CBIT Therapy for Tics and Tourette's

How Comprehensive Behavioral Intervention for Tics Works and Why It Is the Best Treatment Available

Natalie Noel, LMHC | Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists | Tampa, FL

If your child has been diagnosed with Tourette’s Disorder or a tic condition, you have probably heard the word CBIT. Maybe a neurologist mentioned it. Maybe you found it while researching online. But what is it and does it actually work?

 

CBIT is the most effective non-medication treatment for tics that exists. It is endorsed by the American Academy of Neurology as the first-line behavioral treatment for Tourette’s and other tic disorders. And it is far less well-known than it should be.

 

This page explains exactly what CBIT is, how it works, and what treatment looks like in practice for children, teens, and adults.

In-person sessions are provided in Tampa and virtual sessions are available throughout Florida and New York.

Quick Answer: What Is CBIT?

CBIT stands for Comprehensive Behavioral Intervention for Tics. It is a structured, evidence-based therapy that teaches people with tics to recognize the urge that comes before a tic and respond to it with a competing physical behavior disrupting the tic cycle without suppression. CBIT is recommended as the first-line behavioral treatment for Tourette’s Disorder and other tic conditions by the American Academy of Neurology. Most people see meaningful tic reduction within 8 to 12 sessions.

Why CBIT Not Just Willpower or Suppression

Many people try to manage tics by simply holding them in what is called tic suppression. This works temporarily, but it takes enormous mental energy and usually results in a rebound of tics when the person relaxes. Over time, suppression alone does not reduce tics. It just delays them.

 

CBIT works differently. Instead of suppressing the tic after the urge appears, CBIT teaches you to catch the urge early and respond with a specific competing behavior. The competing behavior breaks the tic cycle and with practice, the urge itself becomes less frequent and less intense.

CBIT does not ask you to fight your tics or hold them in. It teaches your brain a new response to the urge one that is incompatible with the tic and that gradually retrains the habit pattern over time. This is why CBIT produces lasting results when suppression alone does not.

The Three Core Components of CBIT

1. Psychoeducation

The first part of CBIT is learning. You and your family learn what tics are, how premonitory urges work, what makes tics worse (stress, excitement, boredom, certain environments), and why the CBIT approach is more effective than trying to hold tics in. This knowledge is the foundation for everything that follows.

2. Habit Reversal Training (HRT)

HRT is the core of CBIT. It has three parts:

3. Function-Based Intervention

The third component of CBIT maps the situations, settings, and emotional states that make tics worse. This might include specific environments (classrooms, waiting rooms), activities (screen time, homework), or emotional states (stress, excitement, boredom). Once triggers are identified, strategies are developed to address them reducing tic frequency in those specific contexts.

What Does a CBIT Session Actually Look Like?

Here is what the typical CBIT treatment course looks like from start to finish:

PhaseWhat Happens
Sessions 1–2

Psychoeducation: learning about tics, premonitory urges, and the CBIT model. Building a tic inventory listing each tic, its frequency, and the urge that comes before it.
Sessions 3–4Habit Reversal Training begins. Identifying the premonitory urge for the primary target tic. Choosing and practicing the competing response. Teaching the social support role to parents or a partner.
Sessions 5–6Function-based assessment: mapping triggers, high-tic situations, and emotional patterns. Developing strategies for the most problematic contexts.
Sessions 7–10Generalizing the competing response to real-life situations school, home, social settings. Adding competing responses for additional tics if the first is well-managed. Troubleshooting and refining the plan.
Sessions 11–12Relapse prevention: preparing for situations where tics may temporarily worsen (illness, stress, transitions). Planning for ongoing maintenance and what to do if tics return.

CBIT Competing Response Examples

Every competing response is chosen collaboratively with the therapist based on the specific tic, the person’s body, and what is practical in their daily settings

Does CBIT Work for Adults Too?

Yes. CBIT was originally developed and studied in adults before being adapted for children and teens. The research supports CBIT for all ages. Adults who have had tics for decades and never received behavioral treatment respond to CBIT in the same way as children. It is never too late to benefit from this approach.

How Is CBIT Different From General Therapy or CBT?

CBIT is not the same as general Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). CBT addresses thoughts, feelings, and behaviors broadly. CBIT is a specific, structured protocol designed exclusively for tic disorders with unique components like the premonitory urge assessment and function-based intervention that do not exist in standard CBT.

 

This is why working with a therapist trained specifically in CBIT matters. A general therapist who uses CBT techniques may not have the training to identify premonitory urges, select appropriate competing responses, or conduct a proper function-based assessment. These distinctions directly affect treatment outcomes.

In-Person and Virtual Sessions

In-person

730 S Sterling Ave, Suite 306, Tampa, FL 33609

Virtual

Available throughout Florida

Frequently Asked Questions

The standard CBIT protocol is 8 sessions over 10 weeks, though many therapists extend this slightly depending on the number of tics being targeted and the complexity of the case. Most people see meaningful tic reduction within this timeframe. Maintenance sessions may be scheduled periodically afterward, especially during stressful life transitions.

Yes and it works very well via telehealth. Your therapist can observe tics directly through video, teach competing responses in real time, and coach practice during the session. Being at home where tics are often most visible can actually be an advantage for virtual CBIT sessions.

CBIT typically produces significant reduction in tic frequency and intensity and many people achieve a level of control where tics no longer significantly interfere with daily life. Complete elimination of all tics is possible for some people but is not the guaranteed outcome. The goal of CBIT is meaningful, lasting improvement and most people achieve it.

Habit Reversal Training (HRT) is the core behavioral component within CBIT but CBIT is broader. CBIT includes psychoeducation and function-based intervention in addition to HRT. Research has shown that the full CBIT package produces better outcomes than HRT alone, which is why the complete protocol is recommended.

CBIT Is the Most Effective Tic Treatment Available. We Are Trained in It.

Most therapists do not offer CBIT because it requires specific training that goes beyond general CBT. At Anxiety & OCD Treatment Specialists, we are trained in CBIT and use it as our primary approach for Tourette’s Disorder and other tic conditions. We work with children, teens, and adults in person in Tampa and virtually across Florida and New York.

Happy Clients

Read more about our specialties