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SSRIs: the honest guide

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, including sertraline (Zoloft), escitalopram (Lexapro), fluoxetine (Prozac), paroxetine (Paxil), and citalopram (Celexa), are the most prescribed psychiatric medications in the world and first line treatment for depression and most anxiety disorders. Here is what they do, what they don't, and what the first six weeks actually feel like.

Medically reviewed by Shariq Refai, MD, MBA, FAPA, board certified psychiatrist · Published June 7, 2026 · Last reviewed June 8, 2026 · Editorial policy

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Important. This page is general education, not a prescription or medical advice. Medication decisions, including starting, changing, or stopping, belong in a conversation with your own clinician. Never stop a psychiatric medication abruptly without medical guidance.

How they work

What an SSRI actually does

SSRIs increase the availability of serotonin between brain cells by slowing its reabsorption. But the serotonin boost itself isn't the therapy: it sets off downstream adaptations, including changes in receptor sensitivity and neuroplasticity, that build over weeks. That's why SSRIs help gradually rather than the day you start, and why 'it's just a chemical imbalance' is a cartoon of what's really happening.

Across the class, members differ more in side effect profile and interactions than in average effectiveness. Your history, your other medications, and prior responses, yours and even close family members', guide which one we'd reach for first.

What they treat

Conditions with solid SSRI evidence

SSRIs carry strong evidence for:

  • Major depressive disorder
  • Generalized anxiety disorder
  • Panic disorder
  • Social anxiety disorder
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder (often at higher doses)
  • PTSD
  • Premenstrual dysphoric disorder

The first six weeks

A realistic timeline

Week one to two: side effects tend to arrive before benefits, most commonly nausea, headache, jitteriness, or sleep changes. Most fade within two weeks. Weeks two to four: early shifts, often noticed by others first, in sleep, energy, or how sticky negative thoughts feel. Weeks four to eight: the real verdict window, where mood and anxiety improvements consolidate. We measure this with PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores rather than memory.

Sexual side effects, decreased libido or delayed orgasm, affect a meaningful minority and often persist while on the medication. We bring this up before you start, because patients shouldn't have to discover it alone, and there are management options, including dose timing, dose changes, or switching agents like bupropion.

Safety

What we monitor and warn about

SSRIs are not habit forming and are not controlled substances. Two warnings matter. First, the FDA boxed warning: in people under 25, antidepressants can increase suicidal thoughts early in treatment, which is why early follow up is tight, not optional. Second, stopping abruptly can cause discontinuation symptoms, dizziness, electric-shock sensations, irritability, so SSRIs are tapered, never quit cold. Rarely, especially combined with other serotonergic drugs, serotonin syndrome can occur; we review your full medication list to prevent it.

Want to go deeper? For full, drug-by-drug reference guides sourced from FDA labeling and clinical guidelines, see PsychiatryRx.org, and for plain-language definitions of any term on this page, see Shrinkopedia. Both are independent, ad-free publications in The Shrink Network, medically reviewed by our founder.

Compare

SSRIs vs SNRIs at a glance

Both are first-line antidepressants, but they act on different brain chemicals.

FeatureSSRIsSNRIs
Acts onSerotonin onlySerotonin and norepinephrine
First line forDepression and anxietyDepression, anxiety, some pain
Typical onset2 to 6 weeks2 to 6 weeks
Common early effectsNausea, headache, sleep changesNausea, dry mouth, sweating
Weight effectOften neutral, varies by drugOften neutral, varies by drug
Notable cautionSerotonin syndrome if combinedBlood pressure at higher doses
Controlled substanceNo, not controlledNo, not controlled
General comparison for educational use; your clinician tailors any choice to you.

Frequently asked questions

Good questions, clear answers

How long until an SSRI works?

Early changes can appear by week two, but the fair test is six to eight weeks at an adequate dose. We track scores along the way so the decision to continue, adjust, or switch is based on data.

Will an SSRI change my personality?

No. Treated patients overwhelmingly describe feeling like themselves again, not like someone else. Emotional blunting can occur at higher doses, and it's a dose conversation, not a price you must pay.

Are SSRIs addictive?

No. They're not controlled substances, don't cause cravings, and don't require escalating doses. Discontinuation symptoms on abrupt stopping are a withdrawal-like phenomenon, which is why we taper, but that is not addiction.

Can I drink alcohol on an SSRI?

Light drinking isn't an absolute contraindication, but alcohol works against the treatment, worsening sleep, mood, and anxiety. We'll be honest about that trade-off rather than pretending one rule fits everyone.

What if the first SSRI doesn't work?

Common, and not a dead end. About a third of people respond fully to the first agent; switching within class, changing class, or augmenting are all evidence based next moves your clinician will walk through.

Do SSRIs cause weight gain?

Modest weight change is possible with longer-term use and varies by agent; paroxetine carries the most weight risk, while sertraline and escitalopram are closer to neutral for most people. We track weight openly and switch agents if the trend matters to you.

Can I take an SSRI during pregnancy or breastfeeding?

Often yes, and untreated depression carries its own real risks to both mother and baby. This is a joint decision with your obstetric clinician; sertraline has among the most reassuring reproductive safety data. We coordinate rather than guess.

Do I need blood tests on an SSRI?

Routine labs aren't required for most healthy adults on SSRIs. We may check baseline thyroid or metabolic labs to rule out medical mimics of depression, and citalopram at higher doses warrants attention to heart rhythm in some patients.

Medical Disclaimer: This content is provided for general educational and informational purposes only. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Reading this content does not create a doctor-patient relationship with shrinkMD, Dr. Shariq Refai, or any affiliated clinician. Always seek the advice of a qualified healthcare professional regarding questions about a medical or mental health condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking care because of something you have read on this website. If you are experiencing a medical or mental health emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.

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