Should I leave my depressed partner?

Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-05-08

Short answer

There is no clinically right answer to this. The right framework is: are they actively in treatment, are you able to maintain your own regulation alongside them, and is the relationship still recognisable as the one you committed to? Two yeses generally point to staying with structured support. Two nos generally point to a separation that is honest rather than guilty.

This question arrives in my consulting room more often than people imagine, and almost always with shame attached. The shame is the first thing I want to set down. Loving a person with depression is hard work. Wondering whether you can keep doing it is a sign of honesty, not failure.

The three honest questions

Are they actively in treatment? Not 'have they considered it' — actively, weekly, with a clinician, taking medication if prescribed. The presence of treatment does not guarantee improvement, but its absence guarantees that the relationship is carrying the entire load. Are you able to maintain your own regulation alongside them? Sleep, work, friendships, your own mental health — if these have collapsed alongside theirs, you cannot help anyone, and the relationship has become a single regulating system that is now dysregulated. Is the relationship still recognisable as the one you committed to? Depression changes a person; it does not have to dissolve them. If there are still moments of the person you love — even brief ones — there is something to work with.

What staying well looks like

A treatment plan you both understand. Couples sessions in addition to individual work. Protected time for your own regulation that they support, not resent. Crisis protocols agreed in writing — what you will both do at 2 AM, who to call, where to go. Boundaries that are not punitive but structural — what you can offer, what you can't.

What leaving honestly looks like

If you have done the above, given it real time, and the answer is still that you cannot continue — leaving is a clinically defensible decision. The way to leave matters: with honesty rather than disappearance, with attention to their safety in the immediate aftermath, and with help to set up their care for the next 30 days. That is not abandonment. That is the most generous version of an exit.

Get yourself supported either way

Whether you stay or leave, this conversation deserves a clinician of your own. Take the PHQ-9 and GAD-7 on this site as your own baseline, and consider booking a consultation — your wellbeing is not a side project of theirs.

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