Skip to content
Sign up
Behaviour & sensory

Autistic burnout and masking — what they are and how to recover

Autistic burnout is a distinct, recognisable state different from depression — sustained exhaustion, loss of skills, and increased sensory sensitivity, often driven by years of masking. This piece covers what the research now describes and what recovery looks like.

Autistic burnout has been described by autistic adults for decades and recognised in clinical research only recently. It is a distinct state — not depression, not anxiety, not laziness — characterised by sustained exhaustion, loss of previously-held skills, and increased sensitivity to sensory and social input. It is now well-described in the research, most prominently in Dora Raymaker and colleagues' 2020 paper in *Autism in Adulthood*: "Having all of your internal resources exhausted beyond measure and being left with no clean-up crew."

This piece walks through what autistic burnout actually is, how it differs from depression, the role masking plays in causing it, and what recovery looks like.

The Raymaker definition (2020) The Raymaker paper is the most-cited working definition of autistic burnout in research. The team interviewed autistic adults and synthesised their accounts. The resulting definition has three core features:

1. Chronic exhaustion that goes beyond normal tiredness — not fixable by a weekend off, not responsive to the usual coping strategies. 2. Loss of skills that the person previously had. Words that used to come easily don't. Tasks that used to be routine become impossible. Social interactions that previously felt manageable become overwhelming. 3. Reduced tolerance to stimulus — sounds that used to be bearable become painful, social demands that were tolerable become intolerable. The sensory baseline shifts.

Burnout typically follows an extended period of demands exceeding capacity. The Raymaker participants described causes that converged on a small set: years of masking, environments that didn't accommodate them, the cumulative cost of meeting non-autistic expectations.

How burnout differs from depression The two get confused, and the confusion matters because the responses are different.

Depression typically involves persistent low mood, loss of interest in things the person used to enjoy, and cognitive distortions about self-worth and the future. Antidepressants and therapy often help.

Autistic burnout can look like depression from the outside — exhaustion, withdrawal, loss of function — but the underlying mechanism is different. The autistic person in burnout has not lost interest in their special interests; they have lost the capacity to engage. They are not cognitively distorted about their abilities; their abilities have genuinely contracted. They do not need more activity to lift mood; they need profound rest and accommodation.

Treating burnout as depression often makes it worse. SSRIs are not particularly effective for burnout itself (though they may help co-occurring anxiety). Cognitive therapy that pushes for activity and engagement can deepen the depletion. Most autistic adults who have recovered from burnout describe extended periods of doing far less than they "should" — and that's what worked.

Masking as a primary driver Masking — suppressing autistic traits to appear more typical — is the most-cited cause of autistic burnout. The cost is cumulative. Years of holding eye contact you don't want to hold, suppressing stims that would have helped you regulate, performing social interactions you can't read intuitively, working at jobs that don't accommodate your sensory profile.

The research on masking has expanded rapidly. Laura Hull and colleagues' 2017 study in the *Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders* developed the Camouflaging Autistic Traits Questionnaire (CAT-Q) and documented strong associations between high masking and poor mental-health outcomes. Subsequent work has linked sustained masking to autistic burnout, anxiety, depression, and suicidality.

Masking is not always conscious. Many autistic adults describe realising — sometimes after diagnosis, sometimes after burnout — that they had been masking for decades without knowing there was an alternative. The first step out is often recognising what the mask is doing.

How burnout shows up in children Children can burn out too, though the term is mostly used for adults and teens. In children, the warning signs often look like:

  • Sudden regression in skills the child previously had — they stop using words they used to use, refuse activities they used to enjoy, lose recently-acquired toileting skills.
  • Escalating meltdowns and shutdowns, often without obvious triggers.
  • Increased sensory sensitivity — clothes that were fine become unbearable, foods drop off the safe list.
  • School refusal or extreme exhaustion after school.
  • The mask cracking at home — a child who held it together all day at school becoming dysregulated within minutes of arriving home.

The interventions are similar to adult burnout: drastically reduce demands, accommodate sensory needs, treat the situation as serious. A child in burnout cannot push through it.

What recovery looks like Recovery from autistic burnout is slow. Most autistic adults who have recovered describe a process measured in months or years, not weeks. The common ingredients:

  • Radical reduction in demands. This often means leaving a job, changing schools, dropping social commitments, simplifying the household. It is not a holiday; it is a deliberate, sustained reduction in what is being asked of the nervous system.
  • Sensory accommodation as default. Headphones at the supermarket, dimmer lights at home, soft fabrics, predictable routines. The accommodations are not a treat; they are the new normal.
  • Unmasking in safe places first. Letting the body stim, dropping forced eye contact, speaking in the cadence that comes naturally. Most autistic adults describe this as a process, not a switch.
  • Limited new input. New people, new places, new tasks all cost. Recovery is a low-novelty phase.
  • Time with autistic peers. Spaces where autistic ways of being are the default are restorative in a specific way that mixed-neurotype spaces are not.
  • Patience with the timeline. Two-steps-forward, one-step-back is normal. The trajectory is not linear.

When professional help is warranted Self-managed recovery is often enough. Professional support becomes important when:

  • The burnout is severe enough to impair safety or basic functioning
  • Co-occurring depression or anxiety is present and treatable
  • The person is having thoughts of self-harm or suicide
  • The cause is structural (job, family system, school) and untangling it requires outside input

The right professional is one who recognises autistic burnout as distinct from depression and is willing to work with — not against — the autistic person's pacing. Therapists trained in neurodiversity-affirming practice are increasingly available; Devon Price's resources include a directory.

A note for parents If your autistic child is showing signs of burnout — sudden regression, escalating meltdowns, school refusal — the most useful thing you can do is take it seriously. Drop the demands. Accept the regression. Stop the activities that aren't essential. Reduce school if you can negotiate it. Trust that the child's nervous system knows what it needs.

A child whose burnout is recognised early and accommodated rarely needs to repeat the cycle. A child whose burnout is treated as "won't" instead of "can't" often spends years cycling through deepening crises. Soira's view is that the first response is always to believe the body's signal.