Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)
The Gold-Standard Treatment for OCD and Anxiety What It Is and How It Works
Natalie Noel, LMHC | Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists | Tampa, FL
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You have probably searched for information about OCD or anxiety treatment and seen the same letters come up again and again: ERP. It is described as the gold-standard treatment, the most effective approach, the one with the strongest research behind it.
But what does it actually mean? What happens in an ERP session? Is it as scary as it sounds? And how do you know if a therapist is really trained in it or just saying they are?
This page answers all of those questions clearly and honestly. ERP is what we do at Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists. It is not one of many approaches we use it is the core of how we treat OCD, anxiety disorders, phobias, and related conditions. We have been providing ERP-based treatment since 2014, with training from some of the most respected OCD programs in the country.
In-person sessions are provided in Tampa and virtual sessions are available throughout Florida and New York.
Quick Answer: What Is ERP?
ERP stands for Exposure and Response Prevention. It is a highly structured, evidence-based therapy that works by helping people gradually face the thoughts, situations, or objects that trigger their anxiety or OCD without performing the compulsions, rituals, or avoidance behaviors that would normally follow. Over time, the brain learns that anxiety decreases on its own without the compulsion, and that the feared outcomes do not happen. ERP consistently produces the strongest outcomes of any psychological treatment for OCD and is also highly effective for phobias, panic disorder, PTSD, health anxiety, and other anxiety conditions.
Why ERP Works The Science in Plain Language
To understand why ERP works, it helps to understand what is keeping OCD and anxiety going in the first place.
Anxiety in OCD, phobias, panic, and related conditions survives through avoidance. When something triggers anxiety, the natural response is to escape it or to do something that makes the feeling stop. In OCD, that means performing a compulsion. In a phobia, it means avoiding the feared situation. In panic disorder, it means using safety behaviors that prevent the feared catastrophe or panic attack.
Avoidance works in the short term. The anxiety drops. Relief follows. The problem is that avoidance also sends a powerful message to the brain: that situation was dangerous. That thought was a real threat. That feeling required urgent action. The brain updates its threat-detection system accordingly and the next time the trigger appears, the anxiety fires even faster and even stronger.
This is the cycle that ERP breaks.
ERP does not work by making anxiety go away. It works by changing what the brain learns from anxiety. When a person faces a trigger and the anxiety rises and then stays with that anxiety without performing a compulsion the brain receives a different message: this was not dangerous. I can handle this. The relief comes on its own. Over time, the anxiety response weakens. The compulsion loses its grip. Recovery happens. The person is increases their tolerance of anxiety, guilt, or disgust.
Habituation and Inhibitory Learning
ERP works through two related mechanisms. The first is habituation the natural decrease in anxiety that occurs when you stay in contact with a feared situation long enough without escape. The second and more current understanding is inhibitory learning. This means the brain does not erase the old fear response but builds a new, competing response alongside it: this situation is safe. This is why ERP produces lasting change rather than temporary relief. The new learning is stronger and more flexible than the original fear.
What Conditions Does ERP Treat?
ERP was originally developed for OCD and it remains the most evidence-based treatment for OCD by a significant margin. But the principles of ERP apply to any condition where anxiety is maintained by avoidance and compulsive behavior.
| Condition | How ERP Is Used |
|---|---|
| OCD | Exposures target the specific obsessions contamination, harm, symmetry, intrusive thoughts while blocking the compulsions that follow. ERP is the first-line treatment for OCD across all subtypes. |
| Phobias | Exposures target the feared object or situation dogs, heights, needles, flying in a graduated hierarchy from least to most anxiety-provoking, until the fear response weakens. |
| Panic Disorder | Exposures include interoceptive exposure (deliberately inducing physical sensations that mimic panic) and situational exposure to places or situations where panic has occurred, while blocking safety behaviors. |
| Health Anxiety | Exposures target feared medical situations, symptoms, and health-related searches or checks while blocking reassurance-seeking and excessive medical consultation. |
| Social Anxiety | Exposures target feared social situations conversations, evaluations, public speaking while blocking avoidance, safety behaviors, and self-monitoring. |
| PTSD | A form of ERP called Prolonged Exposure (PE) involves structured contact with traumatic memories and avoided situations until distress decreases naturally. |
| BFRBs (Hair Pulling, Skin Picking) | Habit Reversal Training a related behavioral approach uses competing responses to the urge to pull or pick, targeting the trigger-behavior cycle directly. |
What ERP Is NOT, Clearing Up Common Fears
ERP has a reputation that is sometimes scarier than the reality. Here is what ERP is not:
| What People Fear About ERP | What ERP Actually Involves |
|---|---|
| Being thrown into your worst fear immediately | Starting with steps you agree are manageable working up gradually |
| Being forced to do things you are not ready for | Every step is agreed upon collaboratively nothing is forced |
| Having to touch contaminated things until you are disgusted | Exposures are designed around your specific triggers and goals |
| The therapist dismissing how real the anxiety feels | The anxiety is taken completely seriously the response to it is what changes |
| Being told to just stop the compulsions cold turkey | Compulsions are reduced gradually, with support and a clear plan |
| Endless sessions with no end in sight | A structured, time-limited treatment typically 8 to 15 sessions for OCD |
ERP is not about being brave enough to white-knuckle through your fears. It is a careful, collaborative, evidence-based process. Your therapist builds the exposure ladder with you and nothing goes on that ladder without your knowledge and agreement. The pace is yours. The steps are yours. What changes is what your brain learns from each step.
How ERP Works Session by Session
Here is what a typical course of ERP looks like from the first appointment through the end of treatment:
| Step | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Sessions 1–2: Assessment and Psychoeducation | A thorough evaluation of your specific OCD or anxiety presentation the triggers, the compulsions or avoidance behaviors, how long it has been going on, and how it is affecting your life. Co-occurring conditions are assessed. Exposure hierarchy is created and first exposures completed. You learn exactly how OCD or anxiety works the obsession-compulsion cycle, why avoidance maintains fear, and how ERP interrupts the cycle. This understanding is the foundation for everything that follows. Many people find this session alone produces significant relief. Exposure hierarchy is created and first exposures completed during second session. The faster you get to exposure, the fast you will feel better. |
| Sessions 3 and beyond | Active ERP sessions. You face items on your hierarchy starting with lower-level steps while deliberately not performing the compulsion or avoidance behavior. Anxiety rises, peaks, and then with time decreases on its own. This process is practiced in session and assigned for home practice between sessions. |
| Final Sessions: Generalization & Relapse Prevention | Exposures are extended to real-world settings. You build a relapse prevention plan identifying warning signs, knowing what to do if OCD or anxiety worsens, and having a clear picture of how to use your ERP skills going forward. The goal is independence, not dependence on the therapist. |
Between-Session Practice Why It Matters
ERP is not only what happens in the therapy room. It is one of the few therapies where between-session practice is genuinely essential to outcomes. It is required, not just recommended.
Research consistently shows that clients who engage in daily ERP practice between sessions improve significantly faster than those who only practice during sessions. This is because the brain learns through repeated exposure and the more exposures that happen across different situations and settings, the more generalizable and durable the new learning becomes.
Home practice assignments are always discussed and agreed upon in session before you leave. They are calibrated to your current position on the hierarchy challenging but manageable. Your therapist reviews home practice at the start of each session and adjusts accordingly.
ERP for Children How It Is Adapted
ERP is highly effective for children and adolescents with OCD and anxiety and it looks somewhat different from adult ERP in important ways
- Playful and engaging: For younger children, ERP is woven into activities, games, and age-appropriate challenges. The OCD is often named and externalized given a character the child can boss back rather than approached as a clinical protocol.
- Developmental pacing: The exposure hierarchy and the language used to explain it are adapted to the child's developmental level what works for a 7-year-old is very different from what works for a 15-year-old.
- Parent involvement is built in: Parents are not in the waiting room. They are active participants learning the ERP model, how to support exposures at home, how to stop accommodating OCD, and how to coach their child through difficult moments.
- School coordination: When OCD or anxiety is affecting school, we coordinate with teachers and school counselors with the family's permission to support the child's ERP work in the school environment.
We work with children as young as 5 using ERP. Early treatment consistently produces the best outcomes because the avoidance patterns and accommodation habits that make OCD harder to treat are less entrenched in younger children.
ERP vs. Other Therapy Approaches
Not all therapy is the same and for OCD and anxiety disorders, the differences matter significantly. Many people spend years in therapy that does not produce meaningful improvement not because therapy does not work, but because the wrong kind of therapy was used.
ERP vs. General Talk Therapy
General talk therapy exploring feelings, discussing history, processing emotions is not the same as ERP. For OCD specifically, talking about obsessions without a structured exposure component can actually feed the OCD cycle by giving it more material to work with. Many people with OCD have spent years in talk therapy with little improvement because the talk therapy becomes more about obtaining reassurance, a compulsion.
ERP vs. CBT
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is a broad category that includes many approaches. ERP is technically a behavioral component of CBT. For OCD, the behavioral component the exposure work is the most critical active ingredient. Cognitive work alone (challenging thoughts) is less effective for OCD than ERP, though it plays a useful supporting role. For anxiety disorders more broadly, both the cognitive and behavioral components of CBT are important.
ERP vs. EMDR
EMDR is an evidence-based treatment primarily used for trauma and PTSD not OCD. Some therapists use EMDR for anxiety, and research in this area is developing. For OCD specifically, ERP has substantially stronger research support than EMDR. For PTSD, Prolonged Exposure (which is ERP-based) and EMDR both have strong research support.
ERP vs. Medication
Medication particularly SSRIs can be an important part of OCD and anxiety treatment for many people. For moderate to severe OCD, the combination of ERP and medication tends to produce better outcomes than either alone. Medication can reduce symptom intensity, especially with mental compulsions, enough to make ERP more accessible, and ERP produces the lasting changes in behavior and brain patterns that medication alone does not. We are therapists and do not prescribe medication, but we coordinate closely with prescribing providers when medication is part of the plan.
How to Find an ERP-Trained Therapist and Why It Matters
This is one of the most important pieces of information on this page. ERP is a specific, structured treatment that requires specific training. Many therapists describe themselves as using “CBT” or “ERP” without having completed the focused training that effective ERP delivery requires.
Questions to Ask Before Starting ERP Therapy
When evaluating a potential ERP therapist, ask:
- What specific training have you received in ERP for OCD?
- How many clients with OCD have you treated using ERP?
- Will you build an exposure hierarchy with me? Can you describe what that involves?
- How much of our session time will be spent in actual exposure practice?
- Do you assign between-session ERP practice?
A therapist who is vague about these questions, who describes ERP primarily as ‘facing your fears’ without explaining the specific protocol, or who focuses mainly on insight and understanding rather than active exposure work may not have the training needed to produce real results.
Our team trained at some of the most respected OCD programs in the country. ERP is not one of many approaches we use. It is how we practice.
What to Expect When You Start ERP With Us
- Free 10-minute phone consultation. We hear what is going on, answer your questions, and confirm ERP is the right fit.
- Comprehensive assessment. We thoroughly evaluate your specific presentation the triggers, compulsions, avoidance patterns, and how they are affecting your life using standardized tools and a detailed clinical interview.
- A personalized exposure hierarchy. Built collaboratively specific to your triggers, your life, and your goals. No generic protocol.
- Active exposure practice from the start. ERP begins working when exposure practice begins. We do not spend months in preparation before starting. We get into the work efficiently, typically second session.
- Between-session practice assignments. Agreed upon in session, reviewed at the start of each appointment, calibrated to your current position in treatment.
- Progress tracking. We track your progress using standardized measures and adjust the treatment plan based on what the data shows.
- Relapse prevention. Before treatment ends, we build a clear plan for maintaining gains and knowing what to do if symptoms return.
How Long Does ERP Take?
The research-supported protocol for OCD typically involves 12 to 20 weekly sessions. However, at our clinic, for patients who are still functioning, duration of treatment is typically 8-10 sessions. We ensure that we don’t waste your time and resources while also requiring that exposures are being done daily between sessions.
- For specific phobias, 6 to 12 sessions is often sufficient.
- For panic disorder, 10 to 15 sessions is typical.
- For health anxiety and social anxiety, 12 to 15 sessions depending on severity.
- Again, compliance and exposure work in between sessions are a must.
These are averages. Some people improve faster. More complex cases take longer. What matters most is consistency showing up, doing the between-session practice, and trusting the process even when it is uncomfortable.
Most people begin to notice meaningful improvement within the first 2 to 3 sessions of active exposure work often sooner than they expect. ERP is behavioral, therefore, it works quickly and is empowering. In fact, if you have been working for a provider for months and months that’s typically a sign that the provider is not specialized or there’s been a lack of compliance.
In-Person and Virtual Sessions
In-person
730 S Sterling Ave, Suite 306, Tampa, FL 33609
Virtual:
Available throughout Florida and New Yor
ERP works very well via telehealth including the exposure practice components. Research consistently shows that ERP delivered via video produces outcomes equivalent to in-person treatment. For many exposures particularly those involving situations in the client’s own home, workplace, or community virtual delivery actually offers advantages, because the exposures happen in the real environment where the anxiety occurs.
We Are Ready To Help
Frequently Asked Questions
About ERP
Will ERP make my anxiety worse before it gets better?
During the exposure steps, anxiety temporarily increases that is the nature of facing what you have been avoiding. This is expected, temporary, and actually a sign that the exposure is working. What most people discover is that the anticipation of an exposure is almost always worse than the exposure itself. And after each exposure, the anxiety decreases often more quickly than expected. Over the course of treatment, the overall anxiety level reduces significantly as the brain builds new, more accurate responses to feared situations.
What if I cannot do the exposures? What if I freeze or the anxiety is too high?
This is one of the most common concerns people bring to their first ERP session. A skilled ERP therapist builds a hierarchy that starts well below what feels impossible the first steps should feel challenging but manageable, not overwhelming. If a step is too difficult, we break it down further. No one freezes permanently in ERP. The hierarchy is always flexible. Your therapist’s job is to find the right level of challenge for where you are right now not to push you past what you can handle.
I have had OCD or anxiety for 20 years. Is ERP still going to work?
Yes. ERP produces meaningful results regardless of how long OCD or anxiety has been present. Long-standing conditions may take slightly longer to treat because the patterns are more deeply ingrained and the avoidance is more extensive. But the brain’s ability to learn new responses does not diminish with time. We have helped people who have had severe OCD for decades achieve full or near-full remission through ERP. Duration is not a barrier to recovery.
My therapist says they use ERP but it does not seem to involve actual exposures. Is that normal?
No. If sessions consist primarily of talking about anxiety, discussing the history of OCD, or using thought records without actual exposure practice that is not ERP, regardless of what the therapist calls it. Either your therapist is not really specialized in ERP or they are lazy. Either way, you need to find a new provider. Real ERP involves building a hierarchy, completing exposures during sessions, and practicing between sessions. If you are not doing actual exposures facing the feared triggers and staying with the anxiety without performing a compulsion you are not receiving ERP.
Can ERP work without medication?
Yes, for many people, ERP alone produces excellent results. For mild to moderate OCD and most anxiety disorders, ERP without medication is often sufficient. For severe OCD or anxiety, the combination of ERP and medication tends to produce better outcomes than either alone. This is not because ERP needs medication to work it is because medication can reduce the overall anxiety level enough to make ERP more accessible for people who are severely symptomatic. We will discuss whether medication coordination makes sense for your situation at your first appointment.
How do I know if I am seeing an ERP specialist versus a general therapist who uses some ERP techniques?
Ask directly about training and caseload. An ERP specialist has received focused, supervised training in ERP not just attended a workshop. They spend the majority of session time in active exposure work rather than discussion. They assign between-session practice consistently. They can describe the specific exposure hierarchy they would build for your presentation. ERP is the foundation of every treatment we provide.
ERP Is the Most Effective Treatment for OCD and Anxiety. We Specialize in It.
At Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists, ERP is not one tool among many. It is the core of how we practice. Our entire team trained in ERP at programs built around this approach, and we have been delivering it with consistent results since 2014. We can ensure that we will not waste your time and resources. If you are ready to stop accodating OCD or anxiety and start treating it, we are ready to help.
Happy Clients
EXCELLENT Based on 92 reviews Posted on Bogaci ServicesTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Natalie Noel - great doctor, very professional with individual approach. It was a pleasure to meet her.Posted on SabrinaTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Thanks to Anxiety & OCD Specialists and Matt, I’m now on the road to living a better life with my OCD. Matt is extremely patient, supportive, and knowledgeable. Highly recommend the intensive outpatient program to anyone struggling with OCD!Posted on Fatima SorabiTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. A review for Natalie Noel: hi everyone, I was dealing with severe anxiety for a long time, to the point where I felt completely hopeless. I had intense anticipatory anxiety and could not sleep before any event at all. The insomnia was debilitating and affected every part of my life. I was also carrying severe trauma and PTSD, and I truly felt like I would never be normal again. I tried everything — therapy, EMDR, neurofeedback, and so many other approaches — but nothing fully helped. After doing my own research, I found Natalie Neol and decided to reach out. From the very beginning, Natalie was incredibly insightful and compassionate. After only three sessions, she recognized that I was suffering from severe anxiety and OCD, and she immediately referred me to two excellent doctors for medication support. I scheduled an appointment with one of them, started treatment, and within a month my life has completely changed. I honestly cannot believe how different I feel. For the first time in years, I feel like I am truly living again. Just last week, I had a major presentation — something that would normally have caused overwhelming panic — and I walked in calm, confident, and did amazingly with no anxiety at all. I still can’t believe it. Natalie, God bless you. You are an absolute godsend. I truly owe you my life.Posted on Nate AshbyTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Natalie is the OCD specialist to see around Tampa! She is patient and willing to talk through things as many times as it takes. No case too tough for Natalie. Highly recommend.Posted on Alayna MannTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. This center is great and extremely welcoming! I looked forward to meeting with Natalie and she helped me learn more about myself every session. She also helped redirect negative thought patterns and behaviors and taught me how to handle my thoughts better.Posted on Judy SpigarelliTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Mario Juster-Kruse truly understands my anxiety. Mario's guidance lets me unmask and speak my truth. After just a couple sessions, I felt noticeable positive changes. 30 years of talk therapy didn't get me to the results I need, but Mario's approach has me on the right path. Truly grateful!Posted on Jessica RoseTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. I have been a client of Mario’s for almost a year after having some unexpected, tragic losses as well as coming out of a terrible marriage and being a Covid ER nurse. I’ve always been an anxious person but, after these events, it had become unbearable, and I lost who I was. Things got worse before they got better and the depression was eating at my soul. I feel extremely fortunate to have had Mario as my therapist. He has helped me rebuild myself one broken stick at a time and I’ve started reclaiming control of my life. I’ve had other therapists in the past for various things, but he has been the best I’ve had. I genuinely do not think I would have survived this past year if I had a different therapist and I am extremely grateful for all that he has done to help me. I highly recommend him for anyone seeking treatment.Posted on Anja AlpendreTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. We are incredibly grateful for the care and support our child received from Nona Zamora. She is truly exceptional - kind, compassionate, and deeply knowledgeable. From the very first visit, she created a safe, trusting environment and took the time to truly understand our child’s needs. We felt heard, supported, and confident that our child was in the best possible hands. We were so lucky to be in her care and would wholeheartedly recommend her to any family looking for a thoughtful, skilled, and compassionate psychologist.