Fluvoxamine is an SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) that's mostly prescribed for OCD, but is also widely used for social anxiety, panic disorder, and depression. It's the SSRI of choice when intrusive, repetitive, or obsessive thinking is the dominant problem rather than low mood, and one of the older drugs in the class, first approved in the 1980s.
What sets fluvoxamine apart from the rest of the SSRI family is that it's a strong agonist at the sigma-1 receptor, a chaperone protein on the endoplasmic reticulum that's involved in cellular stress responses, neuroprotection, and inflammation control. This is the basis for its growing reputation outside psychiatry: it's been studied for cognitive recovery in depression, neuroprotection in stroke and neurodegeneration, and most prominently as an outpatient COVID-19 treatment, where multiple trials suggested it lowered hospitalisation risk. Most people taking fluvoxamine are doing so for OCD or anxiety, but the sigma-1 angle is why it keeps showing up in unusual places.
It's a prescription drug. Onset takes weeks (usually 4-12 for full effect on OCD), and stopping it abruptly causes a real withdrawal syndrome. This isn't something to start or stop on a whim.
Deep-dive
Dosage:
- Standard adult dose: 50-300 mg/day. Start at 50 mg in the evening for the first week, then increase by 50 mg every 4-7 days based on tolerability. Most people land at 100-200 mg/day for OCD or SAD, sometimes higher (up to 300 mg) for treatment-resistant OCD
- Splitting doses: Once daily dosing at bedtime works for doses up to about 100-150 mg. Above 150 mg, split into a smaller morning and larger bedtime dose to reduce GI side effects. Controlled-release (CR) formulations stay once daily across the range
- Women may need less. Female patients tend to reach higher serum concentrations than men at the same dose, particularly at 100 mg/day. Start at 50 mg and reassess before pushing higher
- Older adults and liver impairment: start at 25-50 mg, titrate slowly. Clearance is reduced by ~30% with hepatic dysfunction
- Time to effect: 2-4 weeks for early signs of improvement, 8-12 weeks for full effect on OCD. Don't judge response before week 6
- Discontinuation: Never stop abruptly. Fluvoxamine has a 16-hour half-life, which puts it in the high-risk category for discontinuation syndrome. Standard guidance is to taper by 25-50 mg every 2-4 weeks. Slower hyperbolic tapering (proportional rather than linear reductions) is increasingly recommended to minimise withdrawal, especially after long-term use. If symptoms emerge, slow down or briefly hold the previous dose
- Caffeine: This deserves its own line. Fluvoxamine is the most potent CYP1A2 inhibitor in the SSRI class, and caffeine clearance drops by ~80% on fluvoxamine, with caffeine half-life extending from 5 hours to 31 hours. Cut your caffeine intake by 50-75%, or you'll experience effective caffeine intoxication: anxiety, insomnia, palpitations. People often don't connect the symptoms to coffee
- Stacks and interactions: Strong CYP1A2 inhibition also affects melatonin (large bioavailability increase, more grogginess), theophylline, clozapine, olanzapine, tizanidine, ramelteon, agomelatine, and others. CYP3A4 is also moderately inhibited, affecting some benzodiazepines and statins. Always check for interactions before combining
- Hard contraindications: MAOIs (need a 14-day washout in either direction), pimozide, thioridazine, tizanidine, ramelteon, alosetron. Combining with serotonergic drugs (other SSRIs/SNRIs, MDMA, tramadol, triptans, dextromethorphan, St John's wort) raises serotonin syndrome risk
Here's what you can expect:
The first 1-2 weeks are usually the worst. Nausea, headache, sleep disturbance, increased anxiety, and emotional flatness are common as your system adjusts. Most of this fades by week 3-4, but starting low and titrating slowly makes a meaningful difference. If you start at 100 mg straight off, you'll often feel awful and quit before it has a chance to work.
Real therapeutic benefit takes time. Anxiety and panic symptoms often improve first, by week 2-4. OCD symptoms take longer, often 8-12 weeks for full effect, and improvement tends to be gradual rather than sudden. Don't expect to feel "better" in the first month, expect to feel less reactive, less stuck in the loop, less consumed by the obsession.
Emotional blunting is a real and often underdiscussed effect. Things that used to feel intense, both negative and positive, get muted. For someone with severe OCD or panic, this is often welcome at first. Long-term, it's the most common reason people choose to come off.