Clinical support
Try these attachment-based therapy techniques for building secure bonds
Repairing early attachment patterns can help clients strengthen their relationships and gain a sense of security.
November 21, 2025
6 min read
Relationships are an essential part of human development and overall well-being. For clients who come to therapy with relationship problems, you may integrate attachment-based therapy into their treatment plan. Based on research from mid-twentieth century, attachment-based therapy can help clients form secure bonds by addressing unmet needs from childhood caregivers.
Read on to learn more about how attachment-based therapy techniques can help your clients build healthy relationships.
Key takeaways
- Attachment-based therapy addresses attachment wounds, which occur when a child’s needs aren’t met by caregivers early in life.
- Through the therapeutic relationship itself or specific talk therapy techniques, therapists can help clients with attachment-related symptoms gain a sense of safety and security.
- People with relationship concerns, or those who experienced childhood trauma, may be good candidates for attachment-based therapy.
Understanding attachment-based therapy
A secure attachment to caregivers is a critical part of childhood development. When a caregiver does not meet a child’s physical or emotional needs, they may go on to develop attachment concerns that can cause mental health issues and relationship problems.
One way of addressing these symptoms is attachment-based therapy, a form of psychotherapy that seeks to repair early attachment concerns that may be impacting a client’s day-to-day life. Attachment-based therapy was developed in the 1950s by psychologist John Bowlby, who formed “attachment theory,” a psychological framework that explains how early attachment patterns contribute to emotional development and adult relationships. Attachment-based therapy was further expanded on by psychologist Mary Ainsworth in the 1960s and ‘70s.
The four attachment styles
Attachment styles reflect a person’s behavior in adult relationships and often stem from their early attachment with a caregiver. Developed from Ainsworth’s Strange Situation research, the four attachment styles highlight characteristics that often surface based on an individual’s early childhood experiences.
- Secure attachment: This attachment style forms when a child’s physical and emotional needs are consistently met by caregivers. People with secure attachment styles are generally more confident and trusting in relationships (but they can still experience relationship issues, like anyone else).
- Anxious attachment: This attachment style forms when a child has an inconsistent experience with an attachment figure. In adult relationships, a person with an anxious attachment style may worry a loved one will abandon them and may need consistent reassurance that their partner loves them.
- Avoidant attachment: This attachment style forms when a child did not receive enough support or connection from a caregiver. Individuals with avoidant attachment styles often appear overly independent and self-reliant as they avoid emotional connection.
- Disorganized attachment: This attachment style, the rarest type, generally develops in erratic, traumatizing childhood environments. People with disorganized attachment styles simultaneously fear and seek out closeness, which can cause difficulty forming stable relationships.
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Who benefits from attachment-based therapy?
The goal of attachment-based therapy is to develop healthier relationship patterns. Attachment-based therapy can be beneficial for any client who struggles with relationship issues or has experienced childhood trauma stemming from unmet needs from caregivers.
It may be especially helpful for clients who want to understand the link between their childhood experiences and their current relationships, and those who seek to improve romantic relationships, friendships, and other adult relationships.
Powerful attachment-based therapy techniques for building secure bonds
Below, we offer a high-level overview of several attachment-based therapy techniques. Providers will benefit from seeking further training to incorporate these techniques with clients.
Inner child work
Inner child work techniques encourage clients to reconnect with parts of themselves that may have been wounded by caregivers as a child, whether through unmet needs or direct harm. With inner child work, a therapist can help a client pay attention to unresolved needs and respond with self-compassion so they can create a sense of safety within themselves — and as a result, build healthier relationships with others.
Emotion-focused techniques
Clients who have unmet emotional needs may struggle to notice or express their feelings. In therapy, clients can explore their emotions in a safe space where they will be met with compassion and understanding. Emotion-focused techniques allow clients to listen to and trust their own emotions without fear of dismissal or judgment.
Mindfulness and body awareness
When past experiences with caregivers caused harm, clients may experience ongoing symptoms of nervous system dysregulation. Therapists can help clients find a sense of safety within themselves and their surroundings through mindfulness and body awareness techniques. The client can then use these self-regulating skills outside of therapy to improve their well-being and relationships.
Corrective emotional experiences
The therapeutic relationship can be a great opportunity to build security and connection that may not have been present in a client’s childhood. By creating a safe emotional space for the client to be and express themselves, therapists can provide a reparative experience that helps them think, feel, and behave differently in their daily lives.
Integrating attachment-based therapy techniques into your treatment plan
When working with attachment-related wounds, operating from a trauma-informed lens is important no matter what technique you're using. Unsure where to start? The following exercises can help you incorporate attachment-based therapy techniques in your practice:
- Attachment style exploration: Help clients identify their primary attachment style with prompts like “When I’m upset, I usually…” or “I worry that others will…” The answers to these questions can help you and the client find patterns and connect them to attachment theory.
- Relationship mapping: Help build insight into attachment dynamics by having clients make a relationship map of key figures, such as parents, partners, and friends. Use arrows or colors to show closeness, trust, and tension, and then discuss recurring themes.
- Reparenting exercise: Help the client reconnect with their inner child by writing a short letter to their younger self or a compassionate rewrite of a painful early experience, imagining a supportive caregiver response.
- Safe space visualization: Help the client build internal security and emotional regulation by guiding them through picturing a place, person, or memory that represents safety. Encourage grounding techniques when stress or fear come up.
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This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.
© 2025 Therapymatch, Inc. dba Headway. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
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