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Loneliness: Why It Hurts and What Actually Helps

An evidence-based guide to loneliness: how it differs from being alone, why it affects physical and mental health, and which approaches actually reduce it.

A person standing alone in front of a bright window.

Loneliness is one of the most common forms of human distress, and one of the most stigmatised. People often feel ashamed to admit they are lonely, as though it were a personal failing rather than a near-universal experience. It is not a failing. In 2023 the United States Surgeon General issued a public health advisory describing loneliness and isolation as an epidemic, noting that about half of adults report experiencing loneliness and that weak social connection carries a risk to health comparable to smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day. This guide explains what loneliness actually is, why it affects the body and mind so powerfully, who is most at risk, and, most usefully, what the evidence shows actually reduces it.

Loneliness is not the same as being alone

The single most important distinction is between loneliness and social isolation. Social isolation is objective: it describes how few social contacts a person actually has. Loneliness is subjective: it is the distressing feeling that your social connections fall short of what you want or need. The two often overlap, but not always. A person can be surrounded by people, in a busy office or even a marriage, and still feel profoundly lonely. Another can live alone, see few people, and feel content.

This matters because solitude is not the enemy. Chosen, comfortable time alone can be restorative. Loneliness is specifically the gap between the connection you have and the connection you want. Recognising this reframes the problem away from simply being around more people and toward the quality and meaning of the relationships involved.

Why loneliness affects physical health

The link between social connection and physical health is one of the most robust findings in health psychology. Holt-Lunstad and colleagues (2010) conducted a meta-analysis of 148 studies and found that people with stronger social relationships had a 50% greater likelihood of survival over the study periods than those with weaker connections, an effect size comparable to well-established risk factors such as smoking and exceeding many others such as obesity and physical inactivity.

A second meta-analysis by Holt-Lunstad and colleagues (2015) focused specifically on loneliness, social isolation, and living alone, and found each was associated with a meaningfully increased risk of early death: roughly a 26% increase for loneliness, 29% for social isolation, and 32% for living alone. The mechanisms are several. Chronic loneliness keeps the body’s stress systems activated, raising inflammation and blood pressure over time. It disrupts sleep, as the lonely brain stays subtly vigilant for threat. And it erodes the everyday health behaviours, eating well, exercising, attending appointments, that connected people tend to support in one another.

Loneliness and mental health

Loneliness and mental health are tightly, and bidirectionally, linked. Loneliness raises the risk of developing depression and anxiety, and depression and anxiety in turn make people withdraw, deepening loneliness. The Surgeon General’s 2023 advisory lists depression, anxiety, and dementia among the conditions for which social disconnection is an independent risk factor.

The pathway runs partly through the same systems described above: disrupted sleep, chronic stress activation, and rumination. Our depression overview and anxiety hub cover those conditions in depth, and because loneliness so reliably disturbs rest, our sleep and mental health guide is often relevant too. The key clinical point is that loneliness is worth taking seriously in its own right, not dismissing as a symptom that will lift on its own once the depression is treated, because the two sustain each other.

Who is most affected, and why it may be rising

Loneliness is not confined to any one group, but some are more exposed. Young adults consistently report some of the highest levels, contrary to the stereotype that loneliness is mainly a problem of old age, although older adults facing bereavement, reduced mobility, and shrinking social networks remain highly vulnerable. Major life transitions, moving city, starting university, becoming a parent, retiring, losing a partner, are common triggers because they disrupt existing networks faster than new ones form.

The Surgeon General’s advisory points to broader structural shifts as well: declining participation in community organisations, more time spent alone, and changes in how technology mediates connection. Digital contact can support relationships, but when it displaces in-person connection it often leaves the underlying need unmet.

What actually helps

Here the evidence holds a genuine surprise. It is natural to assume the fix for loneliness is simply more social contact. Masi and colleagues (2011) conducted a meta-analysis of loneliness interventions and grouped them into four types: improving social skills, enhancing social support, increasing opportunities for social contact, and addressing maladaptive social cognition. The most effective approaches were those that targeted maladaptive social cognition, the unhelpful, often automatic thought patterns that loneliness creates, such as expecting rejection, reading neutral interactions as hostile, and withdrawing pre-emptively.

This makes sense in light of how loneliness works. Prolonged loneliness puts the brain into a self-protective, threat-sensitive state that subtly biases a person to perceive others as less warm and more critical than they are. That bias then drives the very withdrawal that perpetuates the loneliness. Interventions rooted in cognitive behavioural principles, which help people notice and test these biased predictions, tend to outperform those that simply put lonely people in the same room.

Translated into practical steps, the evidence supports:

Watch: talks and explainers on loneliness and connection

The following talks and explainers, from researchers, a former U.S. Surgeon General, and a science education channel, expand on the ideas above. They are educational resources, not a substitute for individual care.

What makes a good life? Lessons from the longest study on happiness, Robert Waldinger (TED)
The lethality of loneliness, John Cacioppo (TEDxDesMoines)
On loneliness and the power of connection, Dr Vivek Murthy (The RSA)
Loneliness, an explainer from Kurzgesagt, In a Nutshell
Concrete things we can do to combat loneliness, Dr Vivek Murthy

When to seek professional help

Loneliness becomes a reason to seek support when it is persistent, when it is accompanied by low mood, hopelessness, or anxiety that does not lift, or when it leads to withdrawal that feels hard to reverse. A GP or mental health professional can help, and approaches such as cognitive behavioural therapy that address the thought patterns loneliness creates have good evidence behind them. If loneliness is ever accompanied by thoughts that life is not worth living, treat it as an emergency and contact local emergency services or a crisis line immediately. For a broader map of related topics, see our topics overview.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between loneliness and social isolation?

Social isolation is objective: it refers to having few social contacts or little interaction with others. Loneliness is subjective: it is the distressing sense that your relationships fall short of what you want or need. They frequently coincide, but a person can be isolated yet content, or surrounded by people yet deeply lonely. The distinction matters because the remedy for loneliness is rarely just more contact; it is more meaningful connection.

Is loneliness actually bad for your health?

The evidence is strong. Holt-Lunstad and colleagues (2010) found that stronger social relationships were associated with a 50% greater likelihood of survival, an effect comparable to quitting smoking. Their 2015 review found loneliness, social isolation, and living alone each raised the risk of early death by roughly a quarter to a third. The 2023 U.S. Surgeon General’s advisory summarised this evidence in describing social disconnection as a serious public health issue.

Why do I feel lonely even when I am around people?

Because loneliness is about the perceived quality of connection, not the number of people present. Feeling unseen, misunderstood, or unable to be yourself in company can produce loneliness even in a crowd or a relationship. Prolonged loneliness also biases the brain toward expecting rejection, which can make social situations feel less warm than they are, a pattern that is treatable.

What is the most effective way to reduce loneliness?

The meta-analysis by Masi and colleagues (2011) found that the most effective interventions were not those that simply increased social contact, but those that addressed maladaptive social cognition, the unhelpful thought patterns loneliness creates, such as anticipating rejection. Approaches based on cognitive behavioural principles, which help people notice and test these predictions, tended to work best, often alongside opportunities for genuine, shared-interest connection.

Is loneliness more common in older or younger people?

Both groups are affected, and the stereotype that loneliness is mainly an issue of old age is misleading. Surveys consistently find high levels of loneliness among young adults, while older adults remain vulnerable through bereavement, reduced mobility, and shrinking networks. Major life transitions at any age, such as moving, starting a new stage of life, or losing a relationship, are common triggers because they disrupt established social connections.