OCD in Children
Recognizing OCD in Your Child and How to Get Them the Right Help
Natalie Noel, LMHC | Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists | Tampa, FL
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Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder in children is real, it is more common than most parents realize, and it is one of the most treatable conditions in child mental health when it is identified correctly and treated by a specialist. The emotional responses are generally anxiety, guilt, and/or disgust.
This page is for you, the parent. It explains what OCD in children looks like, why it is so often missed or misunderstood, how treatment works, and what you can do right now to help your child.
In-person sessions are provided in Tampa and virtual sessions are available throughout Florida and New York.
Quick Answer: What Is OCD in Children?
OCD in children involves two things that occur in a cycle: obsessions unwanted, distressing thoughts, fears, or mental images and compulsions repetitive behaviors or mental acts the child performs to reduce the distress from the obsession. The compulsions bring temporary relief, which reinforces the cycle. It affects approximately 1 in 200 children and responds very well to specialized ERP therapy.
How Common Is OCD in Children?
OCD can begin as young as 3 or 4 years old, though the most common onset is between ages 7 and 12. A second peak of onset occurs in adolescence, particularly in teenage boys. In many cases, symptoms begin earlier than they are recognized because the behaviors can look like phases, personality quirks, or anxiety rather than OCD.
Early diagnosis and treatment matters significantly. Research consistently shows that the earlier ERP treatment begins, the faster and more complete the recovery tends to be. Years of untreated OCD allow the cycle to deepen, the avoidance to spread, and the child’s world to shrink around the rituals. You do not have to wait and see.
How OCD Looks Different in Children
| What Parents Often Think It Is | What It May Actually Be |
|---|---|
| A phase they will grow out of | OCD rituals and compulsions that are not developmental |
| Perfectionism or being a "Type A" child | OCD-driven perfectionism not a personality trait but a symptom |
| Anxiety or general worry | OCD anxiety, guilt, and disgust are part of OCD but it has a specific structure |
| Being difficult or controlling | OCD the child is not choosing this behavior |
| Sensory issues | OCD with sensory-driven "just right" compulsions |
| ADHD or behavioral problems | OCD difficulty concentrating and behavior problems can be OCD symptoms |
| Being overly religious or conscientious | Scrupulosity OCD a recognized subtype with intense guilt |
Common Ways OCD Shows Up in Children
Reassurance-seeking:
Asking the same question over and over 'Are you sure nothing bad will happen?' 'Do you promise?' and never quite being satisfied with the answer. This is one of the most common presentations of childhood OCD and is frequently mistaken for insecurity or anxiety
Confessing:
Children with OCD can be sensitive to guilt. They might confess their ‘bad thoughts’ as a compulsion.
Bedtime rituals:
Extended, rigid routines at bedtime that take much longer than they should saying goodnight in a specific order, arranging objects perfectly, needing things to feel 'just right' before sleep is possible.
Checking:
Returning to check that something is done, safe, or right the stove is off, the door is locked, the homework is correct multiple times, beyond what is logical.
Contamination fears:
Excessive hand washing, refusing to touch doorknobs, avoiding certain people or places for fear of germs, becoming very distressed around illness in the household.
Harm obsessions:
Frightening thoughts about something bad happening to a parent or sibling often expressed as excessive worry, clinginess, or repeated need for reassurance that family members are safe.
'Just right' sensations:
Needing things to feel balanced, even, or 'just right' before the anxiety will release touching something on one side and needing to touch the other, erasing and rewriting until it feels correct.
Avoidance:
Refusing to do activities, go certain places, or be around certain people or objects that trigger OCD. In children, this can present as school refusal, social withdrawal, or refusal to participate in family activities.
Mental rituals:
Counting, repeating words silently, praying in a specific way, or replaying memories rituals that happen entirely inside the child's head and are therefore invisible to parents.
The child doing these things is not being manipulative or dramatic. They are doing them because the anxiety is real and the compulsion brings genuine if temporaryrelief. The problem is that every compulsion makes the obsession stronger over time. This is the cycle that ERP breaks.
OCD at Different Ages What to Look For
Young Children (Ages 5–8)
OCD in young children most commonly involves fears about harm coming to parents or caregivers, contamination rituals, and 'just right' compulsions. Very young children may not be able to explain why they are doing what they are doing they just know they have to. Their obsessions are often about safety "What if something bad happens to Mommy?" and their compulsions are attempts to prevent that feared outcome.
Young children with OCD may also involve parents directly in their rituals requiring parents to say specific phrases, perform actions in a particular order, or provide the same reassurances repeatedly. This is called family accommodation and it is extremely common. It feels like helping and support, but tt actually maintains the OCD cycle.
School-Age Children (Ages 8–12)
OCD in school-age children often interferes with school, homework, and friendships. Children in this age group may spend hours on homework because it never feels finished or correct. They may have rituals that make morning routines excruciatingly slow. They may begin avoiding situations that trigger OCD missing school, refusing activities, withdrawing from friends.
This is also the age when children begin to feel embarrassed about their OCD and start hiding it from peers. They may hold it together at school and release a flood of compulsions at home which can make parents feel confused about how serious the problem is.
Teenagers (Ages 12–18)
OCD in teenagers is more likely to involve the subtypes that are common in adult OCD harm obsessions, sexual or religious intrusive thoughts, relationship OCD, existential obsessions, and Pure O presentations. Teens are more likely to suffer in silence because the content of their obsessions feels shameful or frightening to disclose. A teenager who is having intrusive thoughts about harming a sibling is unlikely to bring that up without a safe, knowledgeable clinician to receive it.
OCD in teenagers also intersects more directly with academic pressure, social relationships, and identity development making the impact on daily life particularly significant. Untreated OCD in adolescence can have lasting effects on educational achievement, social development, and self-concept.
Common OCD Subtypes in Children
OCD in children can center on many different themes. The specific content of the obsession is less important than the underlying structure obsession, anxiety, compulsion, temporary relief, repeat. Here are the most common subtypes we see in children and teens:
| OCD Subtype | Common Obsessions in Children | Common Compulsions |
|---|---|---|
| Contamination OCD | Germs, illness, dirt, chemicals, passing illness to others | Handwashing, avoiding surfaces, refusing to touch objects or people |
| Harm OCD | Something bad happening to a parent, sibling, or themselves | Seeking reassurance repeatedly, checking, confessing fears |
| Just Right OCD | Things feeling 'off,' uneven, or not complete | Arranging, touching, repeating until it feels right |
| Scrupulosity | Having done something wrong, sinned, or been immoral | Confessing, praying repeatedly, seeking reassurance about morality |
| Contamination (mental) | Being contaminated by a 'bad' person, place, or idea | Avoidance, mental washing, seeking reassurance |
| Symmetry / Exactness | Things must be even, balanced, or perfect | Rearranging, erasing, repeating until symmetrical |
| Pure O / Intrusive Thoughts | Frightening thoughts that feel against the child's values | Mental rituals, reassurance-seeking, avoidance, confessing |
| Health OCD | Fear of having a disease, something wrong with their body | Checking body, seeking reassurance, researching symptoms |
| PANDAS / PANS-related OCD | Sudden onset of any OCD theme following illness | Any compulsion onset is sudden and dramatic |
We have dedicated pages for many of these subtypes on our website including harm OCD, contamination OCD, scrupulosity, Pure O, and PANDAS/PANS. If one of these specifically describes your child, those pages go into greater depth.
Family Accommodation. The Hidden Fuel of Childhood OCD
Family accommodation is almost universal in families with a child with OCD. It happens because parents are doing what good parents do trying to relieve their child’s suffering. But OCD is a disorder where the instinct to help often works against recovery.
What Family Accommodation Looks Like
- Providing reassurance answering 'Are you sure?' for the 40th time today
- Participating in rituals arranging things in the required way, saying goodnight in the required order
- Avoiding triggers not buying a certain food because it triggers contamination fears, not visiting relatives who trigger the OCD
- Completing tasks the child has delegated due to OCD opening doors, using communal objects on their behalf
- Changing family routines significantly to accommodate the child's OCD
A Note to Parents: Accommodation Is Not Your Fault
Here is what you need to know: accommodation provides temporary relief but maintains the OCD cycle. Every time a compulsion is completed with or without your help the obsession gets slightly stronger.
Changing accommodation patterns is a central part of ERP treatment for childhood OCD. Parents are taught specifically how to respond to OCD in ways that support recovery rather than feeding the cycle. This is done gradually, with support, and with enormous care for both your child and for you.
How Is OCD Diagnosed in Children?
- A detailed clinical interview. The clinician talks with both parents and the child about the specific fears, thoughts, rituals, and how they are affecting daily life.
- Standardized rating scales. Tools like the Children's Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale (CY-BOCS) measure the severity of OCD symptoms and help track progress over time.
- Assessment for co-occurring conditions. OCD in children often co-occurs with anxiety disorders, ADHD, depression, tic disorders, body dysmorphic disorder (teens) and other conditions. All of these are assessed and factored into the treatment plan.
- Parent and school input. For children, information from parents and with permission from teachers or school counselors helps give a full picture of how OCD is affecting the child's life.
How OCD in Children Is Treated ERP
How ERP Is Adapted for Children
- Playful and engaging: Exposures are designed to feel like challenges or games rather than clinical exercises. We name the OCD giving it a character like 'the worry bully' and work with the child to boss it back.
- Gradual and collaborative: Every step is agreed upon by the child and therapist together. Nothing is forced. The exposure ladder starts with steps the child rates as manageable and works up gradually.
- Parent involvement is built in: Parents are not just in the waiting room. They are taught what ERP involves, how to support exposures at home, how to respond when OCD is pushing for accommodation, and how to coach their child through difficult moments between sessions.
- School coordination: When OCD is affecting school, we communicate with teachers and school counselors with the family's permission to ensure support is in place.
What About Medication?
We are therapists, not psychiatrists, and do not prescribe medication. For mild to moderate OCD in children, ERP alone is often sufficient and produces lasting results. For moderate to severe OCD, the combination of ERP and medication particularly SSRIs tends to produce better outcomes than
either alone.
If medication may be appropriate for your child, we will discuss this and can refer you to a trusted child psychiatrist. We coordinate closely with prescribing providers when medication is part of the plan. ERP is always the foundation medication supports it but does not replace it.
How Long Does Treatment Take? What Should Parents Expect?
For mild to moderate childhood OCD, meaningful improvement typically happens within 3 to 6 sessions. For more severe cases or for children who have had OCD for several years without treatment, progress takes longer but it is still achievable. Most children who complete a full course of ERP with consistent home practice see significant and lasting reduction in their OCD symptoms.
What Parents Can Do Right Now
- Stop providing reassurance for OCD-driven questions. Instead of 'Yes, I promise you are safe,' try 'That sounds like your OCD talking. I know that is hard. I believe you can handle this.'
- Do not accommodate rituals when possible. If you have been opening doors, rearranging objects, or saying specific phrases as part of your child's ritual, begin noting these you will work with the therapist on how to gradually step out of the ritual.
- Name the OCD not the child. 'OCD is making you check again' rather than 'You are being difficult.' This helps the child externalize the disorder and see it as something separate from who they are.
- Seek a specialist, not a general therapist. The research is clear that OCD responds to ERP delivered by a trained specialist. General therapy for OCD without ERP is often ineffective and can sometimes make things worse by giving OCD more material to work with.
- Call us. A free 10-minute consultation will give you a clear picture of whether your child's symptoms fit OCD and what treatment would look like for your family.
OCD and School
Children with OCD may qualify for accommodations under a 504 Plan or an IEP depending on how OCD is affecting their education. Accommodations might include extended time on tests, permission to leave the classroom briefly, reduced written work during a compulsive checking phase, or a quiet space for exposure practice. School accommodations are important as long as they are not accommodating the OCD. Your provider will help you distinguish the difference.
We provide documentation to support 504 Plans and IEPs when needed, and we are happy to consult with school staff with the family’s permission. We also help parents navigate the sometimes difficult conversations with schools about a child’s OCD.
What to Expect When You Work With Us
- Free 10-minute phone consultation. We start with a brief call to hear what is going on, answer your questions, and determine whether we are the right fit.
- Comprehensive assessment. We assess your child's specific OCD presentation, severity, and any co-occurring conditions, sometimes using the CY-BOCS and a full clinical interview with both parent and child.
- A personalized ERP plan. Built around your child's specific obsessions and compulsions, their developmental level, and what their life actually looks like school, home, family, friends.
- Parent training from session one. Parents are active participants not observers. We teach you what ERP involves, how to support exposures at home, and how to stop accommodating OCD in a way that your child can handle.
- School coordination. When school is affected, we help you navigate accommodations and, with your permission, communicate with staff.
- Ongoing support. OCD is a condition that can resurface during stressful periods. We give families the skills to recognize early signs and respond effectively so that a recurrence never gets as bad as the first time.
In-Person and Virtual Sessions
In-person
730 S Sterling Ave, Suite 306, Tampa, FL 33609
Virtual:
Available throughout Florida and New York
Your Child Does Not Have to Keep Suffering. Help Is Here.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my child has OCD or just regular childhood anxiety?
My child says the rituals help them feel better. Why would I take that away?
What if my child refuses to do ERP?
My child's pediatrician said they would grow out of it. Should I wait?
Can OCD in children be cured?
Is OCD in children hereditary?
Yes, OCD has a significant genetic component. Children with a first-degree relative who has OCD are at higher risk of developing it themselves. If you have OCD and your child has been diagnosed, that is not a coincidence and it is also not your fault. The genetic predisposition to OCD is real, and it is not something any parent caused. What matters now is getting your child the right treatment early.
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.