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Kleptomania: Understanding the Disorder, Its Signs, and the Test

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychotherapist
3 min read

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In short: kleptomania is a DSM-5 impulse-control disorder. It is not "stealing": it is the repeated inability to resist the impulse to take objects the person neither needs nor uses. What defines the disorder is a cycle: tension builds before the act, then the act brings relief or pleasure, often followed by shame and guilt. It is rare, misunderstood, and very different from theft for profit. No online test diagnoses this.

What is kleptomania?

The vast majority of thefts have nothing to do with kleptomania: they are motivated by profit, need, group pressure, or anger. Kleptomania is paradoxical: the person steals objects of no value or use to them (they could often pay for them, and they throw them away, return them, or hoard them unused). The act has no material goal — it discharges an inner tension.

It is an impulse-control disorder, akin to intermittent explosive disorder and pyromania: all share the same tension–act–relief mechanism.

The signs (DSM-5 criteria)

  • repeated inability to resist the impulse to steal useless objects (not motivated by need or value);
  • rising tension just before committing the theft;
  • pleasure, gratification, or relief at the moment of the act;
  • the theft is not committed to express anger or revenge, and is not due to a delusion or hallucination;
  • the behavior is not better explained by conduct disorder, a manic episode, or antisocial personality.

What people often confuse it with

Ordinary theft (for profit, need, adolescent dare) is not kleptomania. Compulsive buying is a different phenomenon. And a manic episode (bipolar disorder) may involve impulsive buying or stealing without being kleptomania. The intense shame felt by people with kleptomania clearly distinguishes them from owned theft.

How is this dimension measured?

The specialized tool is the K-SAS (Kleptomania Symptom Assessment Scale, Grant), used mostly in research and treatment follow-up. It is a symptom-assessment instrument, not a general-public diagnostic test.

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Our kleptomania test helps spot the tension–act–relief cycle and put words to it, to prepare for a consultation. A high score is not a diagnosis.

What CBT can do

CBT is the best-supported approach. Two techniques stand out: exposure and response prevention (learning to tolerate the tension without acting) and stimulus control (reducing exposure to triggering situations). Work on shame is added, and sometimes a medical opinion (some treatments are studied). The disorder is treatable — all the more so when it is spoken about despite the shame.

When to seek help?

When the impulse to steal escapes you, repeats, and generates shame, anxiety, or legal problems; when you hide these acts from loved ones. A psychologist or psychiatrist can help without judgment — it is a symptom, not a moral flaw. Overview: behavioral disorders in the DSM-5.


This article is intended for psychological information and education. It does not constitute a diagnosis or medical advice. Only a qualified health professional can diagnose an impulse-control disorder, after a complete clinical assessment.

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Gildas Garrec, Psychopraticien TCC

About the author

Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.

📚 16 published books📝 900+ articles🎓 CBT certified