We'll learn about LSD's potential for treating anxiety in 2026
Two later-stage trials investigating LSD for treating anxiety are due to conclude in 2026, which could lead to the drug being approved for the common mental health condition

LSD can enhance the brain’s ability to rewire itself, potentially dampening anxiety
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Two major trials investigating the potential of the psychedelic drug LSD for reducing anxiety are set to conclude in 2026. Scientists are feeling positive after the drug’s success in an earlier-stage trial, which could mean the treatment will be available in the US as early as 2027.
Generalised anxiety disorder is a common condition where people feel very anxious about lots of different things. It is typically treated with antidepressants and talking therapies, but around half of people don’t respond to such treatments.
Other psychedelic drugs like psilocybin and MDMA are already used to treat particularly severe cases of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder in some countries, such as Australia and Switzerland. LSD is increasingly being explored as a mental health treatment, partly because research shows it triggers profound emotional experiences in some people, and it seems to enhance the brain’s ability to rewire itself and form new thought patterns.
In 2025, a landmark trial showed that a single high dose of LSD relieved moderate to severe anxiety for at least three months.
Now, two later-stage trials are building on these results, with findings expected in 2026. Both are made up of about 200 people with moderate to severe anxiety, who will take either LSD as tablets that collectively add up to a 100-microgram dose or placebo pills. Their anxiety levels will be tracked for up to three months after the dosing day.
Then, in a second 10-month phase of the study, all the participants – including those who were initially on placebo pills – will be offered LSD whenever they self-report their anxiety reaching a certain threshold on a standard scale. This will help determine how long effects last from a single dose, says Dan Karlin at biotech company MindMed in New York, who was involved in the 2025 trial and both of the upcoming ones.
The key difference between the two trials is that the second also has a third group of participants on a 50-microgram dose of LSD. The 2025 trial demonstrated that this dose has mind-altering effects, such as hallucinations, but doesn’t reduce anxiety beyond the placebo effect. Including this group should help address a major limitation of most psychedelic trials: that participants can often tell whether they have taken the drug.