How Long Does TMS Last? What Most Patients Can Realistically Expect

Caleb Whitenack, MD

Key Takeaways
- Most people who respond to TMS maintain meaningful improvement for 6–12 months after completing treatment.
- How deep your initial response was is one of the strongest predictors of how long the benefits hold.
- If symptoms return, retreatment is usually effective — most people who come back for a second course respond again.
- Combining TMS with ongoing therapy or medication extends how long results last for many people.
- A return of symptoms after TMS isn’t starting over — it’s a signal that the same approach can work again.
When people ask how long TMS lasts, they’re rarely asking about session length. They’re asking something much harder to answer: whether this is going to hold. Whether the lift they feel after finishing treatment will still be there six months from now — or whether they’ll slowly drift back to where they started and have to begin all over again.
That fear makes sense. A full course of TMS is a significant commitment — in time, in cost, and in hope. Nobody goes through seven weeks of daily sessions hoping for temporary relief. So before committing, or after finishing, the question of durability isn’t academic. It’s personal. And it deserves a straight answer.
How Long Do TMS Results Typically Last?
For most people who respond to a full course of TMS, meaningful improvement holds for 6 to 12 months. For people treated with TMS for depression, a meta-analysis of 19 studies found that among initial responders, 66.5% sustained their response at 3 months, 52.9% at 6 months, and 46.3% at 12 months. A real-world U.S. registry tracking 307 patients found that 62.5% of those who responded to TMS continued to meet response criteria across the full 12-month follow-up period.
Those numbers are real — but they also tell you something worth sitting with: results do tend to fade over time for some people, and that’s not a treatment failure. It reflects the nature of complex, recurring conditions like depression.
What predicts longer-lasting results? Depth of initial response matters most. People who achieve full remission after TMS tend to stay well longer than those who see partial improvement — which is why completing the full recommended course, rather than stopping early, makes a meaningful difference.

None of these are trivial to experience, and we’re not minimizing them. But they are manageable, they tend to improve over the course of treatment, and they resolve completely when treatment ends. They’re also very different from the kinds of side effects that come with long-term medication use — there’s no weight change, no sexual dysfunction, no systemic effects.
What Helps Results Hold Longer
TMS changes how the brain’s circuits fire — but those circuits don’t exist in isolation. Sleep, stress, physical activity, and whether you continue therapy or medication after treatment all influence how long those neurological gains hold. The post-treatment period is not a passive “wait and see” phase, and what you do in the months after finishing TMS matters more than most people expect.
For people on antidepressants, continuing medication after a successful TMS course has been associated with lower relapse risk for many patients. It’s not a universal recommendation — it’s a conversation to have with your provider — but it’s worth knowing the data supports it.
What Does It Look Like When TMS Results Start to Fade?
For most people, results don’t disappear overnight. Fading tends to be gradual — which is actually important to know, because it means there’s usually a window to act before a full relapse sets in.
What patients often notice first isn’t a dramatic crash. It’s subtler: sleep starting to feel less restful, motivation dipping, the mental heaviness that was gone beginning to creep back in. Concentration may start slipping. Small things that felt manageable start feeling harder again.
If you recognize those early signs, the worst thing to do is wait and see. The earlier you contact your TMS provider, the more options you have — whether that’s a maintenance session, a medication adjustment, or beginning to plan a full retreatment course if needed. Acting at the first signs of a gradual return is far more effective than waiting until symptoms are fully back.
Knowing what to watch for is part of getting the most out of TMS — and it’s worth having that conversation with your provider before you finish treatment, not after.
If Symptoms Come Back, That’s Not the End

This is the part people don’t hear enough: if depression or other symptoms return after TMS, retreatment usually works. Research on retreatment suggests response rates of approximately 60–80% for patients who seek a second course of TMS. The brain doesn’t build a tolerance to TMS the way it can stop responding to a medication over time. TMS is also a cumulative process, so many times consecutive treatments can lead to even greater response than the first treatment.
Some patients also use maintenance TMS — a tapering schedule of less frequent sessions designed to preserve gains before symptoms fully return. Whether that’s appropriate depends on your history and how your initial course went.
A return of symptoms is a signal, not a verdict. It means the approach that worked once can work again.
Final Thoughts
TMS isn’t a permanent fix for everyone — but it delivers real, lasting relief for many people. Knowing the typical durability window, that retreatment is effective, and that there are ways to extend results takes some of the uncertainty out of the decision. You don’t have to go in wondering whether the clock is ticking.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. Can I do TMS again if my symptoms come back?
Yes. Research suggests response rates of approximately 60–80% for patients who seek a second course. A returning symptom after TMS doesn’t mean the treatment stopped working permanently; it means your brain may be ready for another course.
2. Does TMS wear off faster for some people than others?
Yes. People who achieve full remission tend to maintain results longer than those with partial improvement. Age, condition severity, and whether you continue other treatments after TMS also play a role.
3. Should I stay on medication after TMS?
This depends on your situation and is a decision to make with your provider. For many patients, continuing medication after a successful TMS course reduces the chance of relapse — but it isn’t the right call for everyone.
Responsibly edited by AI
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