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Maintenance treatment: a plain-language definition
Maintenance treatment is the phase of continuing care after symptoms improve, aimed at keeping them from returning. Its length is individualized and reviewed regularly with your clinician.
Medically reviewed by Shariq Refai, MD, MBA, FAPA, board certified psychiatrist · Last reviewed June 8, 2026 · Editorial policy
Definition
What maintenance treatment means
Maintenance treatment is the stage of care that comes after the acute phase, once symptoms have improved or remitted. Its purpose is to protect the gains and prevent relapse. In depression, for example, the acute phase brings symptoms down, a continuation phase consolidates the improvement, and the maintenance phase keeps a person well over the longer term. The same medication and dose that achieved remission usually continues through maintenance.
In practice maintenance treatment is what happens when someone feels better and asks whether they still need to keep going. For a first episode of depression, guidelines often suggest continuing treatment for six months to a year after recovery before considering a taper. For people with several past episodes or with bipolar disorder, maintenance may be longer or indefinite, because the relapse risk without it is high. The plan is always individualized.
This matters because stopping too early is one of the most common reasons symptoms come back. Feeling well is the goal of maintenance, not a signal that treatment is finished; the medication is often part of why the person feels well. Decisions about when and whether to taper belong in a conversation with the clinician, who weighs the number of past episodes, severity, and personal preference, and who plans any reduction gradually.
A common misconception is that needing maintenance treatment means a person is dependent on the medication or has failed to recover. Continuing treatment to stay well is a normal part of managing many conditions, the same way someone manages blood pressure. Another misread is that maintenance lasts forever by default. For many people it is time-limited, and tapering off with a clinician is a planned step, not an abandonment of care.
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Frequently asked questions
Good questions, clear answers
Why continue treatment after I feel better?
Because feeling better is often the result of the treatment, and stopping too early is a common cause of relapse. Maintenance treatment protects the improvement and keeps symptoms from returning.
How long does maintenance treatment last?
It is individualized. After a first episode of depression, treatment often continues six months to a year after recovery. People with several past episodes or bipolar disorder may need longer or ongoing maintenance.
Does maintenance treatment mean I am dependent on the medication?
No. Continuing treatment to stay well is a normal part of managing many conditions. Antidepressants are not addictive, and any decision to taper is planned gradually with your clinician.
Sources
Sources and further reading
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