Teen & Family

Back-to-School Anxiety in Teens: A Parent's Guide

Back-to-school anxiety is the worry, dread, and physical stress some teens feel as a new school year approaches. A degree of it is normal. Most kids feel some nerves in late August. But for some teens, that worry rises to a level that disrupts sleep, mood, and the ability to walk into the building, and at that point it’s no longer just nerves. Knowing the difference is the most useful thing a parent can do.

Anxiety is also more common than most families realize: an estimated 31.9% of adolescents aged 13–18 experience an anxiety disorder at some point (National Institute of Mental Health). If your teen is struggling, they are far from alone, and there is genuinely effective help.

Why back-to-school is hard for anxious teens

A new year is a stack of unknowns all at once: new teachers, new social dynamics, harder coursework, and, in the South Bay’s high-achieving schools, real performance pressure. For a teen prone to anxiety, the weeks before school can fill with “what ifs” that are hard to turn off. The anticipation is often worse than the reality, which is exactly why the period right before school starts is when many families notice it most.

Normal nerves vs. anxiety that needs support

Most back-to-school worry settles within a week or two. Anxiety that needs support tends to look different:

Normal nervesAnxiety that needs support
DurationEases within the first week or twoPersists or worsens beyond the first weeks
IntensityManageable; comes and goesIntense, hard to soothe, frequent
Daily lifeSchool and routines continueDisrupts sleep, eating, friendships, or attendance
AvoidanceGoes, despite nervesRefuses or repeatedly tries to stay home
BodyOccasional butterfliesFrequent headaches or stomachaches, especially mornings

If what you’re seeing sits mostly in the right-hand column, it’s worth a closer look.

Signs of anxiety in a teenager

Teen anxiety doesn’t always announce itself as worry. It often shows up as physical complaints or behavior:

How to help, without feeding the anxiety

The instinct to reassure (“you’ll be fine”) and to let an anxious teen skip the hard thing is understandable, but both can quietly make anxiety stronger over time. More helpful:

In our work with teens and families, the families who do best are rarely the ones with the “right words.” They’re the ones who stay steady and keep the relationship open while their teen does hard things.

When to seek professional help

Reach out for a professional evaluation when anxiety is persistent, is disrupting daily life, or isn’t improving on its own, and sooner rather than later if there’s school refusal or panic attacks, since avoidance gets harder to reverse the longer it sets in. You don’t need to wait for a crisis to ask for help; earlier support is usually easier support.

If your teen is in crisis or talking about harming themselves, call or text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, or go to your nearest emergency room.

How therapy helps

Teen therapy gives an adolescent a confidential, respectful space to understand what they’re feeling and build real tools to manage it. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a well-supported approach for adolescent anxiety, and good care works with parents, keeping you appropriately informed while giving your teen room to do their own work. When it helps, family therapy brings everyone onto the same page.

If you’d like to talk it through, our teen therapy team works with South Bay families in person and across California online. A free 15-minute consultation is a low-pressure place to start.

Frequently asked questions

Is it normal for my teen to be anxious about school? Some nerves are completely normal and usually ease within the first week or two. It’s worth a closer look when the anxiety is intense, persistent, or disrupts sleep, friendships, or attendance.

What are the signs of anxiety in a teenager? Often physical (headaches, stomachaches), behavioral (avoidance, irritability, withdrawal), or school-related (reassurance-seeking, dropping grades, refusing to go), not always spoken worry.

How can I help without making it worse? Validate the feeling rather than dismissing it, support facing fears in small steps instead of avoiding them, protect sleep and routine, and stay calm. Avoidance and over-reassurance tend to strengthen anxiety over time.

When should I get professional help? When anxiety is persistent, disrupts daily life, or doesn’t improve, and quickly if there’s school refusal or panic. Earlier support is easier support.

Does therapy actually help teen anxiety? For many teens, yes. Evidence-based approaches like CBT help adolescents build practical skills to manage anxiety. We’ll talk honestly about what’s realistic for your teen.

Do you offer teen therapy near me? We see South Bay teens in person and offer virtual sessions across California. Reach out for a free consultation.

References

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