Teenage years bring big changes: shifting life phases, peer pressures, school demands, and evolving identities. It’s no surprise that many teens feel anxious. According to one global meta-analysis, the prevalence of anxiety and depressive symptoms among adolescents has increased significantly in recent decades.
As a dad, your support matters. When your teen feels heard, validated, and knows you’re beside them with practical tools, you help build their confidence and resilience. Below are evidence-based tips on how dads can support their teens through moments of anxiety.
-
Create a safe, judgment-free space to talk
Research shows that youths who report low parental support or monitoring are significantly more likely to experience psychosocial health problems (including anxiety) than those with high parental support.
As a father, you can create this by:
- Setting aside a time that works for both of you (after dinner, a car ride, side-by-side activity, like talking in the car) when the conversation isn’t forced.
- Listening – ask the question: “What’s one thing today that made you anxious? What helped?” and let them speak without interruption.
- Avoiding dismissive phrases like “You’ll be fine” or “Don’t worry about it” — research around emotion-coaching shows that when parents minimise or ignore emotions, teens may struggle more with emotional regulation. Instead help to name their emotions and show curiosity.
-
Validate their feelings and normalise anxious moments
What this looks like in practice:
- You might say: “I can see that felt scary/overwhelming – thanks for sharing that with me.”
- Then ask: “When that happened, what helped you? What might you try next time?”
This helps your teen recognise their own coping, rather than simply reducing the anxiety for them.
-
Focus on being present rather than ‘fixing’ everything
As a dad:
- Your role isn’t always to solve the anxiety. Sometimes the biggest help is being alongside them.
- Doing a low-pressure activity (walking, driving, shared hobby) while you ask that question above creates space for connection and unwinding.
- After listening, you might collaboratively consider a “small action” for next time. This aligns with the actionable tip in your copy.
-
Help build small, manageable coping tools
Here’s how you can help practically:
- Once you’ve listened and validated, ask: “What helped? Could we try something together next time?”
- Encourage the teen to pick one small coping skill: e.g., taking a 5-minute walk, doing a breathing exercise (4 s in, 2 s hold, 6 s out), writing down one anxious thought and one “what helped” after school, limiting screen/phone time before bed (which links to anxiety via sleep disruption).
- When the teen uses a tool or realises “I handled it somewhat better,” acknowledge it: “That was strong of you to try that — good work.” This helps build self-confidence and resilience.
- Encourage consistency. Over time, this builds a coping habit rather than one-off fixes.
-
Model calm coping and look after your own wellbeing
What this means for you:
- Recognise that how you handle stress (and talk about it) matters. If you say, “I felt tense today too, I went for a short walk and it helped me,” you model healthy coping.
- Prioritise your own wellbeing so you’re available emotionally for your teen.
- Secure parent-teen attachment and emotional availability matter. One study found that parents of youths with anxiety disorders engaged in significantly less “emotion-coaching” (helping teens label and process emotions) than parents of non-anxious youths.
-
Know when to seek additional help
While the tips above support everyday anxiety, persistent, intense, or disabling anxiety (impacting school, sleep, friendships) may warrant professional support.
As a dad you can:
- Monitor how your teen is coping: Are they withdrawing? Are they avoiding activities they used to enjoy? Are their grades changing?
- Offer to help make an appointment with a GP, school counsellor or mental health professional. Let them know you’ll support them.
- Reinforce: asking for help is a strength, not a failure.
- Continue your communication question: “What’s one thing today that made you anxious? What helped?” This keeps the connection open even as you consider professional support if needed.
-
Keep the conversation going
When repeated regularly your teen learns:
- You’re a safe person to share with.
- Anxiety isn’t a shameful secret—they have your attention.
- They’re building agency: recognising what made them anxious + what helped + “next time I’ll try…”
Final thoughts
As a dad you may not have all the answers (and you don’t need to). What counts is your consistent presence, your openness to listen, your emotional availability and your willingness to help your teen build tangible coping skills.
By combining:
- Validation + Safe space
- Listening + Small action
- Modeling calm coping
- Knowing when to seek additional help – you’re helping your teen not just manage anxiety today — but build resilience for tomorrow.