What is Multiple Sclerosis?

Fatigue in MS

One of the most common symptoms of MS — and one of the most misunderstood. This is not ordinary tiredness.

Fatigue is one of the most common symptoms of MS, affecting the majority of people at some point. For many, it is also one of the most limiting — even when their other symptoms are mild.

MS fatigue, sometimes called lassitude, is different from normal tiredness. It can appear suddenly, feel overwhelming, and be out of all proportion to what you have done. It is not always relieved by rest or a good night’s sleep, and it can arrive on days when you have barely done anything at all.

Because it cannot be seen, fatigue is often one of the hardest symptoms for other people to understand — which can make it feel isolating as well as exhausting.

Managing your energy is not giving in. It is one of the most practical ways to stay in control of your day.

What it can feel like

  • A sudden ‘wall’ of exhaustion that arrives without warning
  • Heavy, leaden limbs that make simple tasks feel like hard work
  • Needing to rest after activities that never used to tire you
  • A foggy brain — harder to think, focus or find words
  • Symptoms that feel noticeably worse in heat or after exertion

Why it happens

Fatigue in MS can be primary — a direct result of the changes MS causes in the nervous system, where the brain has to work harder to send signals along damaged pathways.

It can also be secondary — caused or worsened by things such as disrupted sleep, low mood, pain, some medications, infections, or simply doing less over time. Very often it is a mix of both.

That distinction matters, because many of the secondary causes can be identified and treated — which is why persistent fatigue is always worth raising with your MS team.

You are not powerless

What can help

None of this is medical advice — but these are approaches that help many people, and good places to begin a conversation with your MS team.

01

Plan around your energy

Notice when your energy is highest and schedule demanding tasks for those windows. Break big jobs into smaller steps, and build short rests in before you are exhausted rather than after.

02

Keep cool

Many people find heat drains them quickly. Cooler rooms, cold drinks, and cooling products can help you stay steadier through the day.

03

Move a little, often

It feels counter-intuitive, but gentle, regular exercise reduces fatigue for many people over time. Start small and build gradually.

04

Protect your sleep

Poor or broken sleep feeds fatigue. A steady routine helps, and treatable interruptions — like getting up at night — are worth mentioning to your team.

05

Look for hidden causes

Low mood, pain, medication side effects and infections can all amplify fatigue. Reviewing these with your MS team can uncover something fixable.

06

Ask for an assessment

Occupational therapists are specialists in energy management, and your MS team can look for treatable contributors. You do not have to work it out alone.

Fatigue is real, even when no one else can see it. Working with your energy, rather than against it, is how you keep living your life.

— Living with MS

This page offers general information about MS, not medical advice. Your experience is individual — always discuss your symptoms with your neurologist or MS team, who know your situation best.

Explore further

Other symptoms and effects

MS is highly individual, and no two people experience it in the same way. Explore the areas that matter most to you.

You are not alone

Living well, day to day

Fatigue is easier to carry with the right routines and support around you.