Addiction and Anxiety: Why They Go Hand in Hand
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Ask anyone who has struggled with both anxiety and substance use, and most will tell you the same thing: the alcohol, the pills, the weed — whatever it was — worked. At least at first. It quieted something that nothing else seemed to reach.
That’s not a character flaw. That’s not weakness. That’s a completely understandable neurological response to a brain that is in a near-constant state of alarm. And it’s exactly why anxiety and addiction so frequently arrive together — and why treating one without the other so rarely works.
Understanding the relationship between anxiety and addiction doesn’t just explain how people end up in both places at once. It maps the road out.
How Common Is the Overlap?
The co-occurrence of anxiety disorders and substance use disorders is not a coincidence or a minority experience. It is one of the most well-documented patterns in behavioral health.
Research consistently shows that people with anxiety disorders are significantly more likely to develop substance use disorders than the general population — and people with substance use disorders are significantly more likely to have an anxiety disorder. Anxiety disorders are among the most common mental health conditions to co-occur with addiction.
The relationship runs in both directions: anxiety can drive substance use, and substance use can produce and worsen anxiety. In many cases, both are true simultaneously, creating a cycle that feels increasingly inescapable without outside intervention.
Anxiety disorders that most frequently co-occur with addiction include generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), social anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Each has a slightly different relationship with substance use — but all share the same core dynamic: substances offer something that feels like relief, until they don’t, and then they make everything worse.
Why Anxious People Turn to Substances
To understand why anxiety and addiction so often travel together, it helps to understand what anxiety actually does to the brain and body — and what substances do in response.
Anxiety, at its core, is the brain’s threat-detection system in overdrive. The amygdala — the brain’s alarm center — fires stress signals that flood the body with cortisol and adrenaline. Heart rate increases. Muscles tighten. The mind narrows its focus onto whatever it perceives as threatening. This is an adaptive system that evolved to protect us from danger. The problem is that for people with anxiety disorders, this alarm fires constantly, indiscriminately, and often without any identifiable external threat.
Living like this is exhausting. It is also isolating. When your internal experience is one of constant threat, the world feels dangerous in ways that are difficult to explain and that other people don’t always understand. Social situations feel overwhelming. Everyday tasks can feel insurmountable. Sleep is elusive. The nervous system never fully rests.
Into this landscape, alcohol arrives and turns down the volume. Or a benzodiazepine produces a sudden, profound calm. Or cannabis softens the edges of a racing mind. Or an opioid creates a warmth and safety that anxiety had never allowed.
These aren’t random choices. They are, neurologically speaking, self-medication — the brain seeking regulatory relief through external chemistry when its internal chemistry is failing it. The tragedy is that the relief is real, and the brain learns from it quickly. What began as occasional use to manage intolerable internal experiences gradually becomes a dependency, and the dependency creates new anxieties — about having enough, about what happens when it runs out, about what life looks like without it.
The Anxiety That Substance Use Creates
Here is one of the cruelest features of the anxiety-addiction cycle: over time, many of the substances most commonly used to manage anxiety end up significantly worsening it.
The net effect is that substance use and anxiety amplify each other over time. The person uses to manage anxiety; the use worsens the anxiety; the worsened anxiety drives more use. The cycle tightens.
The Role of Avoidance
One of the central mechanisms connecting anxiety and addiction is avoidance — a feature of anxiety disorders that substances enable and reinforce in ways that perpetuate both conditions simultaneously.
Anxiety disorders are maintained, in large part, by avoidance. When the anxious brain encounters something that triggers the alarm system — a social situation, a difficult conversation, a stressful environment — the natural impulse is to avoid it. Avoidance provides immediate relief, which reinforces the brain’s belief that the avoided situation was genuinely threatening, which makes the next encounter with it more anxiety-provoking.
Substances supercharge this pattern. A person with social anxiety who drinks before social events doesn’t get the opportunity to learn that they can manage those situations sober. Each time they use alcohol as a crutch, the social situation remains associated with threat in their brain, and their confidence in their ability to handle it without alcohol erodes further. What began as a social lubricant becomes a social necessity — and the anxiety disorder becomes more entrenched, not less.
The same dynamic plays out across anxiety disorders and substance types. Avoidance feels like relief. Avoidance is, in the longer term, the mechanism that keeps both the anxiety and the addiction alive.
Shared Neurological Roots
The relationship between anxiety and addiction isn’t just behavioral — it’s neurological. Anxiety disorders and substance use disorders share underlying neurobiological pathways that explain why the two so frequently co-occur.
Both conditions involve dysregulation of the brain’s stress-response systems — particularly the HPA axis, which governs cortisol release, and the amygdala, which processes threat. Both involve disruption of the prefrontal cortex, the brain region responsible for rational decision-making, impulse control, and the regulation of emotional responses. And both involve alterations to the dopamine and serotonin systems that govern mood, motivation, and reward.
Early life adversity — adverse childhood experiences, trauma, neglect, chronic stress in developmental years — is one of the strongest shared risk factors for both anxiety disorders and addiction. A nervous system shaped by early chronic stress develops a threat-detection system that is calibrated too high. That high-alert baseline is the soil in which both anxiety and addiction tend to grow.
This neurobiological overlap has important treatment implications. Effective treatment for the anxiety-addiction combination isn’t just about addressing two separate conditions — it’s about addressing the underlying systems that both emerged from.
Why Treating Both Together Matters
When anxiety is left untreated in addiction recovery, it functions as a persistent and powerful relapse driver. The discomfort, the restlessness, the social difficulty, the insomnia, the sense of constant threat — these are real experiences that substances genuinely relieved. Without a treatment plan that addresses them directly, the gravitational pull toward substances in early recovery is enormous.
When addiction is left untreated in anxiety treatment, the substances being used continue to destabilize the very neurological systems that anxiety treatment is working to regulate. Antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications work differently — or don’t work at all — in people who are actively drinking or using. Therapy requires a certain degree of nervous system stability to be effective, which active substance use undermines.
Integrated treatment — a unified clinical approach that addresses both conditions simultaneously — is the standard of care for co-occurring anxiety and addiction. It treats the anxiety that drove the use. It treats the neurological consequences of the use. And it helps build a life in recovery in which the person has genuine tools for managing anxiety that don’t require a substance to work.
Evidence-based approaches include Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) — which addresses the thought patterns and behavioral avoidance that maintain both conditions — Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) for emotional dysregulation, trauma-focused therapies such as EMDR for PTSD presentations, Exposure and Response Prevention for anxiety disorders, and medication management when appropriate.
What Recovery With Anxiety Looks Like
Recovery for someone with co-occurring anxiety is not the same as recovery for someone without it. It involves not just sobriety but learning a genuinely different relationship with anxiety — developing the capacity to tolerate and navigate anxious states without substances to manage them. That is a skill that takes time and practice and support. But it is learned. People develop it every day, with the right treatment and the right community around them.
For many people with anxiety, early recovery is actually when anxiety feels most intense — the neurological stabilization that happens as substances leave the system is uncomfortable, and the coping mechanisms that substances provided are no longer available. Understanding this, and having a clinical team that anticipates it, makes all the difference in getting through that window.
Beyond the clinical work, many people in recovery find that the lifestyle dimensions of sustained sobriety — regular sleep, physical activity, meaningful connection, reduced stress, practices like mindfulness and breathwork — produce neurological changes over time that genuinely reduce baseline anxiety. Recovery doesn’t just remove the substance. Over time, for many people, it reduces the thing the substance was managing.
You Don’t Have to Choose Between Getting Sober and Managing Your Anxiety
If you’ve been afraid that getting sober means losing the one thing that keeps your anxiety manageable — that fear deserves to be taken seriously. It’s based on a real experience. And it’s also based on a limited picture of what treatment can actually do.
Effective, integrated care for co-occurring anxiety and addiction addresses both. It doesn’t ask you to white-knuckle through anxiety without support — it helps you develop the neurological and psychological infrastructure to genuinely feel better, without needing substances to get there.
At Bodhi Addiction, we connect people with treatment programs that understand the full complexity of co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders. Whether you’re living with diagnosed anxiety, navigating PTSD, or simply know that anxiety has been at the root of your relationship with substances, we’re here to help you find care that addresses all of it.
Reach out to our team today
The anxiety and the addiction both have treatment — and both can get better at the same time.





