If sexual thoughts or behaviors are causing real problems in your life — and you’re struggling to manage that on your own — this page is for you.
Sexual thoughts, urges, and behavior are a normal part of human experience. Having a strong sexual drive, frequent sexual thoughts, or an active sex life — even a very active one — is not a problem in itself. Compulsive Sexual Behavior Disorder (CSBD) becomes a clinical concern only when a person genuinely loses control over intense sexual impulses and that loss of control causes real, ongoing harm to their life.
You may be unsure whether what you’re experiencing crosses that threshold. You may know something is wrong but not know how to describe it. You may have tried to change your patterns and found it harder than expected. Any of those is a valid reason to be here.
This page provides accurate, non-judgmental information about CSBD — what it is, what it isn’t, and what can help. No diagnosis is offered here. No labels are required of you. This is not about judging what you do or how often — it is about whether you feel in control, and whether your life is being harmed.
The question is not how often sexual behavior occurs, or what form it takes. The question is whether control feels genuinely impaired — and whether meaningful harm is occurring despite repeated efforts to change.
CSBD, as recognized in the WHO ICD-11, is defined by persistent inability to control intense sexual urges combined with meaningful functional impairment — not by the type, frequency, or content of sexual behavior.
Control over behavior
Priority in daily life
Response to harm
Daily functioning
Duration
Can choose to stop or redirect; may feel strong urges but remains able to manage them
Sexual activity coexists with other valued activities, relationships, and responsibilities
Adjusts behavior when negative consequences appear
Relationships, work, self-care, and health generally maintained
Not applicable
Persistent inability to control intense sexual impulses despite genuine attempts
Sexual behavior consistently displaces other priorities, even when problems are visible
Continues sexual behavior despite clear, ongoing harm to health, relationships, work, or wellbeing
Significant impairment in one or more important life areas directly attributable to the pattern
Persistent pattern present for at least 6 months (or shorter if severity is unequivocal), with sustained distress or functional impairment
The content of behavior is far less relevant than the pattern of control, persistence, and harm.
These patterns — when persistent over six months or more and accompanied by real-world impairment — are worth discussing with a healthcare professional. No single sign confirms a disorder.
There is no single established treatment protocol for CSBD. Effective approaches are individualized and often multimodal.
Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), motivational interviewing, attachment-focused work, and relapse-prevention strategies are commonly used.
Depression, anxiety, ADHD, substance use, and attachment difficulties frequently co-occur and require direct treatment.
Couples or family therapy may be appropriate. Partners often require support in their own right.
Peer-support programs may offer accountability and connection. Fit and clinical guidance matter.
Your primary care physician can provide referral. Seek clinicians experienced in sexual health or impulse-control conditions. A good evaluation examines the full psychological and relational context.
Compulsive Sexual Behavior Disorder is a clinical condition — not a character flaw or moral failure. Shame often worsens the pattern. Honest, informed engagement improves outcomes.
This page will be here whenever you return to it.
This resource is educational and does not substitute for professional medical or mental health advice. Diagnosis requires assessment by a qualified clinician.