Lorazepam (Ativan)

A benzodiazepine used for anxiety, intended mainly for short-term or occasional use.

What it treats

Lorazepam is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat anxiety disorders, the short-term relief of anxiety symptoms, and anxiety associated with depression. Benzodiazepines like lorazepam are also used in some other medical settings, but this guide focuses on its use for anxiety.

Because of the dependence risk described below, benzodiazepines like lorazepam are generally used short-term or for occasional situations rather than as an everyday, long-term treatment. For ongoing, day-to-day anxiety, SSRIs or SNRIs are the usual first-line medications. Lorazepam often has a role alongside that, for instance during the weeks before an antidepressant takes effect, or for specific situations a prescriber identifies.

How it works

Lorazepam is a benzodiazepine. It strengthens the effect of GABA, which is the brain's main calming, or inhibitory, chemical messenger. By boosting GABA's signal, lorazepam quiets nerve activity and produces a fast reduction in anxiety, usually within about an hour of a dose.

That speed is the main difference from antidepressants such as SSRIs. SSRIs take weeks to build their effect, while lorazepam acts the same day. That fast relief is useful, and it is also part of why lorazepam needs more caution than an antidepressant.

What to expect

Relief from lorazepam is fast, often within an hour of a dose. You do not need to wait weeks for it to start working the way you would with an SSRI.

Lorazepam is intermediate-acting. Its effect lasts longer than a very short-acting benzodiazepine, but not as long as a long-acting one. In practice this means relief comes relatively quickly and then holds for a while before wearing off. How a dose is timed and how often it is taken are decisions a prescriber makes with that pattern in mind.

Common side effects

The most common side effects come from lorazepam's calming, sedating action:

  • Drowsiness and sedation.
  • Tiredness.
  • Lightheadedness.
  • Reduced coordination.
  • Memory problems, slowed thinking, and slurred speech, especially at higher doses.

These effects are more noticeable early on and at higher doses. If they interfere with daily activities such as driving or work, that's a conversation to have with the prescriber.

Serious side effects and warnings

Lorazepam is useful, and it also needs more caution than most medications on this site. The most important warnings are two FDA boxed warnings.

Boxed warning: dependence and withdrawal. Benzodiazepines, including lorazepam, carry an FDA boxed warning about the risks of abuse, misuse, addiction, physical dependence, and withdrawal. These risks can develop even when the medication is taken exactly as prescribed.

Boxed warning: combining with opioids. Benzodiazepines also carry an FDA boxed warning about the serious dangers of combining them with opioid medications. Together they can cause extreme sedation, slowed breathing, coma, and death. Lorazepam and opioids should not be used together unless a prescriber has specifically decided there is no alternative.

Beyond the boxed warnings, a few points are worth knowing:

  • Physical dependence can develop with regular prescribed use. This is not the same as misuse. The body adjusts to lorazepam over time, sometimes within a few weeks, so that it comes to expect the medication.
  • Stopping abruptly can cause serious withdrawal. Withdrawal can include seizures and can be dangerous. For that reason lorazepam must be tapered slowly under medical supervision rather than stopped on your own.
  • Tolerance can build. Over time the same dose may work less well, which is one reason long-term daily use is generally avoided.
  • Alcohol and other sedatives sharply increase the risks. Combining them with lorazepam adds to sedation and slowed breathing.
  • Older adults are more affected. They are more prone to falls, confusion, and memory problems on benzodiazepines.

Sexual side effects

Lorazepam is not particularly associated with sexual side effects, unlike SSRIs. This is one area where it differs from the antidepressants used for anxiety. If you do notice a change, it is worth mentioning to your prescriber, since other factors, including anxiety itself, can play a part.

Weight, appetite, and sleep

Lorazepam is not a notable cause of weight change. It does not typically affect appetite the way some other psychiatric medications can.

It is sedating, which is its intended effect on anxiety but also why it can leave people drowsy or low on energy during the day. If daytime sleepiness is a problem, a prescriber can review the dose and timing.

Starting and dosing basics

This section is general background, not a dosing instruction for any individual. The right dose and the length of treatment are decisions for a prescriber.

Lorazepam comes as tablets. It is generally prescribed at the lowest effective dose for the shortest reasonable time. A prescriber sets the starting dose and any changes based on the condition being treated and how a person responds.

One useful point sets lorazepam apart from some other benzodiazepines. It is processed by the body in a way that is less affected by liver problems and by some drug interactions. This is sometimes why a prescriber chooses it, particularly for older adults or people with liver concerns.

Missed doses and interactions

Follow the prescriber's guidance on what to do about a missed dose, since the right approach depends on how lorazepam is being used.

The most important interactions are opioids and alcohol. Both are dangerous combined with lorazepam, because all three slow breathing and deepen sedation. Other sedating medications add to the same risk. Give every prescriber and pharmacist a full list of your medications and supplements, including over-the-counter ones, so these combinations can be checked.

Stopping and tapering

This is the most important section on this page. Lorazepam should not be stopped suddenly.

After regular use, the body adjusts to lorazepam. Stopping abruptly can cause withdrawal, which can include rebound anxiety, trouble sleeping, agitation, and, in serious cases, seizures. That is why coming off lorazepam means a slow, gradual taper, planned and supervised by a prescriber.

A taper steps the dose down over time so the body can adjust at each stage. The schedule depends on the dose, how long lorazepam has been taken, and how a person responds. If you want to stop, the safe path is to talk with your prescriber and plan it together, not to stop on your own.

Pregnancy and breastfeeding

Benzodiazepines are generally avoided during pregnancy and while breastfeeding, unless a clinician judges that they are needed. This is an area where individual circumstances matter and the decision belongs with a clinician. Anyone who is pregnant, planning a pregnancy, or breastfeeding should discuss lorazepam with their prescriber so the specific risks and benefits can be weighed for their situation.

Cost and generic availability

Lorazepam has been available as a generic for many years and is inexpensive. The brand name Ativan and generic lorazepam contain the same active medication and work the same way. Most insurance plans cover it, and for people paying out of pocket, generic lorazepam is low-cost.

Common questions

How fast does lorazepam work? Quickly, often within about an hour of a dose. It does not need weeks to take effect the way an SSRI does.

Is lorazepam addictive? It carries a real risk of physical dependence, which can develop even with regular prescribed use, sometimes within a few weeks. That is why it is usually used short-term and why stopping needs a planned taper. Used carefully and with a prescriber, it can still be a helpful medication.

Can I drink alcohol while taking it? No. Alcohol and lorazepam together are a dangerous combination, because both slow breathing and deepen sedation.

Why is it usually prescribed only short-term? Because the body can develop dependence and tolerance over time. For ongoing, day-to-day anxiety, SSRIs or SNRIs are the usual first-line treatment.

What happens if I stop suddenly? Stopping abruptly can cause withdrawal, including rebound anxiety, trouble sleeping, agitation, and, in serious cases, seizures. Don't stop on your own. Plan a gradual taper with your prescriber.

Questions to ask your prescriber

  • What are we hoping this treats, and how long do you expect I'll take it?
  • How and when should I take it, and how often?
  • Which medications and substances should I avoid while on it?
  • What signs of dependence or tolerance should I watch for?
  • When the time comes to stop, how would we taper it safely?

Sources

  • U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Lorazepam (Ativan) prescribing information.
  • MedlinePlus, U.S. National Library of Medicine. Lorazepam.
  • National Institute of Mental Health. Mental health medications.

Managing a medication needs a prescriber

Any psychiatric medication has to be started and adjusted by a clinician who can follow you over time. If you don't have a prescriber, our guides section explains the options, including in-person care and telepsychiatry, and how to choose between them.

This guide is for general education. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment by a qualified clinician. Never start, stop, or change a medication without talking to your prescriber. If you are in crisis or thinking about harming yourself, call or text 988 in the U.S. to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline.