Learn Understanding the Link Between...

Understanding the Link Between Addiction and Schizophrenia

An illustration showing five versions of the same man expressing different emotions and experiences related to alcohol and cannabis use against a purple background.
By
Grace Ogren profile
Grace Ogren
Grace Ogren profile
Grace Ogren
Author

As a Clinical Research Specialist, writer, and person with lived experience in mental health recovery, Grace blends clinical research with honest storytelling to inspire healing and hope. In her free time, she enjoys writing books for young adults, an age when she needed stories the most.

Updated February 19, 2026
Clinically Reviewed by
Rajnandini Rathod
Rajnandini Rathod profile
Rajnandini Rathod
Reviewer

Rajnandini is a psychologist (M.Sc. Psychology) and writer dedicated to making mental health knowledge accessible.

Drug addiction and schizophrenia can feel pretty similar. And if you have both, it might be hard to tell where one condition ends and the other begins. Learning about that dynamic is a key part of recovery. That knowledge can empower you to find the right type of treatment for schizophrenia and substance abuse.

Does Drug Addiction Cause Schizophrenia?

In short: no, taking drugs won’t give you schizophrenia. But addiction and schizophrenia have similar causes—and similar symptoms.1 The same factors that make you vulnerable to one can also make you vulnerable to the other.

If you have schizophrenia, drug use can trigger your symptoms.2 And depending on what drug you’re taking, being high can even feel like psychosis.3 That’s because both drug use and schizophrenia tamper with your brain’s reward system.1 Here’s why.

Explore Schizophrenia Treatment Centers

The Similar Brain Chemistry of Schizophrenia and Addiction

Taking any drug has an impact on your brain’s reward system.4 And it doesn’t matter what the drug’s actual effects are. The very act of getting high increases your levels of dopamine, a neurotransmitter. So when you take drugs, you feel a sense of reward.

Over time, you’ll need more and more of a drug to achieve that feeling. Reward might be replaced with relief. And as your tolerance goes up, you’ll likely develop a more severe addiction.

Even if you never take drugs, schizophrenia still disrupts your reward system.1 In some people, it decreases baseline levels of dopamine. Or, it can make you hypersensitive to dopamine, so doing drugs feels like an even bigger reward. And if you’re taking drugs that reduce the symptoms of schizophrenia, addiction is even more likely.5

Self-Medicating to Manage Schizophrenia

While addiction is unhealthy, it often begins as a coping mechanism. You might feel like drug use helps you control the symptoms of schizophrenia.6 And, in some cases, that might even be true. For example, nicotine reduces psychotic symptoms.7 But that doesn’t mean cigarettes are good for you.

In the long term, addiction continues to destabilize your reward system. Because of this, ongoing drug use can exacerbate your schizophrenia symptoms. This complicates the process of recovery.

Treatment for Both Schizophrenia and Addiction

Quitting drugs isn’t a cure for schizophrenia.8 But for some people, it’s an important first step toward healing. And because of the overlap between addiction and schizophrenia, many of the same treatments might help with all your symptoms.8

If you’re recovering from both these conditions, you might benefit from treatment for co-occurring disorders. Within that framework, there are several specific therapies that can help.

Motivational Interviewing

Motivational interviewing (MI) helps patients with schizophrenia commit to ongoing treatment.9 It’s an especially effective treatment for people with both addiction and psychosis.11

MI isn’t technically a type of therapy. Instead, it’s a conversation style that many different clinicians apply to treatment. Therapists, doctors, nurses, and others can all use this approach. During MI, they’ll use active listening, pointed questions, and other techniques. This can help you find your personal spark of motivation to heal.

Contingency Management

For patients with both schizophrenia and addiction, contingency Management (CM) can make recovery more likely.12 This approach rewards your participation in treatment. For example, you might get a gift card, voucher, or even cash for going to a therapy session. You and your care team will write and honor a treatment contract, defining prizes for each activity. In most cases, the value of your rewards will go up over time. For many people, this agreement motivates positive changes.

Dialectical Behavioral Therapy

Dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) was originally developed to treat borderline personality disorder. Today, it has many additional uses. For example, DBT can help patients with schizophrenia, addiction, and other mental health conditions.13

Sessions of DBT can feel more like classes than therapy. You’ll meet with a group, go through a workbook, and even do homework. You might also have 1:1 sessions with your therapist. Patients learn practical skills in 4 modules: mindfulness, interpersonal effectiveness, emotion regulation, and distress tolerance. These coping strategies can empower you to live a healthier life.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

Like DBT, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) focuses on practical coping skills. CBT helps patients with addiction and schizophrenia manage their symptoms without drug use.14

Instead of trying to change your feelings, CBT shows you new ways to respond. Future episodes of psychosis might always trigger drug cravings. But you’ll learn how to accept that feeling and move on, instead of falling back into addiction.

You Are Not Alone

Mental health struggles can feel isolating, but compassionate care is within reach. Browse our comprehensive list of inpatient mental health facilities and residential treatment centers for depression, trauma, anxiety, and more. Healing is possible; find mental health help for yourself or a loved one today.


FAQs

Yes. People living with schizophrenia are significantly more likely to experience substance use disorders compared to the general population. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, substance use disorders occur in nearly half of people with schizophrenia at some point in their lives, with nicotine, alcohol, and cannabis being the most commonly used substances. This overlap is known as co occurring disorders and can make symptoms more complex to treat.

Substance use does not directly cause schizophrenia, but certain drugs can increase the risk of developing psychosis, especially in people who are already vulnerable. The National Institute of Mental Health explains that cannabis use, particularly during adolescence and at high potency levels, has been linked to a higher risk of developing psychotic disorders. Stimulants like methamphetamine can also trigger psychotic symptoms that resemble schizophrenia.

Some people with schizophrenia use substances to cope with distressing symptoms such as anxiety, depression, or hallucinations. This is sometimes referred to as self medication. However, research from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration shows that substance use often worsens symptoms, increases hospitalizations, and interferes with treatment, even if it initially feels like short term relief.

Addiction can make schizophrenia symptoms more severe and more difficult to manage. According to the American Psychiatric Association, substance use may increase psychotic episodes, reduce medication effectiveness, and raise the risk of relapse. It can also complicate recovery by affecting relationships, housing stability, and overall health.

Return to Resource Library

Our Promise

How Is Recovery.com Different?

We believe everyone deserves access to accurate, unbiased information about mental health and recovery. That's why we have a comprehensive set of treatment providers and don't charge for inclusion. Any center that meets our criteria can list for free. We do not and have never accepted fees for referring someone to a particular center. Providers who advertise with us must be verified by our Research Team and we clearly mark their status as advertisers.

Our goal is to help you choose the best path for your recovery. That begins with information you can trust.