The Main Difference
The primary distinction between burnout and depression is scope. Burnout is typically context-specific (work or caregiving) and revolves around energy depletion. Clinical depression is pervasive, affecting all areas of life, and is characterised by a deep sense of hopelessness and low self-worth. If removing the stressor significantly lifts the symptoms, it is likely burnout.
When you are staring at the ceiling at 3 AM, both feel exactly the same. But the neurobiological mechanism—and the recovery path—is fundamentally different.
The Overlap of Exhaustion
Both conditions present with profound emotional exhaustion and mental exhaustion. You will struggle to concentrate, feel a lack of motivation, and experience disrupted sleep patterns.
In fact, severe burnout symptoms look neurologically similar to a depressive episode, making it critical to identify the root cause before beginning treatment.
The Key Divergence: Context
The Persistence Test: Are you capable of experiencing joy outside of work? If a friend suggests a hobby on a Saturday, do you feel even a minor spark of interest? If yes, it is likely occupational burnout. Your capacity for joy is intact; your capacity for your current environment is depleted.
If you suspect burnout, the immediate fix is an operational burnout recovery plan. If you suspect clinical depression, the immediate fix is seeking a licensed therapist or psychiatrist.
(Disclaimer: This is for educational purposes and is not medical advice).
Is it burnout?
If you have identified that your symptoms are context-specific, your next step is the recovery framework. Start by stopping the energy leak.
VIEW THE RECOVERY SYSTEM