
They can look alike, but they need different responses. Here is how to tell them apart, and where they overlap.
6 June 2026 · Clarity Wellbeing Clinic
The simplest way to tell burnout and depression apart is this: burnout is usually tied to a specific source of chronic stress, most often work, and tends to ease when that stress lifts or you get proper rest. Depression is more pervasive, colours every part of life regardless of the situation, and does not reliably lift with rest or a holiday. They can look very similar from the outside, and they can overlap, which is exactly why it is worth understanding the difference.
If you are exhausted, flat, and not yourself, you may be wondering which one you are dealing with. Here is how to think it through.
Burnout is the result of chronic stress that has not been successfully managed, and the World Health Organization classifies it specifically as an occupational phenomenon rather than a medical condition. It tends to involve three things: deep exhaustion, a growing sense of cynicism or detachment from your work, and a feeling that you are no longer effective at what you do.
The defining feature is context. Burnout is usually attached to a particular drain, your job, caring for someone, a relentless period of pressure. Step away from that source, genuinely rest, and burnout typically begins to lift.
Depression is a recognised mental health condition that goes wider and deeper. It is marked by a persistent low mood and a loss of interest or pleasure in things you normally enjoy, lasting most of the day, most days, for at least two weeks.
Crucially, depression does not stay confined to one area of life. It affects everything, home, relationships, hobbies, not just the thing that might be stressing you. It often brings changes in sleep and appetite, difficulty concentrating, feelings of worthlessness or guilt, and a heaviness that rest does not shift.
A few distinctions help separate the two. Burnout is usually traceable to a specific stressor, while depression is pervasive and not always tied to an obvious cause. Burnout tends to ease with rest and distance from the stressor, while depression generally does not. Burnout often centres on cynicism and depletion, while depression more often involves a loss of pleasure and feelings of worthlessness or guilt.
Here is the catch. Burnout and depression share a lot of ground, both bring exhaustion, low motivation, and poor sleep, and unaddressed burnout can develop into depression over time. They are not always cleanly separable, and you can experience both at once.
That is why self diagnosis only goes so far. If you are not sure which you are facing, or rest has not helped, it is worth getting a proper assessment rather than guessing.
Reach out to your GP or a therapist if exhaustion and low mood have lasted more than two weeks, if rest and time off have not made a difference, or if it is affecting your ability to function day to day. Please seek help promptly if you feel persistently hopeless, or if you are having thoughts that life is not worth living. You deserve support, and these feelings are treatable.
Burnout responds to reducing and managing the source of stress, real recovery time, boundaries, and changes to the situation that is draining you. Depression usually needs proper treatment, which may include therapy and, for some people, medical input from a GP. In both cases, talking therapy helps, by easing the load, making sense of what has happened, and building a way forward.
At Clarity Wellbeing Clinic in Nuneaton, we help people make sense of exhaustion and low mood, whether it is burnout, depression, or a mix of both, and find a path back to themselves. We offer support in person and online, at your pace.
Burnout is tied to a specific source of chronic stress and tends to ease with rest and distance from it. Depression is pervasive, affects all areas of life, and does not reliably lift with rest.
Yes. Chronic, unaddressed burnout can develop into depression over time, and the two can occur together. This is one reason it is worth seeking help rather than pushing through.
Ordinary tiredness improves with rest. If low mood and exhaustion last more than two weeks, affect everything rather than one area, and do not lift with rest, it is worth speaking to a GP or therapist.
If symptoms last beyond two weeks, do not improve with rest, or affect your daily functioning. Seek help promptly if you feel persistently hopeless or have thoughts that life is not worth living.
If you are running on empty and not sure why, Get in touch when you're ready.
Clarity is not an emergency or crisis service, and our inbox is not monitored around the clock. If you are in distress or struggling to cope right now, please reach out straight away. You deserve support, and it is always okay to ask for it.