Existential Psychotherapy vs Person-Centered Therapy

A side-by-side comparison: mechanism, evidence, the conditions each treats, philosophical roots, and where they actually disagree clinically.

At a glance

Existential Psychotherapy

Tradition
Existential
Founder
Rollo May / Irvin Yalom (1958)
Evidence
Emerging evidence
Focus
Insight + Relational
Format
Individual + Group
Duration
Open-ended

Person-Centered Therapy

Tradition
Humanistic
Founder
Carl Rogers (1951)
Evidence
Guideline-recommended
Focus
Relational
Format
Individual + Group
Duration
Open-ended

How they work

Existential Psychotherapy

Core mechanism: Confronting ultimate concerns (death, freedom, isolation, meaninglessness) authentically reduces existential anxiety and enables choice

Ontology: Existential anxiety arising from confrontation with the givens of existence

Person-Centered Therapy

Core mechanism: Conditions of worth dissolve through unconditional positive regard, empathy, and congruence; self-actualizing tendency re-engages

Ontology: Incongruence between self-concept and organismic experience caused by conditional regard

Conditions treated

4 shared · 0 Existential Psychotherapy-only · 1 Person-Centered Therapy-only

Only Person-Centered Therapy

What each assumes — and misses

Existential Psychotherapy

Philosophical roots: Heidegger (being-toward-death, thrownness, Dasein); Kierkegaard (anxiety as dizziness of freedom); Sartre (bad faith, radical freedom); Buber (I-Thou); Levinas (face of the Other); Tillich (courage to be); Jaspers (limit situations); Marcel (mystery vs. problem)

Blind spots: May neglect symptom stabilization and concrete coping; can feel abstract for clients in acute distress

Therapeutic voice: You keep saying you should feel grateful. But what do you actually feel?

Person-Centered Therapy

Philosophical roots: Kierkegaard (authenticity); Buber (I-Thou relation); Husserl (phenomenological attitude, bracketing); Dewey (organism-environment transaction); Maslow (self-actualization); Rousseau (natural goodness corrupted by society)

Blind spots: May underemphasize skill-building, structure, and direct intervention when clients need concrete tools for acute symptoms

Therapeutic voice: It sounds like there's a part of you that has never felt permission to want that.

Choosing between them

Existential Psychotherapy (Existential) and Person-Centered Therapy (Humanistic) come from different traditions, which means they assume different things about what a person is, what causes suffering, and what the therapeutic relationship is for. The choice between them is often less about "which works better" and more about which set of assumptions fits the client and the therapist.

For deeper coverage: see the full Existential Psychotherapy and Person-Centered Therapy pages, or use the interactive comparison tool to add more modalities to this comparison.