Can I Drive After TMS? Safety, Timing & Practical Tips

Short Answer
Yes - most patients can drive after a TMS session because TMS is performed while you’re awake and does not require sedation. If you experience unusual dizziness, severe headache, or are given medication that impairs alertness, don’t drive until you’ve been cleared by the clinic.
This short guide explains why driving after TMS is usually safe, how timing and protocols affect daily activities, how TMS compares with in-clinic treatments that do require post-treatment observation, and practical workplace guidance and checklists you can use.
Why driving is usually OK after TMS
- No sedation required. Standard TMS is non-invasive and does not involve anesthesia or sedating drugs, so people are typically able to leave the clinic and drive home after a session. This is a major practical advantage over treatments that require on-site observation.
- Short, supervised sessions. TMS sessions are brief (a few minutes for iTBS; session appointments take longer because of prep and setup), and trained staff monitor patients throughout. If you feel unwell, the staff will evaluate you before you leave.
Caveat: Always follow your clinic’s instructions. If the team advises you not to drive (for example, after an unusually strong reaction, severe headache, or medication given during treatment), do not drive.
Timing and driving by the TMS protocol
Standard TMS (1 session/day, weeks):
Most patients resume normal activities, including driving, after each session. Schedule sessions before or after work, or at times that minimize disruption.
Read More: Standard TMS
Accelerated TMS (multiple sessions/day, e.g., 50/5 days):
Treatment days are long. Patients often take the day off during an accelerated week. Driving home after each session is usually safe, but because treatment days are lengthy and tiring, many patients arrange transport or plan not to drive the same evening if they feel fatigued.
Read More: Accelerated TMS
ONE-D / Single-Day (20 sessions in 1–2 days):
These compressed visits can be physically and mentally demanding. Expect to need the day(s) off and avoid driving until you feel fully alert and comfortable. ONE-D should be clinician-supervised with clear post-treatment guidance.
Read More: One-Day TMS
Comparing TMS with Spravato® (esketamine) and ketamine
| Treatment | Sedation / Monitoring | Driving same day? | Practical impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard TMS | No sedation; patient awake | Yes, usually safe | Minimal recovery time; can work same day |
| Accelerated TMS / ONE-D | No sedation but intensive | Usually yes after a session, but plan for fatigue; many take treatment days off | Long clinic days; best to plan leave for accelerated/ONE-D |
| Spravato® (esketamine) | Requires monitoring post-dose | No — on-site observation required (often 2 hours) | Cannot drive same day; requires clinic-based monitoring |
| IV Ketamine (some protocols) | May cause sedation/dissociation | No — often requires observation | Post-treatment recovery time; driving |
Why the difference: Spravato® and many ketamine protocols produce transient sedation, dissociation or cognitive slowing and therefore require on-site monitoring until the patient is safe to leave. TMS, by contrast, is non-sedating and therefore compatible with same-day driving in most cases. Always follow the specific guidance for the treatment you receive.

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Practical safety tips - before, during and after sessions
Before your appointment
- Bring a list of medications and mention any sedating drugs or substances. Clinics screen medications because some drugs affect the seizure threshold.
- Plan transport for accelerated or ONE-D days (consider a ride-share or friend).
- Eat & hydrate so you’re not lightheaded.
During treatment
Ask staff about expected sensations (tapping, scalp soreness) and when to signal for help. Mapping and motor-thresholding are part of the standard safety setup.
After treatment
- Wait a few minutes if you feel any dizziness or lightheadedness.
- Do not drive if you feel disoriented, dizzy, extremely fatigued, or sedated from a concurrent medication.
- Report severe headaches, vision changes, weakness, or unusual symptoms immediately. Clinics are trained to triage and advise next steps.
Workplace guidance & planning
For employees
- Talk to HR about flexible start times or short breaks for standard TMS sessions. Most people continue working while in standard TMS by scheduling around work.
- For accelerated/ONE-D protocols, request a medical leave day(s) or a short block of time off to cover intensive clinic days and recovery. Employers commonly approve short medical leave for concentrated treatment.
- Bring a clinician note that confirms treatment dates and expected work impact - clinician letters usually satisfy HR. (Templates are widely available, and clinics can provide them.)
For employers
- Understand that TMS is outpatient and non-sedating for standard protocols; most employees are able to work the same day. For accelerated or ONE-D schedules, allow short-term leave and reasonable accommodations (remote work, flexible hours).
- For safety-sensitive roles (pilots, ATC, first responders), a clinician fitness-for-duty sign-off is required before returning to critical tasks.
What to do if you get symptoms that concern you
Call your TMS clinic right away if you experience:
- Severe or worsening headache that won’t respond to rest/OTC meds,
- Any seizure-like activity, fainting, or loss of consciousness,
- New weakness, numbness, severe dizziness, or vision/speech changes.
Clinics will triage you and either advise urgent evaluation or schedule an immediate assessment. Serious complications are rare when screening is done properly, but rapid reporting is essential.
Quick checklist: Can I drive after my TMS session?
- No sedation given as part of TMS? → usually safe to drive.
- Feeling alert, no dizziness or severe headache? → safe to drive.
- Feeling disoriented, very tired, or sedated? → do not drive; seek clinic advice.
- Received a sedating med (Spravato®/IV ketamine)? → do not drive; clinic will advise.
How soon can I drive after accelerated TMS day?
Individual sessions typically allow same-day driving, but accelerated days are long and tiring. Many patients plan time off for an accelerated week and avoid driving if they feel fatigued.
Is TMS safer than ketamine for driving?
TMS does not involve sedation, so it usually allows same-day driving. Ketamine and Spravato® often impair alertness and require on-site monitoring, so driving the same day is not permitted.
My job involves safety-sensitive tasks (piloting/ATC). Can I do TMS?
Yes, but coordinate with your treating clinician and employer. You may need a fitness-for-duty letter and a graded return to full duties per your clinician's guidance.

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