Last Updated on February 5, 2026
Quick answers: can you take antidepressants while pregnant?
Many people can. For many, staying on an effective SSRI during pregnancy is safer than stopping and relapsing. “Safe” does not mean “zero risk.” It means the likely benefits are greater than the likely harms for you and your baby.
If you just found out you are pregnant while on an SSRI
- Do not stop suddenly. Stopping can cause withdrawal‑like symptoms and a fast return of anxiety or depression.
- Call the clinician who prescribes the SSRI and let your OB team know what you take and the dose.
- Ask for a short plan in writing: stay the same, adjust the dose, or consider a supervised switch.
Fast checklist: what not to do
- Do not change your dose on your own to “make it safer.”
- Do not skip doses to reduce exposure. Inconsistent dosing can worsen symptoms.
- Do not wait until late pregnancy to talk about delivery and newborn monitoring.
Three common situations your team weighs
- Mild symptoms with long stability: Therapy, sleep support, and close follow‑up may be enough for some people.
- Moderate to severe symptoms: Many teams recommend continuing or starting medication to protect daily function.
- Past relapse after stopping: The risk of stopping may be higher than the risk of steady exposure.
What SSRIs are and why pregnancy can change the plan
Definition: SSRIs
SSRIs are antidepressants that raise serotonin signaling by blocking serotonin reuptake in the brain. They are used for major depression, generalized anxiety, panic disorder, OCD, PTSD, and related conditions.
Why pregnancy can change symptoms and side effects
Pregnancy can change sleep, hormones, stress, and how your body processes medicine. Nausea and vomiting can also lead to missed doses. Any of these can make anxiety or depression flare, even if you were stable before pregnancy.
Why “steady” is often safer than “perfect”
Many problems happen when treatment becomes unpredictable. Examples include missed doses, abrupt stopping, and unplanned switching. In many cases, one SSRI at the lowest effective dose, with clear follow‑up, is safer than frequent changes.
Why the “best SSRI” is often the one that works for you
SSRIs are not all identical. They differ in side effects, how long they stay in the body, and how people respond. If a medication has kept you stable, that history matters in pregnancy decision‑making.
Why treating depression and anxiety during pregnancy matters
Decisions about antidepressants during pregnancy are not only about medication exposure. They are also about the risk of untreated illness. Untreated depression and anxiety can disrupt sleep, nutrition, relationships, and prenatal care. Severe symptoms can also increase unsafe coping, including alcohol or drug use.
What federal guidance emphasizes
The FDA notes that patients and clinicians should weigh potential medication risks against the serious risks of under‑treatment or no treatment of depression during pregnancy (FDA safety communication on SSRI use in pregnancy).
Symptoms that deserve urgent support
- Suicidal thoughts, self‑harm urges, or feeling unable to stay safe.
- Severe panic, agitation, or not sleeping for days.
- Hearing or seeing things that others do not.
SSRI pregnancy risks: what research shows and what is still uncertain
Most data on SSRIs and pregnancy comes from large real‑world studies. Researchers compare groups and adjust for factors like smoking, other medications, and depression severity. This helps, but it cannot control every difference.
What large reviews suggest overall
Recent reviews generally find no strong link between SSRI exposure and major birth defects after accounting for the parent’s underlying illness. Some outcomes may increase slightly, but the absolute risk is usually low (updated review of SSRIs in pregnancy (PubMed Central)).
Possible risks discussed most often
- Preterm birth or lower birth weight in some studies.
- Pregnancy complications, such as higher blood pressure, in some studies.
- A small increase in postpartum bleeding in some studies.
- A rare newborn breathing and blood‑flow problem called PPHN.
- Short‑term newborn adaptation signs, such as jitteriness, feeding trouble, or fast breathing.
Why studies can sound conflicting
Depression and anxiety themselves can affect pregnancy outcomes. People with more severe illness may also be more likely to use medication. That makes it hard to separate the impact of the condition from the impact of the medication in every study.
How to think in absolute risk
Relative risk can sound scary. Absolute risk is often more useful. Ask: “Out of 1,000 pregnancies, how many cases happen without an SSRI, and how many with it?” Also ask: “If it happens, what would the care team do?”
Timing matters: first trimester, late pregnancy, and delivery planning
“SSRIs and pregnancy” includes different stages. Early pregnancy focuses on stability. Late pregnancy focuses on delivery planning and newborn observation.
First trimester: avoid unnecessary switching when you are stable
If you are stable on an SSRI, switching only to “be safer” can backfire. Switching can trigger withdrawal symptoms and relapse. A switch may still be needed for side effects or a specific concern, but it should be planned and monitored.
Late pregnancy: plan for newborn observation, not panic
Some babies exposed to SSRIs late in pregnancy show short‑term adjustment signs. Many cases are mild and improve with supportive care. Hospitals may watch breathing, feeding, tone, and irritability.
For a simple overview of how newborn withdrawal and related adjustment symptoms are monitored and treated, see Nova’s guide to newborn withdrawal symptoms (NAS) and treatment.
Should you taper before delivery?
There is no one rule. Lowering a dose may reduce exposure, but it can also raise relapse risk when stress and sleep loss increase. This is a shared decision based on your history.
Delivery handoff checklist
- Confirm your current SSRI name and dose are documented in your OB and psychiatry charts.
- Ask who will tell the newborn team about medication exposure.
- Ask what signs the baby team will watch for and for how long.
- Schedule postpartum follow‑up before delivery, not after.
What to discuss with your OB‑psych team
A good plan is written down and shared. It should include your treatment goals, your monitoring plan, and a “what if” plan if symptoms worsen.
Bring this information to your appointment
- Your diagnosis and your most impairing symptoms.
- Your past medication trials and side effects.
- Any relapse after stopping or lowering antidepressants.
- Any history of mania or hypomania (important for bipolar screening).
- Any alcohol or drug use, even if you feel embarrassed about it.
- All medicines and supplements you take.
Questions that make visits more productive
- What is my relapse risk if we stop or lower the medication?
- What is the lowest effective dose for me?
- How will we track symptoms (a weekly check‑in, a scale, or a short log)?
- If symptoms worsen, what is our first step?
- What is the delivery plan for newborn monitoring?
- What is the postpartum plan for the first two to six weeks?
Topics that deserve extra caution
- Bipolar disorder risk, because antidepressants alone can worsen mania in some people.
- Severe depression or suicidality, because fast treatment may be needed.
- Withdrawal risk from alcohol or certain sedatives, which can be dangerous in pregnancy.
Safer SSRI use while pregnant: practical habits that reduce risk
Keep dosing consistent
Take your SSRI at the same time each day. Missed doses can cause dizziness, irritability, anxiety spikes, and sleep disruption. If nausea leads to missed doses, ask about timing with food or moving the dose to a different time.
Have a missed‑dose plan
Ask your prescriber what to do if you miss a dose. In general, doubling up is not the default answer. A simple plan can reduce anxiety and prevent sudden changes.
Avoid supplement surprises
Ask before adding new supplements for sleep, energy, or “mood support.” Some products can worsen side effects or interact with serotonin pathways.
Use pregnancy labeling carefully
You may still see older letter categories online. They can be misleading because they compress complex data into a single label. For a deeper explanation, read Nova’s guide to pregnancy medication categories (A/B/C/D/X).
If substance use is part of the picture
Some people use alcohol, opioids, or sedatives to manage anxiety, insomnia, or depression. Pregnancy raises the stakes. Withdrawal and relapse can harm both parent and baby. Substance use can also make SSRI side effects harder to read and can increase missed doses.
Do not try to detox alone while pregnant
Withdrawal from alcohol and some sedatives can cause seizures and other serious complications. Opioid withdrawal can also be dangerous and can lead to dehydration and severe stress. If you are pregnant and cannot stop safely, get medical help.
Where medical stabilization can fit
For medically supervised support during withdrawal or early recovery, Nova offers Austin detox.
Where longer structure can fit
If you need a longer, structured setting to stabilize recovery and mental health together, Nova offers Austin residential inpatient rehab.
Why coordination matters for SSRIs
When OB care, psychiatric care, and substance use care are coordinated, SSRI decisions are usually safer. Coordination reduces abrupt medication changes, missed doses, and relapse cycles.
After birth: postpartum planning, breastfeeding, and relapse prevention
The postpartum period is a common time for depression and anxiety to return. Sleep loss, hormone shifts, and stress can trigger symptoms quickly. A postpartum plan is part of SSRI safety.
Know the signs that deserve quick support
Depression during and after pregnancy can include persistent sadness, numbness, intense worry, irritability, and trouble bonding. If symptoms last more than two weeks or interfere with daily care, contact a clinician. A federal women’s health resource outlines common symptoms and when to reach out (depression during and after pregnancy).
Breastfeeding questions to ask
- Is my SSRI a reasonable choice if I plan to breastfeed?
- What signs should we watch for in the baby, such as sedation or feeding changes?
- Do we need extra follow‑up because of prematurity or other risks?
Protect sleep and support early
- Plan for help at night when possible, even if it is a few set hours.
- Schedule mental health follow‑up soon after delivery, not “when things calm down.”
- Have one person who knows your warning signs and can help you reach care.
When higher support levels may help protect recovery
If you are at high risk for relapse, including relapse to alcohol or drugs, a structured setting can add stability while you build routines and coping skills. Nova’s Wimberley inpatient rehab program is one option for longer‑term support.
When to seek urgent help
Seek urgent help right away if any of the following occur during pregnancy or after birth:
- Suicidal thoughts with intent, a plan, or feeling unable to stay safe.
- Hallucinations, paranoia, severe agitation, or days without sleep.
- Seizures, severe confusion, or signs of dangerous withdrawal.
- Heavy bleeding, severe headache, vision changes, or decreased fetal movement.
You do not have to make SSRI decisions alone. With shared planning, many people stay stable through pregnancy and postpartum.