More than three-quarters of psychologists in the United States say their patients have brought up AI in therapy sessions.
Some are using chatbots to seek a diagnosis, while others are using them to supplement their treatment or even for something harder to categorise — friendship, companionship, intimate relationships.
A new survey has mapped just how far AI has already moved into the mental health space, and the picture it produces is complicated.
The findings come from the American Psychological Association (APA)’s Chatbots and Mental Health Survey, conducted among more than 1,200 licensed psychologists across the United States.
The survey was distributed in April 2026 and captures how therapists are seeing AI show up in their patients’ lives and what they make of it.
What patients are using AI for
The range is broader than most people would probably guess. Nearly two in five psychologists – 39 percent – have had conversations with patients who used AI to self-diagnose.
About a third said their patients are turning to chatbots for help with self-discipline, affirmations, or behavioral reminders.
Roughly the same proportion said patients are using AI to assist with their treatment, or to act as an additional mental health professional.
Then there’s the social dimension. Psychologists reported patients using chatbots for fun, for friendship, and in some cases for intimate relationships.
More than two-thirds said their patients felt supported or validated by a chatbot. Two in five said their patients used chatbots to reinforce healthy coping skills.
Those aren’t all negative findings. But there are warning signs in the data too.
Thirty-six percent of psychologists said their patients were developing a level of dependency on a chatbot. Fifteen percent said their patients were developing distorted thinking or delusions.
Why people are turning to chatbots
AI chatbots are available at any hour. They don’t require insurance, don’t have waiting lists, and don’t judge.
For someone in distress at two in the morning who can’t afford a therapist and doesn’t know where else to turn, a chatbot that responds warmly and immediately has obvious appeal.
“Generally accessible chatbots appear to offer the path of least resistance for people in need of mental health support – they are supportive to a fault, readily available and easy to access without insurance. But they also don’t have the same capacity for nuance or alertness to potential warning signs as human professionals,” said APA CEO Arthur C. Evans Jr.
“Before anyone relies on these tools for their mental health, they must understand how they work and how to think critically about the advice they provide.”
That phrase – “supportive to a fault” – captures something real and dangerous. A chatbot that validates everything a user says, never pushes back, and never flags concern is not the same thing as good mental health support.
It may feel better. That’s not the same as being better.
What psychologists think
Opinions among psychologists are genuinely mixed. A little more than half said they were comfortable with some patients using chatbots.
But 93 percent said they had concerns about certain patients using the technology – and the concerns are specific. Nearly all psychologists surveyed said chatbots may inadvertently reinforce negative behaviors or delusional beliefs.
Ninety-four percent said today’s chatbots can’t treat mental health conditions with sufficient nuance. Eighty-nine percent said chatbots may inadvertently encourage self-harm.
Those are striking numbers. The profession is not categorically opposed to AI in this space – but it is worried, and the worries are grounded in what therapists are already seeing.
At the same time, two in five psychologists felt optimistic that chatbots could help patients when a mental health professional isn’t available.
That’s not a small concession. Access to mental health care is a genuine crisis, and any tool that can safely fill gaps in coverage is worth taking seriously.
Where to draw the line
The APA is direct about where it draws the line: AI is not a safe or effective replacement for a qualified mental health provider.
The agency has published guidance aimed at people using AI for mental health support, recommending that users verify any AI-generated advice with a healthcare professional and avoid relying on chatbots in ways that displace real-world relationships or professional care.
“AI tools, when grounded in psychological science and developed in collaboration with mental health scientists, have the potential to meet the growing demand for mental health care and improve patient outcomes,” Evans said.
“But these tools work best when used to complement a relationship with a licensed, human professional who understands how to treat a person, not a prompt.”
Only a quarter of psychologists believe patients will one day prefer chatbots to human therapists. That’s probably the most telling number in the survey.
The people who know mental health care best, from the inside, are not convinced that what a chatbot can offer comes close to what a human relationship provides.
The patients using chatbots at two in the morning, for now, might not be thinking about that distinction – but it’s one worth making.
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