Phobiaq.
HomeCompare phobia types › Agoraphobia

Agoraphobia — Compared

A fear of situations where escape might be difficult, which can lead to avoiding many places. It is an anxiety disorder, and talking therapies such as CBT are a recognized treatment. This page compares agoraphobia against the other main phobia types on stable, objective attributes — not on numbers, and not as a diagnosis.

At a glance

GroupRelated anxiety disorders
Common triggersSituations where escape might feel hard or help unavailable — crowds, open spaces, public transport or leaving home
Exposure therapy commonly used?Yes — as part of CBT
Typical first-line approachCBT; medication is sometimes considered with a doctor
Self-help vs professional careProfessional care is commonly recommended; self-help can support it

Browse common phobias — individual phobias, what each fear is, and how it’s treated →

How Agoraphobia compares to other phobia types

TypeCommon triggersExposure used?First-line approach
Animal phobiasAnimals or insects — for example spiders, dogs, snakes, mice, birds or beesYes — commonly usedCBT with gradual exposure
Natural-environment phobiasFeatures of the natural world — such as heights, storms, water, the dark or deep waterYes — commonly usedCBT with gradual exposure
Blood-injection-injury phobiasBlood, injections, needles, injury or invasive medical proceduresYes — often with extra steps for faintingCBT with exposure; an added technique (applied tension) is often taught
Situational phobiasSpecific situations — such as flying, enclosed spaces, bridges, driving or hospitalsYes — commonly usedCBT with gradual exposure
Other specific phobiasOther triggers — such as choking, vomiting, costumed characters, loud sounds or specific objectsYes — commonly usedCBT with gradual exposure
Social anxiety (social phobia)Social or performance situations where a person fears being watched, judged or embarrassedYes — as part of CBTCBT; medication is sometimes considered with a doctor

Across every type in this table the encouraging pattern is the same: phobias and phobia-related anxiety are among the most treatable mental-health conditions, and the evidence-based first step is usually a form of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) that includes gradual, guided exposure. A licensed professional can help you decide what fits you — there is no one-size-fits-all plan.

Sources: NIMH — Phobias and Phobia-Related Disorders; NHS — Phobias; APA — Anxiety. Cognitive behavioral therapy with exposure is the evidence-based first-line treatment for specific phobias.

Find the right therapist for you

Get matched with a licensed therapist who treats phobias and anxiety — including online options. Free, confidential, no obligation.

Get matched with a therapist →

← Back to the full phobia-type comparison

Get matched with a therapist →

Supportive tips for managing fear & anxiety

Join free for compassionate, evidence-based tips on understanding and easing phobias and anxiety. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

We'll email you useful info and the occasional offer. Unsubscribe anytime.
We use cookies to measure site traffic. See our Privacy Policy.