Oral Ketamine for Depression and How It’s Changing Mental Health Treatment

Published on

Oral Ketamine for Depression and How It’s Changing Mental Health Treatment

  • Written by

    Innerwell Team

  • Medical Review by

    Ben Medrano, MD


If you've waited weeks for an antidepressant to work, only to face unexpected side effects or no change at all, you're not alone. Nearly one-third of people live with treatment-resistant depression, making relief feel impossibly distant.

Oral ketamine is changing that reality. 

This sublingual lozenge modulates NMDA receptors, triggers glutamate surges, and kickstarts the neuroplasticity your brain craves to heal—though significant improvement may require several weeks of treatment.

At Innerwell, you access this breakthrough therapy from home, supported by licensed clinicians and digital tools that guide you through every step of your recovery.

What Is Oral Ketamine—and How Does It Work?

Oral ketamine is a sublingual medication that delivers ketamine in lozenge form to treat depression by modulating brain receptors and promoting neuroplasticity.

Picture a small, mint-flavored lozenge dissolving under your tongue. That's oral ketamine—a breakthrough that brings powerful depression treatment into your living room.

Unlike IV drips in clinical settings or intramuscular shots in hospitals, this sublingual formulation works from home. The medicine passes through your liver first, creating a gentler, slower onset than infusions. Yet clinical trials show the same meaningful results for treatment-resistant depression—often within days to weeks.

But how can a decades-old anesthetic reboot your mood so quickly?

  • The Neural Reset
    Ketamine blocks NMDA receptors—think of them as brakes on your brain's excitatory circuits. When oral ketamine targets these receptors on specific interneurons in your prefrontal cortex, it releases that brake.
    This creates a brief surge of glutamate activity that flips on AMPA receptors and triggers a biochemical cascade. The mTORC1 pathway activates, brain-derived neurotrophic factor levels rise, and new synapses begin sprouting. Your brain essentially clears out frayed wiring and installs fresh connections—which translates into renewed emotional flexibility and improved mood.
  • The Metabolic Advantage
    Because oral ketamine undergoes first-pass metabolism, it produces higher levels of norketamine and hydroxynorketamine—metabolites that carry their own antidepressant properties. These extend benefits beyond the drug's brief presence in your bloodstream. This metabolic pathway also means fewer blood pressure spikes and less intense dissociation than IV dosing.
    The result? A neurochemical reset that rewires circuits traditional serotonin-based antidepressants often can't reach—delivered safely in your own home.

How Oral Ketamine Differs from IV, Intranasal Esketamine & Standard Antidepressants

When you place a ketamine lozenge under your tongue at home, the experience is worlds apart from sitting in a clinic with an IV line or inhaling a metered nasal spray. The route of delivery changes everything—from how quickly the medicine reaches your brain to how intensely you feel its effects. It also shapes practical concerns like cost, supervision, and insurance coverage.

Ketamine Treatment Comparison Table

Proven Benefits: What the Data & Clinicians Say

Speed separates ketamine from everything else you've tried. In the KET01-02 phase-2 trial, patients taking 240 mg/day of prolonged-release oral ketamine showed measurable improvement by day 4, with benefits continuing through week 3. Traditional SSRIs demand four to eight weeks of patience; ketamine begins loosening depression's grip within days.

Suicidal thoughts can't wait for traditional timelines. Multiple controlled studies report sharp reductions in suicidal ideation within 24 hours across all ketamine routes. Early oral studies echo this life-saving effect, proving the route's slower absorption doesn't diminish ketamine's anti-suicidal power.

The biology explains the speed. Ketamine blocks NMDA receptors on inhibitory interneurons, unleashing a glutamate surge that activates AMPA receptors and sparks rapid synaptogenesis. Your brain starts building new connections within hours, restoring the neural flexibility depression destroys.

Innerwell's outcome data mirrors published research: patients show significant reductions in depression symptoms with most noticing progress by week 4. These figures reinforce what the wider evidence confirms—relief doesn't require months of waiting.

The research tells a clear story: ketamine works quickly, reaches people traditional medications abandon, and does so by literally rewiring the brain for resilience.

Who Is (and Isn't) a Good Candidate?

Treatment-resistant depression affects millions, but oral ketamine therapy works best when careful screening ensures both effectiveness and safety for those who need it most.

If you've tried at least two antidepressants at therapeutic doses for 6-8 weeks without meaningful relief, you meet the clinical definition of treatment-resistant depression (TRD). You're likely a strong candidate when you:

  • Are an adult living with TRD or the depressive phase of bipolar disorder
  • Carry a diagnosis of PTSD or generalized anxiety that hasn't responded to standard care
  • Cannot tolerate the side effects of conventional antidepressants,
  • Have a stable home environment that supports guided at-home dosing

However, certain conditions raise the risks enough that treatment isn't recommended. These include:

Screening protects you through multiple safeguards: validated mood assessments, comprehensive medical history, lab work including liver function tests, and urine toxicology screening. Our psychiatric team weighs potential benefits against any risk factors before designing your personalized treatment plan.

If you recognize yourself in the candidate profile, your next step is straightforward. Take our free assessment and let an Innerwell clinician guide you through a personalized eligibility review—because your path to relief deserves both hope and the right foundation.

The Oral Ketamine Treatment Journey

Your path to healing unfolds in four distinct phases, each designed to honor both your safety and your unique story.

Comprehensive Screening Sets the Foundation

A licensed psychiatric clinician starts by truly understanding where you've been. They'll review your medical history, current medications, and previous treatment attempts, then use standard mood assessments like the PHQ-9 to capture your baseline. 

Lab work, blood pressure checks, and toxicology screening ensure conditions like uncontrolled hypertension or active substance use won't interfere with your healing. Following detailed clinical safety guidelines, your team verifies you meet criteria for treatment-resistant depression without exclusionary factors like psychosis or unstable cardiac disease. Once insurance benefits are confirmed, you move forward with confidence.

Preparation Creates Your Sacred Space

Your therapist becomes your guide for this crucial phase. Together, you'll set the stage: first of all, you’ll set clear intentions and maybe even choose music that resonates with your soul and design an environment that feels both secure and inspiring—soft lighting, your most comfortable chair, headphones at the ready. 

You'll discuss practical details like fasting guidelines and what the lozenge tastes like, plus who will stay with you afterward. These conversations follow best-practice recommendations for at-home administration, ensuring you feel prepared rather than anxious.

The Medicine Meets Your Mindset

On dosing day, you place a flavored lozenge under your tongue and let it dissolve over 15–20 minutes. Ketamine absorbs directly through your oral tissues, creating what most people describe as a gentle lift within 10–15 minutes—subtle body lightness, soft visual shifts, or peaceful detachment. 

These effects typically peak and fade within two hours. While you listen to your chosen music through eye shades, a licensed psychotherapist remains virtually present, monitoring your experience and offering breath work guidance when helpful. Innerwell's protocols generally involve starting with lower oral ketamine doses, which are adjusted based on patient response, with support and guidance provided through the patient portal.

Integration Transforms Insight Into Lasting Change

Within 24–72 hours, you'll reconnect with your therapist to process what emerged. This isn't just debriefing—it's where fleeting insights become concrete goals and daily practice shifts. AI-enhanced mood tracking in the Innerwell app captures your reflections and monitors changes in anxiety, sleep, and energy. Each subsequent session builds on the last, turning ketamine's temporary window of neuroplasticity into sustained transformation that extends far beyond the treatment room.

Accessibility, Cost & Insurance Coverage

Most ketamine clinics ask you to pay the full bill yourself. IV infusions rarely get reimbursed, and a single visit typically costs several hundred dollars once you factor in facility fees and monitoring. Even FDA-approved intranasal esketamine is expensive, and while often covered, it still requires in-clinic observation and prior authorizations that create logistical hurdles.

When it comes Innerwell, if your plan participates, the Foundation Plan delivers eight at-home lozenges for about $1,098—approximately $125 per treatment. 

Need longer coverage? 

The Extended Plan provides 24 doses for $2,100, bringing the per-treatment cost to around $83. Self-pay options remain available, but pairing insurance with flexible FSA/HSA payments keeps out-of-pocket expenses predictable.

Sessions happen where you live, so you avoid the travel time and overhead that drive up prices in infusion centers. Oral ketamine costs less per dose than IV or intranasal formulations partly because it eliminates clinic staffing and equipment requirements.

Coverage is still evolving. 

Most commercial insurers classify sublingual ketamine as investigational, so approvals depend on medical-necessity letters and persistence. Reimbursement remains rare for off-label ketamine, and major payers like Aetna explicitly exclude non-intranasal ketamine for depression. Innerwell navigates these complexities by submitting prior authorizations and appealing denials when appropriate.

Currently, Innerwell serves residents in different states, with continued expansion underway. Find out if yours is listed here.

A New Chapter in Depression Care

For decades, depression treatment has largely meant waiting weeks for serotonin-based medications to kick in—if they work at all. Sublingual ketamine rewrites that timeline. Unlike single-pathway antidepressants, ketamine temporarily blocks NMDA receptors. This triggers a glutamate surge that fuels neuroplasticity and new synaptic growth—cellular changes linked to sharper mood, increased flexibility, and restored motivation.

Sublingual dosing undergoes first-pass metabolism, so many patients experience gentler dissociation and fewer blood-pressure spikes compared to intravenous or intranasal routes. They still benefit from active metabolites such as hydroxynorketamine that may extend antidepressant effects. Early safety data are reassuring: supervised programs report no serious adverse events and a low risk of misuse when strict screening protocols are followed.

Taken at home, supported by licensed clinicians, sublingual ketamine lets healing unfold in a familiar setting. Care transforms from something you endure at a clinic to something you experience in the quiet of your own space. It isn't a miracle, but for many it reopens a door they thought was permanently closed: the capacity to feel hope.

Wondering if this breakthrough therapy is right for you? Take our quick, no-cost assessment and receive personalized feedback from the Innerwell care team. Start your personalized treatment journey today.

CTA Callout Illustration
CTA Callout Illustration

87% of Innerwell patients report improvement within 4 weeks

Check

At-home treatment — no clinic visits

Check

1/4th of the price compared to offline clinics

Check

Led by licensed psychiatrists and therapists specialized in therapy

Check

Insurance accepted in selected states

See if you're a fit