-help exercises, journaling, and mood tracking.
  • What’s Up? — Free app with CBT, ACT, and mindfulness tools for anxiety and depression.
  • Youper — AI mental health app with CBT-style conversations and mood tracking.

If you want, I can also narrow these down by best for anxiety, best for depression, or best free apps.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the most popular CBT-focused apps are:

  • Wysa — AI-guided CBT exercises, mood tracking, and chat support
  • Woebot — CBT-based chatbot for thought reframing and mood help
  • Sanvello — CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and community support
  • MindShift CBT — very popular for anxiety; built around CBT techniques
  • MoodKit — classic CBT app with thought records and mood tracking
  • CBT Thought Diary — strong for journaling, cognitive restructuring, and patterns
  • CBT-i Coach — best known for CBT for insomnia (sleep-focused CBT)
  • Happify — includes CBT-style activities and mental wellness exercises

If you want, I can also rank them by best for anxiety, best free options, or best for iPhone/Android.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the most popular CBT-focused apps are:

  • Woebot — AI chat-based CBT support, mood tracking, quick exercises.
  • Wysa — CBT-style coaching/chatbot, anxiety and stress tools, journaling.
  • Sanvello — CBT programs for anxiety/depression, mood tracking, coping tools.
  • MindShift CBT — Anxiety-focused CBT app from Anxiety Canada; very practical.
  • Moodnotes — CBT-based thought journaling and cognitive reframing.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Strong CBT thought records, mood logs, and homework-style tools.
  • Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy — Based on David Burns’ CBT principles.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for anxiety, best free options, or best for iPhone/Android.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the most popular CBT-based therapy apps:

  • Woebot — chatbot-style CBT support; very well known for daily check-ins and thought reframing.
  • Wysa — AI-assisted CBT tools plus coaching options; one of the biggest mental health apps globally.
  • Sanvello — CBT, mindfulness, and mood tracking; popular with people managing stress, anxiety, and depression.
  • MindShift CBT — a straightforward CBT app from Anxiety Canada, especially popular for anxiety.
  • CBT-i Coach — great if you want CBT for insomnia specifically; made with the VA and Stanford.
  • MoodKit — one of the classic CBT apps, focused on mood tracking and behavior change.

If you want the best overall picks:

  • Anxiety/stress: Wysa or Sanvello
  • Insomnia: CBT-i Coach
  • Simple CBT tools: MoodKit or MindShift CBT
  • Chatbot support: Woebot

If you want, I can also rank them by best free app, best iPhone/Android, or best for anxiety vs depression.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the most popular CBT-based therapy apps are:

  • Woebot — AI-guided CBT chat tool; very well-known for daily check-ins and coping exercises.
  • Wysa — Popular AI mental health app with CBT tools, mood tracking, and optional human coaching.
  • Sanvello — Offers CBT, mindfulness, mood tracking, and guided programs; widely used.
  • MindShift CBT — From Anxiety Canada; great for anxiety, with CBT tools and thought-challenging exercises.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Strong for structured CBT journaling, cognitive distortions, and thought records.
  • Happify — Uses CBT-style activities and positive psychology exercises for stress and mood.
  • MoodKit — CBT-based mood tracking and activity planning; long-time favorite on iOS.
  • Intellect — Includes CBT-style self-help programs and habit tools.

If you want the best picks by use case:

  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best AI coach: Wysa or Woebot
  • Best journaling/thought records: CBT Thought Diary
  • Best all-around program: Sanvello

If you want, I can also rank the best free CBT apps or best apps for iPhone/Android.

Which apps offer CBT exercises for mental health?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A few well-known apps that offer CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) exercises for mental health:

  • Woebot — chat-based CBT tools, mood tracking, and guided exercises
  • Sanvello — CBT-based tools for anxiety, stress, and depression
  • MindShift CBT — focused on anxiety; includes thought records and coping exercises
  • MoodKit — CBT and positive psychology tools, journaling, and mood tracking
  • CBT Thought Diary — structured thought records and CBT worksheets
  • Happify — activity-based exercises inspired by CBT and positive psychology
  • Feeling Good: Mood Toolkit — CBT exercises based on Dr. David Burns’ work

If you want, I can also narrow this down by free vs paid, best for anxiety, or best for depression.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are a few well-known apps that offer CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) exercises:

  • MoodKit — guided CBT tools, thought tracking, activity scheduling
  • CBT Thought Diary — structured CBT worksheets, thought records, mood tracking
  • MindShift CBT — CBT exercises for anxiety, worry, and panic
  • Sanvello — CBT-based tools for stress, anxiety, and depression
  • Woebot — chatbot that uses CBT techniques and mood check-ins
  • Youper — AI-guided CBT-style conversations and emotional tracking
  • CBT-i Coach — CBT for insomnia (sleep-focused CBT)
  • BetterHelp / Talkspace — therapy apps; not just CBT exercises, but therapists may use CBT methods

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best free CBT apps, apps for anxiety, or apps for insomnia.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some popular apps that offer CBT-style exercises for mental health:

  • Woebot — guided CBT-based chat tools and mood tracking
  • MoodKit — CBT exercises, thought checking, activity planning
  • Sanvello — CBT tools for anxiety, stress, and depression
  • MindShift CBT — built around CBT for anxiety
  • CBT-i Coach — CBT for insomnia, with sleep tools and exercises
  • Daylio — mood tracking with CBT-style journaling prompts
  • Youper — AI chat plus CBT techniques and mood tracking
  • Headspace — not purely CBT, but has CBT-informed courses for stress/anxiety

If you want, I can also narrow these down by free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or best for anxiety/depression/insomnia.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some well-known apps that offer CBT-style exercises for mental health:

  • Woebot — chatbot-based CBT exercises, mood check-ins, thought reframing
  • Wysa — AI chatbot with CBT tools, breathing, journaling, anxiety exercises
  • Sanvello — CBT-based mood tracking, coping tools, guided programs
  • MindShift CBT — focused on anxiety; thought records, coping cards, exposure tools
  • CBT Thought Diary — classic CBT thought records, cognitive restructuring, mood logs
  • MoodKit — CBT activities, mood tracking, thought-checking exercises
  • Happify — structured activities based on CBT and positive psychology
  • Youper — AI-guided emotional check-ins and CBT-informed exercises

If you want, I can narrow these down by best free options, best for anxiety, or best for depression.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A few well-known apps that offer CBT-based exercises for mental health:

  • Woebot — chatbot-style CBT tools for mood, stress, and thought reframing
  • Sanvello — CBT mood tracking, guided journeys, coping tools
  • MindShift CBT — from Anxiety Canada; strong for anxiety, with CBT exercises and exposure tools
  • MoodKit — CBT-style mood tracking and thought/behavior exercises
  • Moodnotes — helps identify thinking traps and practice CBT reframing
  • Happify — includes CBT-inspired activities for stress and anxiety
  • MindDoc — mood tracking plus CBT-oriented self-reflection tools

If you want, I can also rank these by best for anxiety, best free options, or best iPhone/Android apps.

What are the best apps for CBT-based self-help?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps:

  1. Sanvello
    • Strong CBT tools for mood tracking, thought reframing, coping plans, and guided journeys.
    • Best all-around option for structured self-help.
  2. MoodKit
    • Very CBT-focused, with mood tracking, thought journal, and behavior activation tools.
    • Good if you want a more “classic CBT worksheet” feel.
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Designed for anxiety, with CBT exercises, worry tools, and exposure help.
    • Best for anxiety specifically.
  4. Woebot
    • Chat-based CBT support with quick check-ins and thought-challenging exercises.
    • Best if you like a more conversational format.
  5. CBT-i Coach
    • Official app for insomnia, using CBT-I methods.
    • Best if sleep is the main issue.
  6. Happify
    • Uses CBT-style activities plus positive psychology exercises.
    • Good for general mood support, though a bit broader than pure CBT.

If you want the best single pick, I’d start with Sanvello. If you want anxiety-specific, choose MindShift CBT. If you want sleep, choose CBT-i Coach.

If you want, I can also give you the best free CBT apps or best iPhone/Android options.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps:

  • MindShift CBT — very solid for anxiety; uses CBT tools like thought records, coping cards, and exposure help.
  • Woebot — AI-guided CBT-style chat support; good for quick daily check-ins and reframing thoughts.
  • CBT Thought Diary — excellent for classic CBT exercises like thought logs, cognitive distortions, and mood tracking.
  • Sanvello — broader mental health app with CBT tools, mood tracking, and guided programs.
  • MoodTools — simple, free-feeling CBT-oriented app, especially useful for depression support and thought restructuring.
  • Happify — more activity-based and skills-focused; some CBT elements, but a bit more wellness-oriented.

Best overall for CBT practice: CBT Thought Diary Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT Best for conversational support: Woebot

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best app for anxiety vs depression vs panic.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps:

  • MoodKit (iOS) — Strongest “pure CBT” app for thought tracking, mood monitoring, and restructuring negative thoughts.
  • Sanvello (iOS/Android) — Good all-around CBT app for anxiety, stress, and low mood; includes tools, tracking, and guided programs.
  • Woebot (iOS/Android) — Chat-based CBT support; helpful for quick check-ins and coping exercises.
  • MindShift CBT (iOS/Android) — Great for anxiety, worry, panic, and social anxiety; very practical and easy to use.
  • CBT Thought Diary (iOS/Android) — Good if you want a straightforward thought record and CBT journaling app.
  • CBT-i Coach (iOS/Android) — Best if your main issue is insomnia; built around CBT for sleep.
  • Daylio (iOS/Android) — Not strictly CBT, but excellent for mood tracking and identifying triggers/patterns.

Best picks by need

  • Best overall CBT self-help: Sanvello
  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best for thought records/journaling: CBT Thought Diary
  • Best for sleep: CBT-i Coach
  • Best chat-style support: Woebot

If you want, I can also rank these for free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or anxiety vs depression vs insomnia.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps:

  • MindShift CBT (Anxiety Canada) — one of the best free CBT apps for anxiety, worry, panic, and avoidance. Very practical and evidence-informed.
  • Sanvello — strong CBT tools for mood, stress, and anxiety; includes thought tracking, coping exercises, and guided programs.
  • Woebot — chat-based CBT support for mood and anxiety; good if you like a more conversational format.
  • CBT Thought Diary — excellent for classic CBT thought records, cognitive restructuring, and tracking patterns.
  • MoodKit — a solid CBT app focused on mood improvement with behavior activation and thought monitoring.
  • Daylio — not pure CBT, but great for mood tracking and spotting behavior/mood patterns that CBT uses.
  • CBT-i Coach — best if your main issue is insomnia; built around CBT for insomnia.
  • Roots — a newer CBT-style mental health app with journaling, coping tools, and guided self-reflection.

Best picks by goal:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • General CBT self-help: CBT Thought Diary or Sanvello
  • Sleep: CBT-i Coach
  • Chat-style support: Woebot

If you want, I can also give you a “best free apps” list or rank them for iPhone vs Android.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based self-help apps:

  • Woebot — Best for guided CBT-style check-ins and mood support
  • Wysa — Strong for CBT tools, thought-challenging, and anxiety support
  • MindShift CBT — Excellent if you want a straightforward CBT app for anxiety
  • Sanvello — Good all-around app for mood tracking, CBT exercises, and coping tools
  • MoodMission — Great for quick CBT-based “missions” when you’re stressed or low
  • CBT-i Coach — Best if your main issue is insomnia/sleep (CBT for insomnia)

If you want the best picks by goal:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT, Wysa
  • Depression/mood support: Woebot, Sanvello
  • Sleep: CBT-i Coach
  • Quick daily coping: MoodMission

If you want, I can also rank these for iPhone/Android, free vs paid, or best for anxiety specifically.

What are the top apps for guided CBT techniques?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best-known apps for guided CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) techniques:

  1. Woebot
    • AI-guided CBT conversations, mood tracking, and coping tools
    • Good for quick, structured support between therapy sessions
  2. Wysa
    • CBT-based chat coach with mood check-ins, thought reframing, and grounding exercises
    • Good if you like a more supportive, flexible chatbot style
  3. Sanvello
    • CBT tools, mood tracking, guided programs for stress/anxiety/depression
    • Good all-around option with a polished, app-like curriculum
  4. MindShift CBT
    • Designed specifically for anxiety
    • Includes CBT exercises for worry, panic, and social anxiety
  5. CBT-i Coach
    • Best for insomnia
    • Built around CBT for sleep, with sleep diary and behavioral tools
  6. MoodKit
    • Classic CBT app with thought records, mood tracking, and activity planning
    • Good if you want a more traditional CBT workbook feel
  7. Feeling Good: Positive Mindset
    • Based on CBT-style techniques and mood improvement exercises
    • Simple, structured, and beginner-friendly

If you want, I can also rank these by best for anxiety, depression, or sleep, or suggest the best free options.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best apps for guided CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) techniques:

  1. Woebot
    • Strong for conversational, CBT-style coaching
    • Good for thought reframing, mood tracking, coping tools
  2. Bloom
    • Uses CBT exercises, guided journaling, and structured mental health activities
    • Very user-friendly for daily practice
  3. Sanvello
    • One of the most established CBT apps
    • Includes mood tracking, guided journeys, and coping tools for anxiety/depression
  4. MindShift CBT
    • Designed specifically for anxiety
    • Great for CBT tools like thought records, worry management, and exposure support
  5. CBT Thought Diary
    • Best if you want a more structured CBT worksheet approach
    • Excellent for tracking automatic thoughts and cognitive distortions
  6. Youper
    • AI-guided emotional check-ins with CBT techniques
    • Helpful for quick daily use and mood awareness

Best overall: Sanvello or MindShift CBT Best for chat-style guidance: Woebot Best for journaling/worksheets: CBT Thought Diary

If you want, I can also narrow these down by anxiety, depression, insomnia, or OCD.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best-known apps for guided CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) techniques:

  1. Wysa — AI-guided CBT exercises, mood tracking, and coping tools.
  2. Woebot — Chat-based CBT support with daily check-ins and thought exercises.
  3. Sanvello — Strong CBT-based tools for anxiety, stress, and depression, plus mood tracking.
  4. MindShift CBT — Very CBT-focused, especially good for anxiety and worry.
  5. CBT Thought Diary — Great for structured thought records and cognitive reframing.
  6. BetterHelp / Talkspace — Not CBT-only, but you can work with a therapist who uses CBT techniques.

Best picks by need:

  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best all-around: Sanvello
  • Best guided chatbot style: Wysa or Woebot
  • Best for thought records: CBT Thought Diary

If you want, I can also narrow this down to the best free apps, best iPhone apps, or best apps for anxiety vs depression.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best-known apps for guided CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) techniques:

  1. Woebot
    • AI chat-based CBT coaching
    • Good for quick daily check-ins, mood tracking, and reframing thoughts
  2. Sanvello
    • Structured CBT tools for anxiety, stress, and depression
    • Includes thought tracking, coping exercises, guided journeys, and mood tracking
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Designed specifically around CBT for anxiety
    • Strong for worry logs, coping cards, and practical anxiety exercises
  4. CBT Thought Diary
    • Very CBT-focused journaling app
    • Great for identifying cognitive distortions and doing thought records
  5. Happify
    • Uses CBT-style activities plus positive psychology
    • Good if you want short, gamified exercises
  6. MoodKit
    • Classic CBT app with mood tracking, thought tools, and activity planning
    • Best for people who want a straightforward self-help approach

Best overall picks:

  • For anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • For guided support/conversation: Woebot
  • For structured self-help: Sanvello
  • For thought records/journaling: CBT Thought Diary

If you want, I can also give you the best free CBT apps or the best apps for anxiety specifically.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best guided CBT apps:

  1. Wysa — AI-guided CBT exercises, mood tracking, anxiety tools
  2. Woebot — CBT-based chatbot for daily check-ins and coping skills
  3. MindShift CBT — strong for anxiety; includes thought restructuring, exposure tools
  4. Sanvello — CBT, mindfulness, mood tracking, community support
  5. CBT Thought Diary — excellent for CBT journaling and thought records
  6. Feeling Good: Positive Mindset — CBT-style tools focused on depression/anxiety
  7. What’s Up? — simple CBT and DBT techniques, very user-friendly
  8. Intellect — structured CBT programs with guided modules

Best picks by use case:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT, Wysa
  • Journaling/thought records: CBT Thought Diary
  • Chatbot coaching: Woebot, Wysa
  • All-around wellness: Sanvello

If you want, I can also rank these by free features, best iPhone/Android app, or best for anxiety vs depression.

What are the best mental health apps with CBT tools?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best mental health apps with solid CBT tools:

  • Wysa — AI-guided CBT exercises, thought reframing, journaling, anxiety support.
  • Woebot — Chat-based CBT coaching; very good for quick daily check-ins and thought challenging.
  • MindShift CBT — Great for anxiety; includes thought records, coping cards, exposure tools, and worry trackers.
  • Sanvello — CBT-based mood tracking, guided journeys, coping tools, and community support.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Strong for structured CBT: thought records, cognitive distortions, mood tracking.
  • Moodnotes — Simple, polished CBT-style journaling and thought pattern tracking.
  • Feeling Good — Based on David Burns’ CBT methods; useful for mood and cognitive reframing.
  • Happify — More positive-psychology plus CBT-inspired activities; good for stress and resilience.

Best picks by need:

  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best chatbot-style support: Woebot or Wysa
  • Best for journaling/thought records: CBT Thought Diary
  • Best all-around: Sanvello

If you want, I can also give you the best free CBT apps or best apps for anxiety/depression specifically.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best mental health apps with CBT tools:

  1. Wysa
    • Best for: anxiety, stress, mood tracking
    • CBT tools: thought reframing, guided exercises, journaling, coping skills
    • Why it stands out: very polished and easy to use
  2. Woebot
    • Best for: daily check-ins and CBT-style coaching
    • CBT tools: thought challenging, mood support, behavioral activation
    • Why it stands out: chatbot-based, good for quick support
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Best for: anxiety and worry
    • CBT tools: worry logs, thinking traps, coping statements, exposure tools
    • Why it stands out: one of the most straightforward CBT apps
  4. Sanvello
    • Best for: stress, anxiety, and depression
    • CBT tools: mood tracking, guided journeys, thought journals, coping techniques
    • Why it stands out: broader mental health platform with strong CBT features
  5. Happify
    • Best for: building resilience and improving mood
    • CBT tools: CBT-based activities, gratitude, mindfulness, reframe exercises
    • Why it stands out: more game-like and engaging
  6. CBT-i Coach
    • Best for: insomnia
    • CBT tools: sleep diary, stimulus control, sleep restriction, relaxation
    • Why it stands out: excellent if sleep is a major issue

Best overall picks:

  • Wysa for the best mix of usability and CBT tools
  • MindShift CBT if anxiety is your main concern
  • Sanvello if you want a more complete mental health app

If you want, I can also rank these by free vs paid, best for anxiety, or best for depression.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best mental health apps with solid CBT tools:

  • Sanvello — Probably the most CBT-focused mainstream app. Good for mood tracking, thought reframing, coping tools, and guided programs.
  • Wysa — Strong for CBT-style chat exercises, journaling, anxiety tools, and quick coping support. Easy to use daily.
  • MindShift CBT — Great if your main focus is anxiety. Very practical CBT exercises, thought records, and exposure tools.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Best for structured CBT journaling and challenging negative thoughts. More “workbook” than chatbot.
  • Moodnotes — Simple, polished app for recognizing thinking traps and practicing CBT reframing.
  • Woebot — CBT-based chatbot with check-ins and guided exercises; helpful for short, frequent support.
  • BetterHelp app — Not a CBT tool app specifically, but many therapists on it use CBT methods if you want therapist-guided support.

If you want the best overall CBT app, I’d start with Sanvello or Wysa. If you want anxiety-specific CBT, choose MindShift CBT. If you want structured journaling, choose CBT Thought Diary.

If you want, I can also rank these by free features, iPhone/Android, or best for anxiety/depression.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best mental health apps with CBT tools:

  1. Woebot
    • Best for: guided CBT-style chat support
    • Strengths: mood check-ins, thought reframing, coping tools
  2. Sanvello
    • Best for: CBT + mood tracking + guided programs
    • Strengths: thought journals, anxiety/stress tools, structured lessons
  3. MindShift CBT
    • Best for: anxiety and worry
    • Strengths: CBT exercises, exposure tools, coping statements, thought records
  4. MoodKit
    • Best for: classic CBT homework and mood tracking
    • Strengths: thought diary, activity planning, mood improvement tools
  5. CBT-i Coach
    • Best for: insomnia with CBT-I tools
    • Strengths: sleep scheduling, sleep diary, stimulus control, relaxation tools
  6. BetterHelp
    • Best for: access to a therapist plus CBT-style support
    • Strengths: live counseling, worksheets, messaging, broader mental health support
  7. Talkspace
    • Best for: therapist-led CBT and ongoing support
    • Strengths: therapy access, async messaging, structured care plans

If you want the best free options:

  • MindShift CBT
  • CBT-i Coach
  • Woebot (limited/free features depending on region)

If you want the best overall CBT app:

  • Sanvello

If you tell me whether you want help with anxiety, depression, insomnia, or stress, I can narrow it down to the top 3.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-focused mental health apps:

  • Woebot — AI chat-based CBT exercises, mood tracking, quick daily check-ins. Best for short, guided support.
  • Wysa — CBT tools, thought reframing, anxiety exercises, journaling. Good if you want a more flexible chatbot + self-help app.
  • Sanvello — Strong CBT toolkit with mood tracking, coping plans, guided journeys. Best for structured self-help.
  • MoodKit — One of the most CBT-heavy apps: thought records, activities, mood tracking. Best for classic CBT worksheets.
  • MindShift CBT — Excellent for anxiety, worry, panic, and exposure-based coping tools. Best if anxiety is the main issue.
  • CBT-i Coach — Best for insomnia and sleep-related CBT tools, from the VA. Great if sleep is your main concern.

Best overall picks:

  • Best CBT tools overall: MoodKit
  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best for chat-style support: Wysa or Woebot
  • Best for sleep: CBT-i Coach

If you want, I can also rank the best free apps vs best paid apps.

Which self-guided CBT apps are worth trying?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A few self-guided CBT apps worth trying:

  • MoodKit (iOS) — one of the most “classic” CBT apps; good for mood tracking, thought records, and behavioral activation.
  • MindShift CBT (iOS/Android) — strong for anxiety, worry, panic, and exposure-style tools.
  • Sanvello (iOS/Android) — broad CBT-based app with mood tracking, coping tools, and guided programs.
  • MoodTools (Android/iOS) — simple, free, and solid for depression-focused CBT exercises.
  • CBT-i Coach (iOS/Android) — best if your main issue is insomnia; built around CBT for sleep.
  • Woebot (iOS/Android) — AI-guided CBT-style check-ins; useful for quick daily support.

If you want the shortest shortlist:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Depression / general CBT: MoodKit or Sanvello
  • Sleep: CBT-i Coach

If you tell me your main issue (anxiety, depression, panic, sleep, overthinking), I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A few self-guided CBT apps are actually worth trying:

  • Woebot — best for short, conversational CBT exercises and mood check-ins. Good if you want something very easy to stick with.
  • Wysa — solid CBT-based chatbot plus tools for anxiety, sleep, and stress. One of the better all-around options.
  • MindShift CBT — great for anxiety specifically. Practical CBT tools, thought challenges, and coping strategies.
  • Sanvello — more full-featured mood/anxiety tracking with CBT lessons, goal-setting, and community features.
  • MoodKit — one of the more classic CBT apps; good for structured mood tracking and thought records.
  • MoodMission — useful if you want “what should I do right now?” style CBT coping missions.
  • CBT Thought Diary — strong for thought records and cognitive restructuring if you like writing things out.
  • MoodGym — older but evidence-based; good if you want a course-like CBT program rather than a chat app.

Best picks by need:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT, Wysa
  • Chatbot style: Woebot, Wysa
  • Structured CBT journaling: CBT Thought Diary, MoodKit
  • Self-paced course: MoodGym, Sanvello

If you want, I can also rank these by best free options, best for anxiety, or best for depression.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A few self-guided CBT apps that are generally worth trying:

  • MoodKit (iOS) — one of the more CBT-pure options; good for thought records, mood tracking, and practical exercises.
  • Woebot (iOS/Android) — chatbot-style CBT support; very easy to use, especially if you want something conversational.
  • Sanvello (iOS/Android) — solid mix of CBT tools, mood tracking, and coping exercises; a good all-around app.
  • MindDoc (iOS/Android) — strong for monitoring mood patterns and getting CBT-informed insights over time.
  • CBT Thought Diary (iOS/Android) — good if you want structured thought-challenging and journaling.
  • BetterHelp’s “Regain”/app tools aren’t really self-guided CBT, so I’d skip those if you want true DIY CBT.

If you want the shortest path:

  • Best for structured CBT: MoodKit
  • Best for ease of use: Woebot
  • Best all-rounder: Sanvello
  • Best for tracking patterns: MindDoc

If you tell me iPhone or Android and whether you want anxiety, depression, insomnia, or panic support, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A few self-guided CBT apps worth trying:

  • MindShift CBT — very solid, free, and straightforward for anxiety. Good tools for worry, panic, and avoidance.
  • Woebot — chatbot-style CBT that’s good for quick check-ins and thought reframing. More guided than truly self-led.
  • Wysa — CBT-based, supportive, and easy to use; nice for mood tracking plus coping exercises.
  • Sanvello — structured CBT tools for stress/anxiety/depression; good if you want a fuller program.
  • CBT Thought Diary — best if you want the classic CBT workflow: track thoughts, challenge them, and log patterns.

If you want the shortest answer: MindShift CBT and CBT Thought Diary are the strongest “pure CBT” picks; Wysa and Woebot are better if you want a more conversational experience.

If you want, I can also rank them for anxiety vs depression vs panic, or give free vs paid options.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A few self-guided CBT apps are actually worth a look:

  • MoodGym — classic CBT-style app/course; good if you want structured exercises and mood tracking.
  • Woebot — chatbot-based CBT; nice for quick daily check-ins and thought reframing.
  • Youper — AI-guided mood tracking + CBT/ACT tools; polished and easy to use.
  • Sanvello — one of the more established mental health apps; CBT tools, journaling, coping exercises.
  • MindDoc — strong for mood tracking and patterns; more reflective than chatty.
  • CBT-i Coach — best if your main issue is sleep/insomnia, not general anxiety.
  • MindShift CBT — solid for anxiety management, especially if you like simple, practical tools.

If you want the shortest “start here” list:

  1. Woebot for quick daily CBT
  2. Sanvello for a fuller toolkit
  3. MindShift CBT for anxiety
  4. CBT-i Coach for sleep

If you want, I can also rank these by best for anxiety, depression, or sleep.

What are the best CBT apps for stress and anxiety?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the best CBT-based apps for stress and anxiety are:

  1. Wysa
    • AI-guided CBT tools, mood tracking, breathing exercises
    • Good for everyday stress and anxious thoughts
  2. Woebot
    • CBT-style chat support with guided exercises
    • Best if you like a conversational, check-in style app
  3. Sanvello
    • CBT, mindfulness, mood tracking, and coping tools
    • Strong all-around option for anxiety and stress
  4. MindShift CBT
    • Built specifically for anxiety
    • Very practical for worry, panic, and avoidance
  5. CBT Thought Diary
    • Excellent for thought records and cognitive restructuring
    • Best if you want a more “classic CBT worksheet” approach
  6. Headspace
    • Not pure CBT, but includes great anxiety/stress tools and guided meditation
    • Good complement to CBT apps
  7. Calm
    • Best for relaxation, sleep, and stress reduction
    • Less CBT-focused, but useful alongside one

Best overall:

  • Sanvello for a full CBT toolkit
  • MindShift CBT for anxiety specifically
  • Wysa if you want something simple and interactive

If you want, I can also narrow this down to free apps, best for panic attacks, or best iPhone/Android options.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for stress and anxiety:

  1. Wysa — Great for everyday stress/anxiety support
    • CBT-informed coaching, mood tracking, guided exercises
    • Good if you want a friendly chatbot + self-help tools
  2. MindShift CBT — Best free CBT app for anxiety
    • Built specifically for anxiety symptoms
    • Strong tools for worry, panic, and avoidance
  3. Sanvello — Best all-around CBT app
    • CBT exercises, journaling, mood tracking, guided journeys
    • Good mix of self-help and structure
  4. Woebot — Best chatbot-style CBT experience
    • Short, conversational CBT check-ins
    • Helpful if you like quick daily support
  5. CBT Thought Diary — Best for journaling and thought records
    • Classic CBT thought-challenging format
    • Great for identifying triggers and reframing thoughts
  6. Headspace — Best for stress + anxiety reduction with CBT-like tools
    • More mindfulness-focused, but has solid stress/anxiety content
    • Good if your anxiety is tied to overwhelm and sleep
  7. Calm — Best for relaxation and sleep support
    • Not strictly CBT, but useful alongside CBT for stress reduction
    • Strong for relaxation, breathing, and sleep

Best picks overall:

  • Best free: MindShift CBT
  • Best structured CBT: Sanvello
  • Best chatbot: Wysa or Woebot
  • Best journaling: CBT Thought Diary

If you want, I can narrow this down to free apps only, iPhone/Android, or the best app for panic attacks/social anxiety.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for stress and anxiety:

  • Headspace — great for stress reduction, mindfulness, and anxiety support; very polished and easy to use.
  • Calm — strong for stress management, sleep, breathing, and relaxation; less CBT-specific but very effective.
  • Sanvello — one of the most CBT-focused apps; includes mood tracking, thought reframing, and coping tools.
  • Woebot — chatbot-style CBT coach; good for quick daily check-ins and cognitive reframing.
  • MindShift CBT — specifically designed for anxiety; uses CBT tools like exposure, worry tracking, and thought challenges.
  • FearTools — simple, free CBT app focused on anxiety management, thought diaries, and exposure tools.
  • BetterHelp app — not a CBT app exactly, but useful if you want access to a therapist who can use CBT techniques.

Best pick overall for CBT: Sanvello or MindShift CBT Best for ease of use: Headspace or Calm Best free option: FearTools

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best free CBT apps, or
  2. the best CBT apps for panic attacks vs generalized anxiety.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for stress and anxiety:

  1. MoodMission
    • Strong CBT-style exercises for anxious or stressed moments
    • Good for “what do I do right now?” situations
  2. MindShift CBT
    • Made specifically for anxiety
    • Uses CBT tools for worry, panic, and avoidance
    • Free and very practical
  3. Sanvello
    • Combines CBT, mood tracking, guided journeys, and coping tools
    • Good if you want a more complete mental health app
  4. Woebot
    • Chat-based CBT support
    • Helpful for daily check-ins and reframing thoughts
    • Best for people who like conversational support
  5. CBT-i Coach
    • Best if anxiety is affecting sleep
    • Built around CBT principles for insomnia, but useful for stress-related sleep issues too
    • Free, from the VA
  6. Headspace
    • Not pure CBT, but includes evidence-based anxiety/stress tools
    • Better for mindfulness + calming than structured CBT

Best picks by use case:

  • Best overall CBT anxiety app: MindShift CBT
  • Best for quick coping tools: MoodMission
  • Best if you want chat support: Woebot
  • Best all-in-one option: Sanvello

If you want, I can also give you a free-only list or rank them for iPhone vs Android.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for stress and anxiety:

  1. Sanvello
    • Best all-around CBT app for anxiety/stress
    • Offers mood tracking, CBT tools, coping exercises, and guided journeys
  2. Headspace
    • Best for stress reduction with a CBT-adjacent approach
    • Strong mindfulness content plus courses for anxiety and sleep
  3. Calm
    • Best for relaxation and sleep
    • Less CBT-focused, but very good for lowering stress and improving sleep
  4. Woebot
    • Best chatbot-style CBT support
    • Uses CBT techniques in brief, conversational check-ins
  5. MindShift CBT
    • Best free CBT app for anxiety
    • Built specifically for anxiety management, with practical CBT tools
  6. Moodkit
    • Best for structured self-help CBT exercises
    • Includes thought records, mood tracking, and activity scheduling

If you want the best picks by goal:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT or Sanvello
  • Stress: Headspace or Calm
  • CBT exercises: Moodkit or Woebot

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best free apps only
  • the best iPhone/Android apps
  • or a top 3 ranking based on your needs.
What are the best CBT apps for emotional wellbeing?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for emotional wellbeing:

  • MindShift CBT — Great for anxiety, worry, and stress. Very practical CBT tools, thought challenging, and coping strategies.
  • Woebot — A chat-based CBT app that helps you work through thoughts and emotions in a conversational way.
  • Sanvello — Strong for mood, stress, and anxiety; includes CBT exercises, tracking, and guided journeys.
  • MoodKit — Good for structured CBT activities and mood tracking; more therapist-like and practical.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Excellent if you want to track thoughts, emotions, and cognitive distortions in a classic CBT format.
  • BetterHelp / Talkspace — Not CBT apps per se, but useful if you want CBT with a licensed therapist through an app.

Best overall for most people: Sanvello or MindShift CBT Best for thought tracking: CBT Thought Diary Best conversational experience: Woebot

If you want, I can also give you the best free CBT apps, or recommend one based on anxiety, depression, or stress.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for emotional wellbeing:

  1. Wysa — Great all-around CBT chatbot + exercises for anxiety, stress, and low mood.
  2. Woebot — Strong CBT-style check-ins and mood support; very easy to use.
  3. Sanvello — Best if you want structured CBT tools, mood tracking, and guided self-help.
  4. MindShift CBT — Excellent for anxiety, worry, and panic; very practical CBT tools.
  5. MoodKit — One of the most solid pure CBT apps for thought tracking and behavior change.
  6. CBT Thought Diary — Best for journaling, reframing thoughts, and tracking patterns.
  7. Youper — AI-assisted emotional check-ins with CBT-inspired techniques.

Best picks by need:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT, Wysa
  • General emotional wellbeing: Wysa, Sanvello
  • Thought journaling: CBT Thought Diary, MoodKit
  • Chat-based support: Woebot, Youper

If you want, I can also give you the best free CBT apps or the best CBT apps for iPhone vs Android.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for emotional wellbeing:

  1. Woebot
    • AI-guided CBT-style check-ins, mood tracking, and coping tools
    • Good for quick daily support and stress management
  2. MoodMission
    • Helps you choose a “mission” based on how you feel, using CBT and behavioral strategies
    • Great for anxiety, low mood, and feeling stuck
  3. Youper
    • CBT-informed emotional tracking and guided conversations
    • Good for self-reflection and understanding patterns
  4. Sanvello
    • CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and mindfulness
    • Strong all-around option for anxiety and stress
  5. MindShift CBT
    • Built specifically for anxiety using CBT techniques
    • Best if anxiety is your main concern
  6. CBT Thought Diary
    • Classic CBT thought records, behavior tracking, and reframing tools
    • Best if you want a more structured CBT approach
  7. Happify
    • Uses CBT, positive psychology, and stress-reduction exercises
    • Good for building healthy habits and resilience

Best overall picks:

  • Sanvello for a full-featured CBT app
  • MindShift CBT for anxiety
  • CBT Thought Diary for a more traditional CBT experience

If you want, I can also narrow this down by anxiety, depression, stress, or free apps only.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for emotional wellbeing:

  • Wysa — Best all-around. CBT tools, mood tracking, journaling, and guided chats. Good for anxiety, stress, and low mood.
  • Woebot — Best for quick daily check-ins. Uses CBT-style conversations to help reframe thoughts.
  • MindShift CBT — Best for anxiety. Very practical CBT exercises, thought records, and coping tools.
  • Sanvello — Best for structured self-help. Includes mood tracking, CBT lessons, and tools for stress and depression.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Best for journaling and thought challenging. Strong if you like written exercises.
  • Moodfit — Best for tracking. Combines CBT tools with mood, sleep, and habit tracking.
  • Happify — Best for positivity and resilience. More CBT-adjacent, with science-based activities and games.

My top picks:

  • Wysa for most people
  • MindShift CBT if anxiety is the main issue
  • CBT Thought Diary if you want a more hands-on CBT journal

If you want, I can also narrow these down by anxiety, depression, stress, or insomnia.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-based apps for emotional wellbeing:

  1. Sanvello — strong all-around CBT tools for stress, anxiety, and mood tracking.
  2. Woebot — chatbot-style CBT support; good for quick check-ins and coping exercises.
  3. MindDoc (formerly Moodpath) — excellent for mood tracking plus CBT-informed insights over time.
  4. Bloom — highly polished, beginner-friendly CBT exercises with a more guided feel.
  5. MoodMission — great for “what do I do right now?” support with practical CBT missions.
  6. Feeling Good — based on David Burns’ CBT methods; good for self-guided cognitive restructuring.
  7. CBT Thought Diary — useful for thought records, reframing, and journaling.

Best picks by use case:

  • Best overall: Sanvello
  • Best for quick support: Woebot
  • Best for mood tracking: MindDoc
  • Best for practical daily exercises: MoodMission

If you want, I can also narrow this down to the best free apps, best iPhone apps, or best for anxiety/depression specifically.

What are the leading CBT app options?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the leading CBT-focused apps are:

  • Woebot — AI-guided CBT-style check-ins, mood tracking, and quick coping tools.
  • Wysa — CBT, mindfulness, and journaling with AI chat support plus human coach options.
  • Sanvello — CBT programs for anxiety, stress, and depression; includes mood tracking and coping exercises.
  • MindShift CBT — Designed for anxiety; strong CBT tools, thought reframing, and exposure exercises.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Excellent for structured CBT journaling and thought records.
  • MoodKit — CBT-based mood improvement tools, activities, and thought tracking.
  • Youper — AI mental health assistant with CBT-style conversations and mood tracking.

If you want the best overall picks:

  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best journaling/thought records: CBT Thought Diary
  • Best AI-guided support: Wysa or Woebot
  • Best all-around consumer app: Sanvello

If you want, I can also rank these by cost, evidence, iPhone/Android, or best for anxiety vs depression.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the leading CBT-focused app options:

  • Wysa — AI-guided CBT-style exercises, mood tracking, journaling, and human coaching add-ons.
  • Woebot — Chatbot-based CBT tools for anxiety, depression, and thought reframing.
  • Youper — CBT/ACT-style conversations, mood tracking, and emotional check-ins.
  • Sanvello — Strong CBT toolkit with mood tracking, guided journeys, and peer support.
  • MindShift CBT — Very good for anxiety; practical CBT exercises, exposure tools, and coping strategies.
  • CBT Thought Diary — More structured CBT journaling for identifying and challenging thoughts.
  • MoodTools — Free, basic CBT support focused on depression, thought records, and safety planning.
  • Happify — Broader mental wellness app with CBT-informed activities and games.
  • Headspace / Calm — Not pure CBT, but useful if you want mindfulness plus some CBT-style stress tools.

Best picks by use case:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT, Sanvello
  • Depression / thought tracking: CBT Thought Diary, MoodTools
  • Chat-style support: Wysa, Woebot, Youper
  • All-around wellness: Sanvello, Happify

If you want, I can also rank them by best free option, best for anxiety, or best for iPhone/Android.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Some of the leading CBT-focused app options are:

  • Woebot — AI-guided CBT-style support for mood, anxiety, and thought reframing.
  • Sanvello — CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and coaching/community options.
  • MindShift CBT — Strong for anxiety; built around CBT exercises, coping tools, and exposure strategies.
  • MoodMission — Uses CBT-based “missions” to help with low mood and anxiety in the moment.
  • CBT-i Coach — Best if your main issue is insomnia; CBT for insomnia from the VA.
  • Happify — More broad mental wellness app, but includes CBT-based activities and habit tools.
  • BetterHelp / Talkspace — Not CBT apps specifically, but can connect you with therapists who use CBT.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for anxiety, depression, or insomnia.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the leading CBT-focused apps:

  • Woebot — AI-guided CBT-style chat support, good for daily check-ins and thought reframing.
  • Wysa — AI chatbot plus human coaching option; strong for anxiety, stress, and CBT exercises.
  • MindShift CBT — Free CBT app from Anxiety Canada; excellent for anxiety tools and exposure exercises.
  • CBT Thought Diary — Solid journaling app for tracking thoughts, emotions, and cognitive distortions.
  • Sanvello — CBT-based self-help with mood tracking, coping tools, and community features.
  • BetterHelp — Not a pure CBT app, but offers licensed therapists who often use CBT.
  • Talkspace — Similar to BetterHelp; therapy platform with CBT-capable clinicians.

If you want the best pure CBT self-help apps, I’d start with MindShift CBT, Woebot, and CBT Thought Diary.

If you want, I can also rank them for anxiety, depression, or free vs paid.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Leading CBT-style app options:

  • Woebot — AI-guided CBT check-ins, mood tracking, coping tools; strong for quick daily support.
  • Wysa — CBT-based chatbot plus exercises, journaling, and human coach add-on; good for anxiety and stress.
  • Sanvello — CBT tools, mood tracking, guided journeys, and community features; one of the most established.
  • MindShift CBT — from Anxiety Canada; very solid free option focused on anxiety, worry, and avoidance.
  • Moodnotes — CBT-inspired thought tracking and cognitive reframing; simple and well-designed.
  • Youper — AI mental health assistant with CBT-style techniques and mood tracking.
  • Happify — more CBT/positive-psychology blended, with structured activities and programs.

If you want the best free CBT app, start with MindShift CBT. If you want the most polished all-around paid option, look at Sanvello or Wysa. If you want chatbot-style support, try Woebot or Wysa.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for anxiety, best for depression, or best free apps only.

What are the best apps that teach CBT skills?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-focused apps:

  • Moodkit — one of the more CBT-pure apps; good for thought records, mood tracking, and behavioral activation.
  • Woebot — chatbot-style support using CBT techniques; easy to use and good for quick check-ins.
  • Sanvello — strong for CBT, mindfulness, and mood tracking; polished and widely used.
  • MindShift CBT — specifically designed for anxiety; very practical CBT tools and coping strategies.
  • CBT Thought Diary — excellent for thought challenging and journaling; very close to a classic CBT worksheet format.
  • Daylio — not strictly CBT, but great for mood tracking and spotting patterns that support CBT work.

If you want the best overall CBT learning app, I’d start with Moodkit or CBT Thought Diary. If your main issue is anxiety, try MindShift CBT.

If you want, I can also rank these by free vs paid, iPhone vs Android, or best for anxiety/depression.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-focused apps:

  • MoodKit — one of the strongest true CBT apps; helps with thought records, behavior activation, and mood tracking.
  • Woebot — chatbot-style CBT coaching with daily check-ins and guided exercises.
  • CBT Thought Diary — excellent for thought records, cognitive restructuring, and tracking patterns.
  • Sanvello — CBT-based tools for stress, anxiety, mood tracking, and guided journeys.
  • MindShift CBT — especially good for anxiety; simple, practical CBT strategies.
  • Feeling Good: Mood Training — based on David Burns’ CBT methods; solid for reframing negative thoughts.

Best picks by goal:

  • Most comprehensive CBT tools: MoodKit
  • Best for anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Best thought diary: CBT Thought Diary
  • Best conversational coaching: Woebot

If you want, I can also give you the best free CBT apps or the best CBT apps for anxiety/depression specifically.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-focused apps:

  1. Woebot
    • Guided CBT chats, mood tracking, thought reframing
    • Best for: quick daily support and CBT practice
  2. MoodKit
    • One of the most CBT-heavy apps: thought records, activity scheduling, mood logs
    • Best for: structured self-help CBT
  3. CBT Thought Diary
    • Strong for tracking negative thoughts, cognitive distortions, and alternative thoughts
    • Best for: journaling and cognitive restructuring
  4. MindShift CBT
    • Created for anxiety; includes CBT tools, exposure exercises, coping statements
    • Best for: anxiety and panic symptoms
  5. Sanvello
    • CBT lessons, mood tracking, coping tools, community support
    • Best for: all-around mental health support
  6. Youper
    • AI chat + CBT-style exercises + mood tracking
    • Best for: conversational, easy-to-use CBT practice

If you want the most “pure CBT” experience, I’d start with MoodKit or CBT Thought Diary. For anxiety, MindShift CBT is excellent.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for anxiety, depression, or budget/free options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best CBT-focused apps:

  1. Woebot — conversational CBT-based support, good for quick thought reframing.
  2. MindShift CBT — great for anxiety; teaches CBT tools, exposure, and coping strategies.
  3. Sanvello — strong CBT modules for stress, anxiety, and depression tracking.
  4. MoodKit — solid CBT + behavioral activation exercises; very practical.
  5. CBT Thought Diary — excellent for thought records and cognitive restructuring.
  6. Feeling Good: Positive Mindset — based on classic CBT principles, simple and structured.

Best overall for learning CBT skills: MindShift CBT or MoodKit Best for thought records: CBT Thought Diary Best conversational coach: Woebot

If you want, I can also rank them for anxiety, depression, or free vs paid.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A few of the best CBT-skills apps:

  • Woebot — conversational CBT-style coaching; great for quick thought reframing and mood check-ins.
  • MindShift CBT — one of the strongest CBT apps for anxiety; includes tools for worry, panic, and avoidance.
  • Sanvello — polished app with CBT tools, mood tracking, and guided programs for stress/anxiety.
  • CBT-i Coach — best if your main issue is insomnia; based on CBT for insomnia.
  • MoodTools — simple, free, and useful for depression-oriented CBT exercises and thought records.
  • Therapy Assistance Online (TAO) — more structured CBT modules; good if you want a course-like feel.

Best overall for most people: MindShift CBT or Sanvello. Best free/simple option: MoodTools. Best for insomnia: CBT-i Coach.

If you want, I can also rank them by anxiety, depression, insomnia, or free features.

Which CBT apps are good for daily practice?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A few good CBT apps for daily practice:

  • MindDoc — good for mood tracking, CBT-style check-ins, and daily reflections.
  • Woebot — chat-based CBT exercises; very easy for quick daily use.
  • Moodkit — classic CBT app with thought records, activity scheduling, and mood tracking.
  • CBT Thought Diary — strong for journaling, cognitive restructuring, and tracking patterns.
  • Sanvello — CBT tools, guided journeys, mood tracking, and coping exercises.
  • I Am Sober — not pure CBT, but useful if your daily practice is tied to habit change and accountability.

If you want the best simple daily CBT habit, I’d start with:

  1. CBT Thought Diary for structured exercises
  2. MindDoc for tracking
  3. Woebot for quick daily check-ins

If you want, I can also suggest the best free CBT apps or the best ones for anxiety/depression specifically.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Good CBT apps for daily practice:

  • MindShift CBT — great for anxiety, simple daily exercises, thought records, coping tools.
  • Moodnotes — excellent for tracking thoughts and spotting thinking traps; very CBT-focused.
  • CBT Thought Diary — strong for daily journaling, cognitive restructuring, and homework-style practice.
  • Sanvello — broad CBT/mood-tracking app with guided exercises and daily check-ins.
  • Woebot — chat-based CBT coach; good for quick daily support and skill practice.
  • MoodMission — offers small “missions” based on how you’re feeling; very practical for daily use.

If you want the best pick by goal:

  • Anxiety: MindShift CBT
  • Thought journaling: Moodnotes or CBT Thought Diary
  • Chat-style support: Woebot
  • General daily mental fitness: Sanvello

If you want, I can also narrow these down to free vs paid or iPhone vs Android.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Good CBT apps for daily practice:

  • MindShift CBT — great for anxiety; simple CBT tools, thought records, coping cards.
  • MoodTools — solid for depression; includes thought diary and behavior activation.
  • CBT Thought Diary — one of the best for daily thought tracking and restructuring.
  • Woebot — chat-based CBT-style coaching; good for quick daily check-ins.
  • Sanvello — polished app with CBT exercises, mood tracking, and guided programs.
  • Youper — AI-guided mood journaling with CBT/DBT-style exercises.
  • Feeling Good: Positive Mindset — based on CBT ideas; useful for thought reframing.

If you want the best overall for daily CBT practice, I’d start with:

  1. CBT Thought Diary
  2. MindShift CBT
  3. Sanvello

If you tell me whether you want help for anxiety, depression, panic, or overthinking, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are good CBT apps for daily practice:

  • MoodKit (iOS) — strong CBT tools, mood tracking, thought records, and behavior activation.
  • Sanvello (iOS/Android) — guided CBT exercises, mood tracking, and daily coping tools.
  • MindShift CBT (iOS/Android) — simple, practical CBT for anxiety, with daily check-ins and coping strategies.
  • CBT Thought Diary (iOS/Android) — excellent for journaling, cognitive restructuring, and tracking patterns.
  • Woebot (iOS/Android) — chat-based CBT practice; good for short daily check-ins.
  • Happify (iOS/Android) — more broad than pure CBT, but has helpful daily exercises for stress and mood.

If you want the best ones for daily CBT practice, I’d start with:

  1. CBT Thought Diary
  2. MindShift CBT
  3. MoodKit (if you use iPhone)

If you tell me whether you want anxiety, depression, or general stress, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Good CBT apps for daily practice:

  • MoodKit (iOS) — very CBT-focused, with mood tracking and thought exercises.
  • CBT-i Coach (iOS/Android) — best if sleep is a big issue; CBT-based and free.
  • Sanvello (iOS/Android) — strong for daily mood tracking, thought reframing, and guided tools.
  • MindShift CBT (iOS/Android) — good for anxiety, with practical CBT exercises.
  • Woebot (iOS/Android) — chatbot-style CBT check-ins and daily support.
  • Daylio (iOS/Android) — not pure CBT, but excellent for habit + mood tracking to support CBT practice.

If you want the most “pure CBT” feel, start with MoodKit or MindShift CBT. If you want something easier for daily check-ins, try Sanvello or Woebot.

If you tell me iPhone or Android and whether you want anxiety, depression, or sleep, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

All 72 prompts run for Daylio

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Daylio known for?
  • 2 What are Daylio's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Daylio? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Daylio compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Daylio?
  • 6 What is a typical self-help cbt app known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best CBT apps for managing anxiety symptoms? discovery
  • 2 Which CBT apps are good for depression support? discovery
  • 3 What are the best CBT apps for panic attacks? discovery
  • 4 What are the best CBT apps for social anxiety? discovery
  • 5 Which CBT apps help with negative thoughts? discovery
  • 6 What are the best CBT apps for sleep anxiety? discovery
  • 7 What are the best CBT apps for stress management? discovery
  • 8 Which CBT apps are best for beginners? discovery
  • 9 What are the best CBT apps with journaling features? discovery
  • 10 Which CBT apps have mood tracking? discovery
  • 11 What are the best CBT apps for teens? discovery
  • 12 What are the best CBT apps for adults? discovery
  • 13 Which CBT apps are good for managing overthinking? discovery
  • 14 What are the best CBT apps for intrusive thoughts? discovery
  • 15 What are the best CBT apps for building coping skills? discovery
  • 16 Which CBT apps offer structured daily lessons? discovery
  • 17 What are the best CBT apps with guided exercises? discovery
  • 18 What are the best CBT apps for self-esteem? discovery
  • 19 Which CBT apps are best for managing worry? discovery
  • 20 What are the best CBT apps for relapse prevention? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to the leading CBT app? comparison
  • 22 What are the best alternatives to a top CBT therapy app? comparison
  • 23 How do the best CBT apps compare for anxiety support? comparison
  • 24 What is the best alternative to a premium CBT app? comparison
  • 25 Which CBT apps are better for self-guided therapy? comparison
  • 26 What are the best alternatives to a CBT app with mood tracking? comparison
  • 27 Which CBT apps are best if I want more exercises and less reading? comparison
  • 28 What are the best alternatives to a CBT app for beginners? comparison
  • 29 How do CBT apps compare on cost and features? comparison
  • 30 Which CBT apps are best alternatives for daily habit building? comparison
  • 31 How do I deal with anxiety without seeing a therapist? problem
  • 32 What can I do about constant overthinking? problem
  • 33 How do I manage negative thoughts during the day? problem
  • 34 How can I calm panic attacks at home? problem
  • 35 What helps with social anxiety in everyday situations? problem
  • 36 How do I build better coping skills for stress? problem
  • 37 How can I improve my mood with self-help tools? problem
  • 38 What should I do if I keep worrying too much? problem
  • 39 How do I challenge unhelpful thoughts? problem
  • 40 How can I start CBT exercises on my own? problem
  • 41 How much do CBT apps cost per month? transactional
  • 42 Are there free CBT apps for anxiety? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest CBT app? transactional
  • 44 Do CBT apps have free trials? transactional
  • 45 Which CBT apps are worth paying for? transactional
  • 46 What CBT apps offer a free version? transactional
  • 47 How much is a premium CBT app subscription? transactional
  • 48 Are CBT apps covered by insurance? transactional
  • 49 Which CBT apps are best value for money? transactional
  • 50 Can I get a CBT app for free? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best self-help CBT apps for anxiety?
  • 2 What are the top self-help CBT apps for depression?
  • 3 Which self-help CBT apps are most recommended?
  • 4 What are the best CBT apps overall? 390/mo
  • 5 What are the most popular CBT therapy apps?
  • 6 Which apps offer CBT exercises for mental health?
  • 7 What are the best apps for CBT-based self-help?
  • 8 What are the top apps for guided CBT techniques?
  • 9 What are the best mental health apps with CBT tools?
  • 10 Which self-guided CBT apps are worth trying?
  • 11 What are the best CBT apps for stress and anxiety?
  • 12 What are the best CBT apps for emotional wellbeing?
  • 13 What are the leading CBT app options?
  • 14 What are the best apps that teach CBT skills?
  • 15 Which CBT apps are good for daily practice?