DBT Pros and Cons Skill: A Worksheet for Long-term Consequences

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November 20, 2025
DBT Pros and Cons Skill: A Worksheet for Long-term Consequences | Dialectical Behavior Therapy | Envision your Evolution
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In this article you will read about:

What Is the Pros and Cons Skill in DBT?

How the DBT Pros/Cons Skill Works

Focusing on Crisis Urges

Beyond “Normal” Pros and Cons

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Theoretical Foundations: Why Pros and Cons Matters in DBT

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Step-by-Step: How to Use the DBT Pros and Cons Skill

You can use this skill anytime there’s a meaningful decision, but it’s especially powerful with crisis urges.

Case Example: Applying DBT Pros and Cons Skill in Practice

Limitations and Considerations

Like all skills, Pros/Cons works best when used wisely:

  • Too dysregulated to think. In very high arousal (panic, rage), you may not be able to think clearly enough to complete a worksheet. In those moments, TIPP or grounding might need to come first.

  • Rationalizing harmful behavior. If used superficially, someone might over-emphasize the “pros” of harmful behavior and underplay the cons. It’s important to bring Wise Mind and honesty to the exercise, sometimes with therapist support.

  • Not a substitute for trauma work or problem-solving. Pros/Cons helps with decision-making in the moment; it doesn’t, by itself, heal trauma, fix systemic problems, or replace other DBT modules.

  • Cultural and personal values. What counts as a “pro” or “con” is deeply tied to values, culture, and context. Therapists should explore how these factors shape the lists rather than assuming a universal hierarchy of pros and cons.

Used appropriately and repeatedly, however, Pros/Cons can become a reliable pause button and decision-support tool that helps people move away from crisis behaviors and toward their long-term goals.

Conclusion

The Pros/Cons skill in DBT transforms a familiar decision-making tool into a targeted distress tolerance strategy for moments when emotions run high and urges to act impulsively are strong. By systematically exploring:

  • The advantages and disadvantages of acting on urges, and

  • The advantages and disadvantages of resisting urges and using skills,

individuals gain a clearer view of how their choices affect both short-term relief and long-term wellbeing.

Within the broader DBT framework—alongside mindfulness, emotion regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness—Pros/Cons supports Wise Mind decision-making, strengthens commitment to change, and helps reduce reliance on self-destructive coping. For those living with BPD or other forms of emotional dysregulation, it offers a concrete, portable way to bring clarity and values back into the picture when it matters most.

FAQ

Most frequent questions and answers about the DBT Pros and Cons Skills

Use the Pros/Cons skill when you notice a strong urge to do something that:

  • Might feel good or relieving right now, but

  • Is likely to hurt you or your life in the long run (e.g., self-harm, quitting therapy, using substances, blowing up at someone, ghosting, bingeing).

You can also use it when you’re stuck between two choices and want to see more clearly which one aligns with your long-term goals and values.

A regular pros and cons list usually just asks, “What are the good and bad things about this option?”

The DBT version is more structured and focused on crisis urges:

  • You look at both options: acting on the urge and resisting it/using skills.

  • You consider short-term relief and long-term consequences.

  • You tie the pros and cons back to your values, goals, and treatment.

It’s less about “Which seems nicer?” and more about “Which choice helps me build the life I actually want?”

That’s actually common when you’re in Emotion Mind—your brain is naturally focused on immediate relief. A few tips:

  • Take your time and really stretch to list long-term cons, even if they feel far away.

  • Ask, “If I did this every time I felt this way, where would I be in a year?”

  • Imagine someone you love in your situation—what would you see as the downsides for them?

You can also do the worksheet with a therapist or trusted person who can gently help you see blind spots without shaming you.

If your distress is at a 9–10/10, doing a detailed worksheet might be too much. In those moments, try:

  • Using a faster skill first (like TIPP, paced breathing, or grounding) to bring distress down a bit.

  • Doing a “micro” Pros/Cons:

    • Pros of acting on urge: …

    • Cons of acting on urge: …

    • Pros of resisting: …

    • Cons of resisting: …

Even a brief, mental version can create just enough distance from the urge to help you choose a safer action.

No. It means you’re human and practicing something new under stress. The skill still:

  • Slowed you down—even a little.

  • Gave you more awareness of why you’re doing what you’re doing.

  • Created material you and your therapist can learn from later (e.g., “What pros felt most convincing?” “What cons did I minimize?”).

DBT sees progress not as “never acting on urges again,” but as acting on them less often, less intensely, and with more awareness over time. Each time you use Pros/Cons—even if the outcome isn’t perfect—you’re building that capacity.

DBT Pros and Cons Skills Book Recommendations

Here is a collection of the best books on the market related to DBT Pros and Cons Skills: 

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