Sexual Addiction
Sexual addiction — recognized in ICD-11 as Compulsive Sexual Behaviour Disorder — is a persistent pattern of failure to control intense, repetitive sexual impulses or urges resulting in sexual behaviour over an extended period that causes marked distress or impairment.
Overview
Sexual addiction, also referred to as compulsive sexual behaviour, hypersexual behaviour, or out-of-control sexual behaviour, is a clinical pattern characterized by persistent and repetitive sexual urges, fantasies, and behaviors that the person experiences as out of control and that produce clinically significant distress or impairment in personal, family, social, educational, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
The construct has had a contested diagnostic history. It is not a separate disorder in the DSM-5-TR, where it is partially captured under “Other Specified Sexual Dysfunction” or, when relevant, paraphilic disorder categories. The ICD-11 (effective 2022) introduced Compulsive Sexual Behaviour Disorder (6C72) in the impulse-control disorders chapter, providing the first formally recognized diagnostic framework. The decision to classify it as an impulse-control disorder rather than a behavioural addiction reflects ongoing scientific debate about whether the underlying mechanism is best modelled as addiction, compulsion, or impulse-control failure.
Population prevalence estimates vary widely (1% to 6% of the general population, higher in some clinical samples), reflecting differences in definition, instrumentation, and study population. The disorder is more frequently identified in men, but recent research suggests that women are under-identified rather than less affected. Common presentations include compulsive use of pornography, compulsive masturbation, anonymous or paid sex, multiple concurrent affairs, and use of internet or mobile platforms to maintain contact with multiple sexual partners.
Sexual addiction frequently co-occurs with mood disorders, anxiety disorders, ADHD, substance use disorders, and trauma history. It is associated with relationship dissolution, financial consequences, occupational disruption, sexually transmitted infections, and elevated suicide risk during periods of acute shame or interpersonal crisis.
Treatment is effective for most individuals who engage in care. Outcomes depend heavily on engagement, treatment of co-occurring conditions, and the social-relational context, particularly involvement of an affected partner.
Signs and symptoms
- Repetitive sexual behaviour despite negative consequences — Continued engagement after relationship damage, financial loss, occupational risk, or health consequences.
- Failed attempts to reduce or control — Multiple unsuccessful efforts to limit pornography use, sexual contacts, or related behaviors.
- Loss of time — Significant time lost to sexual fantasy, planning, behaviour, or recovery from behaviour — often hours per day.
- Use to regulate emotion — Sexual behaviour used to cope with stress, sadness, boredom, anger, or anxiety rather than for pleasure or connection.
- Escalation — Need for more frequent, more intense, or more novel sexual stimulation to achieve the previous emotional effect.
- Tolerance and withdrawal-like states — Reduced effect of previously sufficient stimulation; irritability, restlessness, or low mood when access is interrupted.
- Secrecy and compartmentalization — Active concealment from partner, family, or colleagues; double-life patterns and elaborate cover stories.
- Diminished pleasure — Reduced subjective satisfaction over time; behaviour becomes driven rather than enjoyed.
- Risk-taking — behaviour in higher-risk contexts (workplace, public spaces, with strangers) where consequences would be severe.
- Severe shame and self-loathing — Persistent shame, hopelessness, and self-loathing — often the most painful experience the person reports — sometimes culminating in suicidal ideation.
Diagnostic context
The ICD-11 criteria for Compulsive Sexual Behaviour Disorder (6C72) require:
- A persistent pattern of failure to control intense, repetitive sexual impulses or urges resulting in repetitive sexual behaviour, manifested by:
- Repetitive sexual activities becoming a central focus of the person’s life to the point of neglecting health and personal care or other interests, activities, and responsibilities;
- Numerous unsuccessful efforts to significantly reduce repetitive sexual behaviour;
- Continued repetitive sexual behaviour despite adverse consequences (e.g., repeated relationship disruption, occupational consequences, negative impact on health);
- Continued engagement in repetitive sexual behaviour even when the person derives little or no satisfaction from it.
- Pattern of failure to control persists over an extended period (e.g., 6 months or more) and causes marked distress or impairment.
Distress that is entirely related to moral judgments and disapproval about sexual impulses, urges, or behaviors is not sufficient to meet this requirement.
Differential diagnosis includes manic episode of bipolar disorder, hypersexuality due to substance use or medication, hypersexuality secondary to neurological disorder, and paraphilic disorders. Validated assessment instruments include the Hypersexual behaviour Inventory and the Sexual Addiction Screening Test (SAST-R).
Causes and risk factors
Compulsive sexual behaviour arises from interacting biological, psychological, and social factors:
Neurobiological factors: functional neuroimaging studies of CSBD show altered reactivity in brain regions implicated in reward processing, executive control, and salience attribution — patterns partially overlapping with substance use disorders. Heritability of impulsivity and sensation-seeking traits is well-established.
Trauma and developmental factors: early sexual abuse, exposure to sexually explicit material at developmentally inappropriate ages, and emotionally neglectful environments are associated with elevated risk. Sexual behaviour often becomes a self-soothing strategy in the absence of healthy emotional regulation skills.
Attachment factors: avoidant and disorganized attachment styles are over-represented; sexual behaviour offers proximity without the vulnerability of emotional intimacy.
Comorbidity: co-occurring conditions are the rule rather than the exception. Mood disorders (40-80%), anxiety disorders (40-60%), ADHD (20-40%), substance use disorders (40-60%), and personality disorders are commonly seen.
Access and technology: the rise of high-bandwidth internet pornography, anonymous sex apps, and pay-for-content platforms has expanded the opportunity surface and accelerated escalation patterns. Earlier first exposure to pornography (ages 8-12 is now common) is associated with greater risk of later compulsive use.
Cultural factors: social attitudes toward sexuality, religious frameworks, and shame surrounding sexuality all interact with the underlying pattern. The same behaviour can produce very different distress levels in different cultural contexts; treatment must distinguish moral distress from clinical impairment.
Typical treatments
Evidence-informed treatment combines individual psychotherapy, group support, and pharmacotherapy when appropriate:
Cognitive behavioural Therapy targeting the trigger-response chain, cognitive distortions, urge management, and relapse prevention. CBT for CSBD borrows substantially from the substance-use-disorder literature.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) — values clarification, defusion from compulsive thoughts, and committed action provide a complementary framework, particularly helpful for the shame-driven recovery cycles common in this population.
Trauma-focused therapies (EMDR, prolonged exposure, sensorimotor) when an underlying trauma history is identified.
Group therapy and 12-step communities: Sex Addicts Anonymous (SAA), Sexaholics Anonymous (SA), and Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous (SLAA) provide community-based recovery frameworks. Outcome research is limited but consistent: sustained engagement is associated with better outcomes.
Couples therapy when a partner is involved. Disclosure, attachment repair, and rebuilding trust are central. Approaches include CBT for couples and EFT.
Pharmacotherapy: SSRIs (particularly at higher doses) reduce sexual urges and behaviors in some individuals; the effect is partly attributable to sexual side effects of these medications. Naltrexone has limited but suggestive evidence. Anti-androgens are used in severe paraphilic cases. There is no FDA- or Health Canada-approved medication specifically for CSBD.
Treatment of comorbidity is essential — outcomes for CSBD without addressing co-occurring depression, anxiety, ADHD, substance use, or trauma are typically poor.
When to seek help
Professional evaluation is indicated when:
- Sexual behaviour has persisted despite repeated, sincere efforts to stop or reduce it.
- The behaviour is causing meaningful damage to relationships, health, finances, or work.
- You are spending significant time daily on sexual fantasy, behaviour, or recovery from behaviour.
- The behaviour is no longer providing pleasure but feels driven, automatic, or escape-like.
- You are experiencing severe shame, hopelessness, or suicidal thoughts associated with the behaviour.
- You are placing yourself or others at risk (sexually transmitted infection exposure, financial harm, behaviour toward minors or non-consenting persons).
If suicidal thoughts are present, free 24-hour support is available at 9-8-8 (Suicide Crisis Helpline) or 1-833-456-4566 (Talk Suicide Canada). If sexual behaviour involves anyone under 18 or a non-consenting adult, immediate professional consultation is necessary; mandatory reporting laws apply.
Frequently asked questions
Is sexual addiction a real diagnosis?
Is high libido the same as sex addiction?
Is pornography use the same as sexual addiction?
Will my partner find out?
Can I recover and stay in my marriage?
How long does treatment take?
References
- World Health Organization. (2022). International Classification of Diseases, Eleventh Revision (ICD-11). 6C72 Compulsive Sexual Behaviour Disorder.
- Kraus, S. W., et al. (2018). Compulsive sexual behaviour disorder in the ICD-11. World Psychiatry, 17(1), 109–110.
- Reid, R. C., et al. (2012). Report of findings in a DSM-5 field trial for hypersexual disorder. Journal of Sexual Medicine, 9(11), 2868–2877.
- Carnes, P. (2001). Out of the Shadows: Understanding Sexual Addiction (3rd ed.). Hazelden.
- American Psychiatric Association. (2022). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed., text rev.). APA.
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ShiftGrit Psychology & Counselling is professionally regulated, certified, and recognized by leading psychology and mental-health organizations across Alberta and Canada. These associations reflect our commitment to ethical practice, clinical standards, and evidence-informed therapy through Identity-Level Therapy and Reconditioning.










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