- Around 75% of UK suicides are men — suicide is the biggest killer of men under 50.
- Male depression often presents as irritability, withdrawal, alcohol use, risk-taking, or physical symptoms — not classic sadness.
- Treatment works. Most men who get appropriate help recover significantly within weeks to months.
- Asking for help isn’t weakness — it’s a practical step that drastically reduces avoidable harm.
The numbers no one wants to talk about
Around 75% of UK suicides each year are men. Suicide is the biggest killer of men under 50. The peak age is 45–49. Most have never been diagnosed with a mental health condition. Most never asked for help.
Men are also less likely to be diagnosed with depression and anxiety — not because they have less mental illness, but because they present differently and seek help less. The gap between the genuine prevalence and the formally diagnosed prevalence is significant.
This article is honest about the problem, practical about solutions, and aimed at men who might be thinking “is this me?” or someone close to them.
Why men don’t talk
The reasons are well-studied. Some are cultural:
- Masculinity scripts — growing up with messages that strong men handle their own problems, don’t complain, get on with it
- Identity threat — admitting struggle threatens self-image and (perceived) social standing
- Lack of vocabulary — many men literally don’t have language for emotional experience beyond “fine” or “not good”
- Friendship structure — male friendships are often activity-based rather than emotion-disclosing
- Fear of being a burden — or being seen as one
- Career implications — real or imagined
Some are practical:
- Less natural medical contact than women (no equivalent to maternity, contraception, smear tests)
- Working hours don’t fit GP appointments
- NHS waits for talking therapies
- Cost of private therapy
None of these are bad people’s fault. They’re systems and cultures we’ve inherited. They can change.
How depression and anxiety actually show up in men
Textbook depression: sadness, tearfulness, hopelessness, loss of interest. Some men experience that. Many don’t.
What it more often looks like in men:
- Irritability — short temper, snapping at people who didn’t deserve it
- Anger — disproportionate to triggers
- Withdrawal — less contact with friends, partner, family
- Sleep problems — trouble falling asleep, early waking, exhaustion
- Drinking more — to numb, to sleep, to socialise more easily
- Risk-taking — gambling, speeding, financially reckless decisions, affairs
- Avoidance — not opening post, not returning calls, putting things off
- Physical symptoms — chest tightness, headaches, gut symptoms, fatigue
- Reduced libido or sexual function
- Workaholism — or, conversely, can’t engage with work
- Loss of meaning — “what’s the point of any of this”
Anxiety similarly often shows up as physical symptoms (chest pain, heart racing, gut problems, insomnia), restlessness, or the relentless feeling that something bad is about to happen.
What asking for help actually looks like
It doesn’t need to be dramatic. It rarely is.
Talking to a GP
You can book an appointment and say, “I’m not feeling right. I think it might be my mental health.” That’s enough. Doctors handle this every day. You’ll be listened to. You won’t be judged.
What might happen:
- Conversation about what’s going on
- Some structured questions (low mood, anxiety, sleep, hopelessness, self-harm thoughts)
- Blood tests to rule out physical causes (thyroid, vitamins, hormones)
- Discussion of options: talking therapy, medication, lifestyle, follow-up
- A plan you’ve agreed
Talking to someone you know
One person. A partner, friend, brother, parent, colleague. “Hey — can we talk?” or “I’m struggling.” You don’t need a script. People generally respond better than you expect.
Helplines and online
- Samaritans — 116 123 (free, 24/7, anyone, any reason)
- CALM (Campaign Against Living Miserably) — 0800 58 58 58 (specifically for men, evening hours, web chat available)
- Andy’s Man Club — in-person men’s peer support groups across the UK
What helps
Talking therapy
For most mild-to-moderate depression and anxiety, talking therapy is highly effective. CBT (cognitive behavioural therapy) is the most-studied. Other modalities (psychodynamic, integrative, ACT) also work for many people.
Access:
- NHS — self-refer to NHS Talking Therapies (formerly IAPT) in England. Free. Waits vary.
- Private — faster access, choice of therapist. Cost varies; many PMI policies cover.
- Workplace EAPs — many employers offer free short-term therapy via Employee Assistance Programmes.
Medication
For moderate-to-severe depression or anxiety, medication is reasonable and effective. Most commonly first-line are SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors). UK law prevents naming specific medications on this website. Discussed in consultation.
Key points:
- Often takes 4–6 weeks to work fully
- Some initial side effects that usually settle
- Not addictive in the way often feared
- Usually continued for at least 6–12 months after recovery
- Combined with therapy often most effective
Lifestyle
Not a replacement for treatment but genuinely helpful:
- Exercise — particularly aerobic, 3–5 times weekly. Evidence is comparable to mild antidepressant effect.
- Sleep regularity — massive contributor
- Alcohol reduction — often unmasks (and worsens) underlying mood issues
- Connection — even small, regular social contact
- Sunlight and outdoor time
- Limit social media particularly the comparison and doomscrolling kind
Finding therapy that fits
The first therapist isn’t always the right therapist. Fit matters. Things to consider:
- Gender of therapist — preference is legitimate
- Style — some are more directive (CBT), some more exploratory (psychodynamic)
- Background — some have specific experience with men’s issues, sport, work-related stress, addictions, etc.
- Logistics — in-person vs online, evening availability
It’s reasonable to try 1–2 sessions and decide. If it’s not working after 3–4 sessions, ask about adjusting approach or switching therapist.
Medication — when and when not
Reasonable to consider if:
- Moderate-to-severe symptoms
- Significantly affecting function
- Not improving with therapy alone
- Insufficient capacity to engage with therapy due to severity
- Combined with therapy for more severe presentations
Less commonly indicated for mild symptoms responding to therapy and lifestyle changes.
If you’re in crisis right now
If you’re having thoughts of suicide, ending your life, or significant self-harm:
- Call 999 or go to A&E if you might act on the thoughts soon
- Call NHS 111 — ask for mental health crisis support
- Samaritans 116 123 — will listen, no judgement, free
- CALM 0800 58 58 58
- Tell someone you trust, even if you can’t explain it well
- Make the environment safer — have someone remove or secure means of self-harm
Supporting another man
If you’re worried about someone:
- Ask directly. “How are you actually doing?” “You don’t seem yourself recently.”
- Listen without trying to fix immediately. Just being heard helps.
- Ask about thoughts of self-harm or suicide. Direct questions don’t cause harm; they help.
- Encourage practical steps. “Have you spoken to a GP?” “Would it help if I came with you?”
- Stay in regular contact. Brief, consistent, lower-pressure beats intense crisis-mode.
- Look after yourself too. You can’t support someone if you’re collapsing.
If you’d like to talk, we offer 30-minute private GP appointments where mental health is welcomed openly. No script required — just turn up and we’ll work through it together.
We offer confidential 30-minute appointments where you can raise mental health concerns without judgement. No need to have it “figured out” before you come.