Are SSRIs addictive?

Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-04-22

Short answer

No. SSRIs do not produce craving, tolerance escalation or compulsive use — the three defining features of addiction. They do produce physical adaptation, which is why stopping them abruptly causes a discontinuation syndrome. The fix is a slow, planned taper, not avoiding them in the first place.

Addiction vs adaptation — the distinction that matters

Addiction medicine has a precise definition: compulsive use despite harm, craving when the substance is unavailable, and escalating tolerance. SSRIs do not produce any of these. What they do produce is neurochemical adaptation — the receptor system adjusts to the steady presence of the medication. Stopping suddenly causes a discontinuation syndrome (dizziness, flu-like symptoms, electric-shock sensations) which is unpleasant and short-lived but is not withdrawal in the addiction-medicine sense.

How to come off them safely

Always with the prescriber. Typical taper: reduce dose by 25% every 2–4 weeks, longer if symptoms re-emerge. Some people need very slow tapers using liquid formulations or pill-cutting. Plan the taper for a stable period of life — not during a job change, a wedding or a bereavement. Most patients complete a taper without issue when it is paced.

Why this matters

The 'addictive' myth keeps people away from a class of medication that, used correctly, has changed millions of lives. If your distress is at a level where medication has been recommended, the question to ask is not 'will I get hooked' but 'is this the right medication, at the right dose, for the right duration'. Take the PHQ-9 and GAD-7 here, and have that conversation with a clinician.

Take the next step

Read about the condition

Want to talk about your specific situation?

The AI Psychologist trained on Dr. Sodhi's clinical method is free, private and available 24×7 in 100+ global languages.

Related questions