The purpose of this study was to investigate the ethical direction of non-contact therapy in the era of COVID-19. For this purpose, non-contact art therapy, art therapy ethics, and non-contact counseling psychotherapy ethics were searched for on the Internet in countries where art therapy is actively conducted. A total of 77 data points were selected by combining 59 data points with full texts for which adequacy was confirmed and 18 non-contact therapy guidelines posted in domestic and foreign associations among 1,923 data points. As a result of the study, the ethical topics identified as being related to non-contact therapy in counseling, psychotherapy, and art therapy were confidentiality, therapeutic relationship, self-management of the therapist, and legal considerations. The ethical direction in non-contact art therapy after the COVID-19 pandemic emerged has been, first, the therapeutic boundary and therapeutic relationship, second, the safety of clients and therapists; and third, confidentiality. More specifically, therapeutic boundaries are boundaries in space, time, and objects. In therapeutic relationships, art media, the therapeutic process, art works, electronic devices, and ability to use the devices are required. Confidentiality includes online security and the protection of personal information. Based on these results, the significance and limitations of this study were discussed.