Mirtazapine Addiction: The Causes, Symptoms and Side Effects

Mirtazapine is known for helping people in tough spots with either their mental health or sleeping issues. But for some, those effects can become something to depend on, especially when everything else feels unmanageable.

At The Providence Project, we understand how a medication that once offered relief can slowly take over your routines, your sleep, your sense of safety. You may not have intended for it to become a habit but if stopping feels difficult, it might be time to take a closer look.

What is mirtazapine?

Mirtazapine is an antidepressant often prescribed to treat moderate to severe depression. It’s part of a class of medications known as NaSSAs (noradrenergic and specific serotonergic antidepressants), which work by boosting the levels of mood-regulating chemicals like serotonin and noradrenaline in the brain.


Unlike most antidepressants, Mirtazapine also acts as a sedative and appetite stimulant. This makes it especially helpful for people who are struggling to sleep or eat due to anxiety or low mood. Because of these extra effects, it’s sometimes used off-label to help with insomnia, even in people who don’t have depression.

Young woman in stress because of her mirtazapine addiction

Is mirtazapine addictive?

Mirtazapine isn’t addictive in the traditional sense; it doesn’t cause cravings or produce a high like many illicit drugs but that doesn’t mean mirtazapine dependence can’t happen. Many people develop a psychological reliance on mirtazapine, especially when they come to associate it with being able to sleep, feel calm or simply get through the day.

When someone feels they need mirtazapine just to function or starts using it for comfort rather than recovery, it can be difficult to imagine life without it. That’s when the line between medical use and dependency becomes blurred.

How a mirtazapine addiction can develop

Mirtazapine Addiction rarely comes from deliberate mirtazapine misuse. It often grows slowly, rooted in comfort and routine. Here are some of the ways a mirtazapine addiction can form:

Using it for sleep

One of mirtazapine’s most notable side effects is drowsiness. For people with long-standing insomnia, this alone can feel life-changing. But over time, sleep may feel impossible without it and that fear of lying awake becomes its own kind of prison.

Mirtazapine can restore appetite and help with feelings of numbness or sadness. If you’ve associated the drug with stability or emotional regulation, letting go can feel like stepping back into chaos.

Some people increase their dose to feel more sedated or emotionally stable. While not done with malicious intent, this kind of self-medicating can lead to dependency.

You might not feel like you need mirtazapine anymore but the fear of what might happen if you stop keeps you taking it. That kind of psychological tether can be hard to cut without help.

We're here to help

Reach out to our expert support team 24 hours a day

Start the Mirtazapine Rehabilitation Process Today

Finding the best addiction treatment is vital for long-term recovery success. Our friendly and compassionate team will hold your hand through the process until you learn to love yourself again.

The signs of mirtazapine addiction

Mirtazapine is generally seen as low-risk, but that doesn’t mean addiction can’t happen. The signs are often subtle: hidden in habits, routines, or the small panics that arise when a dose is missed. But if you’re paying attention, they’re there.

Physical signs

  • Daytime grogginess or trouble waking up
  • Dizziness or feeling unsteady
  • Increased appetite or weight gain
  • Digestive discomfort
  • Fatigue despite long hours of sleep

Psychological signs

  • Feeling anxious when a dose is missed
  • Emotional flatness or difficulty connecting with others
  • Difficulty sleeping without it
  • Panic at the thought of running out
  • Needing mirtazapine to feel relaxed or safe

Behavioural signs

  • Taking higher doses than prescribed
  • Stockpiling medication
  • Avoiding conversations about coming off the drug
  • Using it in response to emotional distress, not just depression
  • Refusing to explore non-medication alternatives

If you’ve noticed some of these signs, now may be the time to focus a little more on your relationship with mirtazapine.

An intervention for mirtazapine addiction

Am I addicted to Mirtazapine?

Mirtazapine may have started as a fix to your issues, but over time, it can become something you lean on without thinking. If you’ve started wondering whether your relationship with the medication feels a little too necessary, it’s worth slowing down and taking a closer look.

Ask yourself the following questions:

  • Do you feel anxious or unsettled if you miss a dose of mirtazapine?
  • Have you ever taken more than your prescribed dose to feel better or to help you sleep?
  • Do you worry about running out of your prescription, even when you still have enough left?
  • Have you tried to stop taking mirtazapine and experienced withdrawal symptoms like irritability, dizziness or insomnia?
  • Do you continue taking mirtazapine even though you feel it’s no longer helping?
  • Has taking mirtazapine become your go-to way to manage uncomfortable emotions or daily stress?

If you answered ‘yes’ to one or more of these, it might be time to explore whether a dependency has developed. That doesn’t mean you’ve done anything wrong, it just means you could benefit from support. There are safe, structured ways to come off mirtazapine and feel like yourself again. 

Let’s look at how that process works.

Where can I get help for mirtazapine addiction?

If you’re struggling with mirtazapine abuse, The Providence Project offers a specialised antidepressant rehab programme designed to support you through every step of recovery. We start with a full assessment to understand your relationship with the drug.

From there, you’ll enter a supported tapering process, monitored by professionals who are experienced in managing antidepressant withdrawal. You’ll attend daily therapy sessions while living in a local sober accommodation as part of our quasi-residential model.

Our therapy programme includes one-to-one counselling, group work, Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT). These sessions help you understand how the mirtazapine dependence formed and how to cope without relying on medication for comfort or routine.

Once rehab treatment for the prescription drug ends, our aftercare programme ensures the support doesn’t stop. Whether it’s weekly therapy, relapse prevention planning or connection with others who’ve walked a similar path, you’ll be looked after as you build your new normal.

A softer way forward

If you’re taking mirtazapine and know deep down it’s no longer serving you, you don’t have to go through this alone. Letting go of something that’s helped you cope isn’t easy but it is possible through effective rehab treatment.

At The Providence Project, we’ll help you explore new ways to feel calm and emotionally stable, without medication being the only answer.

You can move forward. You can feel like yourself again. Contact us now, and let’s take that first step on the pathway to recovery, together.

We're here to help

Reach out to our expert support team 24 hours a day

Start the Mirtazapine Rehabilitation Process Today

Finding the best addiction treatment is vital for long-term recovery success. Our friendly and compassionate team will hold your hand through the process until you learn to love yourself again.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is mirtazapine prescribed in the UK?

Yes, mirtazapine is regularly prescribed in the UK for moderate to severe depression. It’s also sometimes used off-label to help with sleep difficulties, poor appetite and anxiety-related symptoms when other treatments haven’t worked.

Yes, with prescription drugs like mirtazapine, psychological dependence can form even at prescribed doses, especially with long-term use. People may rely on mirtazapine for sleep, comfort or emotional control, making it difficult to stop without structured support or therapy.

Mirtazapine addiction is dangerous because it often develops quietly. People may continue using it without questioning whether it’s still effective, risking withdrawal, emotional blunting and worsening mental health if stopped abruptly.

Learn more about other antidepressant addictions