Accelerated TMS: Who It’s For and What to Expect
Standard TMS works - but it asks for six weeks of your life.
Five days a week, six weeks in a row, 36 sessions total. For a lot of patients, that's fine. For some, it isn't. Maybe you can't take six weeks off work. Maybe you're travelling from out of state. Maybe you're in enough distress that waiting six weeks for meaningful relief feels impossible.
Accelerated TMS compresses that same course of treatment into five days - ten sessions a day, with 50-minute breaks between each.
Here's what that actually looks like, who it works for, and who it doesn't.
What Accelerated TMS Is
In a standard TMS course, you come in for one 20-minute session per weekday over six weeks. 36 sessions total. 72,000 magnetic pulses delivered over the full course.
Accelerated TMS compresses that into five consecutive days:
- 10 sessions per day
- 50 minutes between each session
- 50 sessions total (more than a standard course)
- 90,000 total pulses (also more than a standard course)
Each session is shorter than in the standard protocol - about 9 minutes and 42 seconds, using a shorter, more intensive pulse pattern called theta burst. That's why we can fit ten into a day without it becoming brutal.
You're at the clinic from roughly 8 am to 6 pm each day. In between sessions, you can read, eat, take calls, or walk around. You're not hooked up to anything between treatments.
The Honest Price
Accelerated TMS at Optimum TMS is $7,500, paid before treatment begins.
Insurance does not currently cover it. Even though the FDA has cleared accelerated protocols, insurers haven't followed.
We include the price upfront because finding out after a consultation that the treatment you want costs $7,500 out of pocket is the kind of thing that breaks trust. If cost is a dealbreaker, standard TMS does similar work over a longer timeframe and is usually covered.
Who Accelerated TMS Is Actually For
Based on the patients we've treated, there are a few realistic profiles where accelerated TMS makes genuine sense.
You can't step away from life for six weeks. Daily visits over a month and a half are logistically impossible for a lot of people - travelling professionals, business owners, parents of young children, people whose work doesn't pause. If the choice is "accelerated TMS or no TMS at all," accelerated starts looking worth the cost.
You're travelling in for treatment. If you're coming from out of state, booking five days is feasible. Booking six weeks isn't.
You're in acute distress, and standard TMS's six-week timeline feels untenable. Some patients are in a place where the idea of waiting another 20-30 sessions for meaningful improvement is genuinely difficult. The accelerated protocol can produce noticeable change much faster.
You've tried standard TMS unsuccessfully and want to try something different.
Not every patient responds to standard TMS. Some who don't respond to the standard protocol do respond to accelerated - the mechanism is slightly different. This isn't a guarantee,
but it's a real option worth discussing with Dr. Blair.
Who Accelerated TMS Isn't For
This is the part most clinics don't write. Being honest about it is the reason we're writing it.
If cost is a serious concern, accelerated TMS probably isn't the right starting point. Standard TMS, covered by insurance, produces strong outcomes for the majority of patients who complete it. Spending $7,500 up front when a covered alternative exists only makes sense if you have a specific reason (logistics, timing, prior TMS failure) for needing the accelerated approach.
If you've never had TMS before and don't have a specific reason to accelerate, standard is usually the right first step. We're not trying to upsell. The evidence base for standard TMS is larger than the evidence base for accelerated protocols, insurance covers it, and the response rates are strong.
If you have unstable bipolar disorder, active psychosis, or a recent seizure history, neither standard nor accelerated TMS is appropriate. The consultation screens for this.
If you can't spare five consecutive days on-site, this protocol won't work for you. Ten sessions a day is the point of the accelerated protocol. Missing sessions defeats the purpose.
What the Treatment Week Actually Looks Like
Day 1: You arrive in the morning. Dr. Blair meets with you, runs through some depression questionnaires to get a baseline, and you begin treatment. Ten sessions through the day with 50-minute gaps. You head home in the evening.
Days 2-4: Same structure. No questionnaires on these days - just the treatments themselves. You're typically at the clinic from roughly 8 am to 6 pm.
Day 5: Final day of treatment.
Dr. Blair runs the same questionnaires again at the end to measure how far you've come. Some patients notice improvement during the week; many notice it more clearly in the two to three weeks that follow.
What Happens After
The follow-up for accelerated TMS is more structured than for standard TMS, because we want to track outcomes carefully with a newer protocol.
- At weeks 3 and 5, Dr. Blair checks in and has you complete the same depression questionnaires again
- You fill out a short self-assessment at the same points, plus monthly, for a full year after treatment
- Maintenance sessions are available if your symptoms return - these are priced separately and not part of the $7,500
We stay in touch. Accelerated TMS isn't a one-and-done treatment; it's a compressed start to what's usually an ongoing relationship with your mental health care.
Side Effects and Safety
The side-effect profile for accelerated TMS is similar to standard TMS:
- Mild headache during or after sessions
- Scalp tenderness where the helmet sits
- Fatigue by the end of each day (this is real - ten sessions are more tiring than one)
- Extremely rare risk of seizure (same as standard TMS)
Research on accelerated TMS has not shown negative effects on memory or thinking. Patients score the same or better on memory and attention tests after treatment.
The fatigue is worth planning for. If you're travelling in for accelerated TMS, don't book your flight home for the evening of Day 5. Take a day to rest first.
Learn More: Benefits & Side Effects
What Happens Next
If you want to find out whether accelerated TMS is the right fit for you, the next step is a consultation with Dr. Mark Blair.
He's a board-certified psychiatrist who founded Optimum TMS in 2017 and has overseen hundreds of TMS courses - both standard and accelerated. The consultation looks at your full history and helps figure out which protocol actually suits you, not just which one you walked in asking about.
Accelerated TMS is a bigger decision than standard TMS - it's a larger financial commitment, a more intense treatment week, and a newer protocol with a smaller evidence base. The consultation exists to make sure it's the right call.
How is accelerated TMS different from standard TMS?
The magnetic pulses do similar work on the same part of the brain. The difference is scheduling - 50 sessions over 5 days instead of 36 sessions over 6 weeks, using shorter and more intensive pulse sessions. The accelerated protocol delivers more total pulses (90,000 vs 72,000).
Why doesn't insurance cover accelerated TMS?
Insurance coverage tends to lag behind FDA clearance, especially for newer protocols. Standard TMS has been FDA-cleared since 2008, and it took years before isurance coverage became widespread. Accelerated protocols have been cleared more recently, and insurers haven't updated their policies yet. This may change over the next few years. For now, it's self-pay.
Is accelerated TMS more effective than standard TMS?
This is the most honest answer we can give: the research suggests accelerated protocols work at least as well as standard TMS, and may work faster. But the evidence base for standard TMS is much larger and more established. If you have no specific reason to accelerate (time pressure, travel logistics, prior treatment history), standard TMS is usually the more evidence-backed choice.
Can I split the cost into payments?
This is worth discussing during your consultation. We'd rather work with you on a realistic payment arrangement than have cost be the reason you don't get treatment. Contact us and we'll talk through the options.
















