Published on
Is Ketamine Therapy Right for Me? 7 Questions To Ask Yourself
About 50% of patients don't respond to their first antidepressant. Ketamine therapy offers a different mechanism of action—one that works through novel brain pathways and can produce results within hours instead of weeks, but that doesn’t mean ketamine therapy is right for everyone.
Ketamine therapy requires true treatment resistance, tolerance for dissociative side effects, commitment to ongoing therapy work, and access to qualified providers. Whether it's right for you depends on your specific clinical profile, practical circumstances, and readiness to engage.
This guide walks you through seven decision-making questions. By the end, you'll have a better idea of whether ketamine therapy is worth pursuing for your situation.
Important: This information is educational, not medical advice. Only a licensed professional who knows your complete medical history can determine if ketamine suits your situation.
Why You’re Considering Ketamine Therapy
Many people exploring ketamine therapy have already tried standard treatments. Some experience success, while others enjoy brief moments of improvement that fade. Others see no change at all.
The mental weight of wondering whether things will ever improve can be exhausting. You may be researching ketamine therapy because you’re looking for something different, but you’re right to be cautious. It’s essential to cover the basics before diving in.
Ketamine therapy has produced meaningful results for many people with treatment-resistant depression and anxiety, but it's not a universal solution. It requires proper medical oversight, realistic expectations, and integration into a broader mental health plan.
7 Questions: Is Ketamine Therapy Right for Me?
These seven questions cut through the marketing claims and provide the framework needed to determine if ketamine therapy aligns with your individual situation.
1. Are Your Depression or Anxiety Symptoms Truly Treatment-Resistant?
Treatment-resistant depression or anxiety means standard options no longer work. In practical terms, you cross that threshold after trying at least two different antidepressants, each at therapeutic doses for six to eight weeks, without meaningful relief according to Mayo Clinic guidance.
You're not alone: around one-third to one-half of people with major depression don't improve after their first antidepressant.
Before labeling symptoms "treatment-resistant," clinicians must confirm that you meet criteria for Major Depressive Disorder. The DSM-5 framework requires five or more specific symptoms—persistent low mood, loss of interest, changes in sleep or appetite, or recurrent thoughts of death—present during the same two-week period, severe enough to disrupt work, relationships, or daily functioning.
Ask yourself:
- Have you completed at least two full courses of antidepressants at prescribed doses?
- Taken each medication consistently for six weeks or longer?
- Tried evidence-based therapy like CBT for at least eight sessions?
- Addressed medical conditions like thyroid problems?
- Are you using alcohol, cannabis, or supplements that might interact with medications?
Recognizing true treatment resistance ensures you don't leap to advanced therapies prematurely, and spares you the frustration of repeating approaches that won't help. If you've exhausted these options, ketamine therapy might be a good next step to explore with your healthcare provider.
2. Will Ketamine Therapy Match Your Expectations?
Ketamine works through a completely different pathway than traditional antidepressants by blocking the brain's NMDA receptors and triggering a surge of glutamate that sparks new neural connections. This is why many people notice a shift in mood within hours.
Clinical research shows IV ketamine produces significant antidepressant effects within hours to days for many patients with resistant depression. Esketamine nasal spray acts almost as quickly, while oral or sublingual lozenges build more gradually over the first few sessions.
Rapid relief doesn't mean universal relief. Roughly one in five patients feels a minimal change after an initial series, and even strong responders may need periodic booster doses. Your diagnosis, metabolism, concurrent medications, and delivery method all shape response.
The advantage of ketamine therapy is the faster feedback loop: instead of waiting a month to see if a medication helps, you'll know within a session or two whether ketamine is working. If it isn't, you can pivot without losing another season to trial-and-error.
3. Can You Access Ketamine Therapy and Commit to the Treatment Format?
Ketamine therapy comes in several forms, each with different time commitments, costs, and accessibility requirements. Understanding what's actually feasible for your situation matters as much as clinical fit.
- Oral sublingual tablets offer the most flexibility, avoiding needles and clinic appointments entirely. At-home programs like Innerwell ship pre-measured tablets, a digital blood-pressure cuff, and a dosing guide directly to your door.
- Intramuscular (IM) injections step up the clinical involvement slightly, requiring quick clinic visits or mobile services. Effectiveness and costs fall between IV and oral options, but you'll need access to a provider offering this format and reliable transportation to appointments.
- Nasal sprays (FDA-approved esketamine) require two-hour supervised clinic visits where you'll spray the medication under nurse observation. You'll need reliable transportation and a clinic within a reasonable distance.
- Intravenous (IV) infusions represent the most time-intensive option, requiring in-clinic visits lasting several hours with continuous vital-sign monitoring. If you live far from specialty clinics or can't take multiple half-days off work, this option becomes impractical regardless of its clinical benefits.
The practical reality: The question isn't which format is "best" in the abstract; it's which you can actually access and sustain over the course of treatment.
4. Do the Risks and Requirements Align With Your Health Profile?
Ketamine is a potent medication, even at the low doses used for mental health care. Before committing to treatment, you need to understand both the common side effects most people experience and the medical conditions that make ketamine unsuitable.
Common side effects during sessions:
- Floating sensation, lightheadedness, or shifts in perception
- Dissociation, which typically fades within an hour
- Dizziness, nausea, or brief blood pressure spikes
Long-term risks deserve careful consideration. Repeated high-dose or unsupervised use can cause bladder inflammation and, rarely, elevated liver enzymes. Because ketamine is a controlled substance, reputable clinics monitor for any signs of dependency or misuse.
Conditions that make ketamine unsuitable:
- Uncontrolled high blood pressure or serious heart disease
- Current or past psychotic disorders
- Pregnancy or breastfeeding
- Severe liver or bladder disease
- Active substance use disorders
- Medications that raise blood pressure or significantly affect brain chemistry
Quality programs build safety into every step—medical screening with labs when needed, real-time monitoring during treatment, mandatory recovery periods, and follow-up calls checking for lingering effects.
Ask yourself: Are you willing to experience temporary dissociation and other mild side effects? Do you have any medical conditions that would rule you out as a candidate? Can you commit to safety protocols like monitoring your blood pressure and having a clinician available during sessions?
If the answer to any of these is uncertain, ketamine therapy may not align with your current health profile or comfort level.
5. Are You Ready to Commit to Integration and Ongoing Therapy?
Ketamine works best when paired with structured psychotherapy. If you're expecting a medication you can take passively without additional therapeutic work, ketamine therapy probably isn't the right fit.
Research shows that ketamine-assisted psychotherapy deepens insights and extends the antidepressant benefit far beyond what the medication alone provides.
What integration requires:
- Scheduling therapy sessions within 48 hours of dosing
- Blocking out time for journaling or reflection
- Working with your therapist to translate insights into actionable changes
- Continuing your existing therapy and medications
- Active participation
Innerwell's model involves coordinated care with licensed psychotherapists, psychiatrists, and specialized clinicians. Patients receive personalized dosing guidance, telehealth support, and integration resources through the Innerwell app—but you still need to show up for the work.
The reality: If you're not willing to commit to regular therapy sessions, journaling, and active integration work, ketamine therapy likely won't produce the lasting results you're hoping for.
6. Can You Afford Ketamine Therapy?
Ketamine therapy costs vary dramatically depending on delivery method and insurance coverage.
- IV infusions typically require the largest financial commitment. They are considered "off-label" for psychiatric use, so most insurance plans decline payment. Expect $400–$800 per infusion out-of-pocket.
- Nasal spray costs between $900–$1,200 per session at list price, but insurers are far more willing to cover it because it carries FDA approval for treatment-resistant depression.
- At-home sublingual programs are often the most affordable option, and pair ketamine with tele-psychiatric supervision at $81–$125 per treatment.
Before committing, clarify:
- Your deductible status and whether the provider is in-network
- Which format (if any) your plan covers, and what prior authorization requires
- Total out-of-pocket costs for your first 2-3 months of treatment
- Whether payment plans or financial assistance programs are available
The bottom line: Financial stress undermines treatment outcomes, so honest assessment of affordability matters as much as clinical fit.
7. Can You Identify a Safe and Qualified Provider?
The difference between safe, effective ketamine therapy treatment and a risky experience comes down to provider quality—and knowing what questions to ask before you commit.
Things to check for:
- Licensed psychiatrists and prescribing clinicians on staff
- Licensed therapists trained in ketamine integration
- Published patient-outcome data, like remission rates and symptom reductions
- Documented safety protocols, including pre-treatment screening, real-time vital-sign monitoring, and post-session observation
- Transparent pricing and insurance guidance upfront
- Responsive patient support staffed by clinicians
Innerwell was designed around patient-first care. Every treatment pairs a board-certified psychiatric prescriber with a licensed therapist, and outcome data from thousands of sessions drives continuous protocol refinement.
Before committing to any provider, ask:
- Who will supervise my sessions, and what are their credentials?
- How many patients does each clinician manage per day?
- Can I see your most recent outcome data?
- What happens if I experience a medical or psychological adverse event?
- How will you help me integrate insights into daily life?
The reality: If you can't find a qualified provider in your area or through telehealth platforms, ketamine therapy may not be a safe option for you right now.
Your Next Steps Towards Ketamine Therapy
Ketamine therapy isn't universal. It requires the right clinical profile, financial resources, commitment to therapy, and access to qualified care.
You now have a framework to evaluate whether ketamine therapy aligns with your situation. You know if you're truly treatment-resistant, whether the timeline and success rates match your expectations, which formats you can access, if the risks fit your health profile, whether you're ready for integration work, if you can afford treatment, and how to identify qualified providers.
Innerwell combines licensed psychiatric care with therapist-guided integration and at-home convenience. Our patients see a 69% reduction in depression symptoms and a 60% reduction in anxiety symptoms after ten weeks. Board-certified prescribers and licensed therapists work together on every treatment plan, with telehealth supervision and safety monitoring built into each session.
Ready to find out if you're a candidate for ketamine therapy? Get started here.
87% of Innerwell patients report improvement within 4 weeks
At-home treatment — no clinic visits
1/4th of the price compared to offline clinics
Led by licensed psychiatrists and therapists specialized in therapy
Insurance accepted in selected states
