The study aimed to investigate the nature and meaning of psychotherapists' experiences with self-car-focused group art therapy. The study participants were five psychotherapists with at least 6 years of experience in a doctoral degree program related to psychotherapy. The data collection was conducted from April 2019 to October 2019 through pre-interviews, 10 sessions of group art therapy, and post-interviews. The analysis of the collected data was conducted using van Manen's hermeneutic phenomenological method, and 22 sub-themes and six essential themes emerged from the data analysis. Accordingly, the research results were as follows. First, the participants were in a difficult and exhausted state due to the physical and emotional factors related to being psychotherapists. This state can directly affect the client, so continuous self-care is necessary. Second, participants could focus on themselves through a felt sense and feel a shift, look inside, recognize their problems, and find solutions. Fourth, through participation in group art therapy, support and empathy were promoted, and the participants could experience emotional stability and self-care. Fifth, focusing group art therapy became a driving force to help clients and participants’ themselves by allowing them to accept themselves as they are and providing an opportunity to grow as a therapist. Based on these results, the implications and limitations of this study were then discussed.