Psychotherapy inherently engages clients' preferences, which have been conceptualized as key elements of evidence-hased clinical practice. Yet, few studies have examined clients' preferences for their psychotherapist's personality characteristics, and even fewer have addressed potential variables that influence such preferences. In a unique study, Greenberg and Zeldow (1980) assessed participants' preferences for an ideal psychotherapist's personality traits, and whether these preferences differed by participant sex. Employing a comparable design, we reexamined in the present study (three decades later) college men and women's ideal psychotherapist preferences. The current participants {N = 258 undergraduates) completed the Adjective Check List (Gough & Heilbrun, 1965) to assess psychotherapist traits. Descriptive statistics are reported for preferred traits across sexes, while t tests and effect size estimates were used to examine differences between sexes. Eindings revealed that the most preferred clinician traits (e.g., personal adjustment, nurturance) were similar for male and female participants. However, Greenberg and Zeldow's primary finding was replicated in the current study: Men indicated a greater preference for a psychotherapist with historically stereotypical feminine sex-role traits, whereas women preferred a psychotherapist with historically stereotypical masculine sex-role traits. There were also several noticeable within-sex differences on stated preferences from the 1980 study to the present study. The fmdings provide psychotherapists with information on client preferences to which they might need to respond, or at least consider, at the level of staffing, client-psychotherapist matching, and/or treatment process.