Bipolar I and bipolar II are two types of bipolar disorder distinguished mainly by the severity of their high phases. Bipolar I involves full manic episodes, while bipolar II involves hypomania, a milder high, paired with episodes of major depression.
Both are serious, lifelong mood conditions, and the difference between them shapes treatment. Understanding which is which helps adults and families make sense of a bipolar disorder diagnosis rather than guessing. This guide explains the core differences and how each is treated.
At our Roseville facility, our clinical team treats adults 18 and older across Greater Sacramento and Placer County during severe mood episodes that outpatient care can no longer hold safely.
Key Takeaways
- The core difference is the high phase: bipolar I has full mania; bipolar II has hypomania plus major depression.
- Both are serious: bipolar II is not a milder disorder, just a milder type of high, and its depressions can be severe.
- Bipolar II is often misdiagnosed as major depression because people seek help during the lows, not the highs.
- Mood stabilization is the foundation: both types are managed with medication plus psychotherapy.
- Antidepressants alone can backfire, sometimes triggering mania or rapid cycling without a mood stabilizer.
- Residential care helps during severe episodes, when safety or stability is at risk.
What Bipolar Disorder Is
Bipolar disorder is a mood disorder marked by shifts between emotional highs and lows that go well beyond ordinary ups and downs. The highs and lows are called episodes, and they can last days or weeks.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, bipolar disorder is diagnosed by the pattern and severity of these episodes. The type depends most on how high the highs go.
Bipolar I vs. Bipolar II: The Core Difference
The clearest way to separate the two types is the high phase and what it does to a person’s life. The table below lays out the main differences.
| Feature | Bipolar I | Bipolar II |
|---|---|---|
| High phase | Full mania | Hypomania (a milder high) |
| Severity of highs | Can impair functioning or require hospitalization | Noticeable but less disabling |
| Depression | Common, but not required for diagnosis | Required; major depressive episodes are central |
| Psychosis | Can occur during mania | Not part of hypomania |
| Common reason for care | A manic crisis | A depressive episode |
Mania vs. Hypomania
Mania is an intense, often dangerous high that can include reckless behavior, little need for sleep, racing thoughts, and sometimes psychosis. It can derail finances, relationships, and safety within days.
Hypomania is a milder version. A person may feel unusually productive, energetic, or confident without the full breakdown in functioning that mania causes, which is part of why it is easy to miss.
The table below compares the three kinds of episode a person with bipolar disorder may experience.
| Episode | Key Signs | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Mania | Little need for sleep, racing thoughts, risky behavior, possible psychosis | Can derail safety, finances, and relationships |
| Hypomania | Elevated energy and confidence, more productivity, less sleep | Noticeable but rarely disabling on its own |
| Depressive episode | Low mood, fatigue, hopelessness, loss of interest | Often the reason people seek help |
"Antidepressants given without a mood stabilizer can trigger mania or rapid cycling. Accurate diagnosis comes first.
— Dr. Bonnie J. Mitchell, DBH, LPCC, Clinical Director
Why Bipolar II Is Often Misdiagnosed
Most people with bipolar II seek help during a depressive episode, not during hypomania, which can feel good. As a result, the condition is frequently mistaken for major depressive disorder.
The distinction matters because the treatments differ. A careful history of past highs is what separates recurrent depression from bipolar II, and missing it can lead to the wrong medication.

Bipolar Stabilization in Residential Care
Mood stabilization and structured support during severe episodes, for adults who need more than outpatient care.
Explore bipolar treatment →How Bipolar Disorder Is Treated
Both types are treated by stabilizing mood, not just lifting depression. Care begins with the comprehensive assessment and a careful history of past episodes.
Medication management with mood stabilizers is the foundation, paired with individual and group psychotherapy to build routine, recognize warning signs, and support recovery.
Clinical references including StatPearls caution that antidepressants given without a mood stabilizer can trigger mania or rapid cycling in bipolar disorder. A typical residential stay runs around 30 days, followed by a step-down to outpatient or virtual support at another organization.
When Bipolar Disorder Needs Residential Care
In Crisis Right Now?
If you or someone you love is in immediate psychiatric crisis, call or text 988 — the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. Available 24/7, confidential, free.
If life is in danger, call 911. Sacramento Mental Health is a residential treatment program — not an acute crisis or emergency service.
Many adults manage bipolar disorder as outpatients. Residential care fits during a severe manic or depressive episode, when safety is at risk, or when medication needs close adjustment in a structured setting.
A 24-hour environment allows daily monitoring while mood stabilizes. We admit adults 18 and older, and adults who need detox first are connected to a partnering provider before admission.
Bipolar episodes hard to manage?
Call our admissions team about a clinical assessment, coverage, and what residential care at our Roseville facility would look like for you or your loved one.
24/7 admissions line
Frequently Asked Questions About Bipolar I and Bipolar II
Is bipolar II less serious than bipolar I?
No. Bipolar II has milder highs (hypomania instead of mania), but its depressive episodes can be just as severe and disabling, and the suicide risk is significant. It is a different type of bipolar disorder, not a lighter version. Both require ongoing treatment.
Can bipolar II turn into bipolar I?
The types are generally considered distinct, but a person diagnosed with bipolar II is reclassified as bipolar I if they ever experience a full manic episode. This is one reason an accurate history and ongoing monitoring matter. A clinician tracks episodes over time to confirm the diagnosis.
Why was my bipolar II missed for so long?
Most people seek help during depression, not during hypomania, which can feel productive rather than like a problem. Without a careful history of past highs, bipolar II is easily mistaken for major depression. Getting the diagnosis right often changes the treatment plan.
Can antidepressants make bipolar disorder worse?
They can. Antidepressants taken without a mood stabilizer may trigger mania, hypomania, or rapid cycling in people with bipolar disorder. This is why an accurate diagnosis matters before starting medication, and why mood stabilization is the foundation of treatment.
When does bipolar disorder need residential treatment?
Residential care fits during a severe manic or depressive episode, when safety is at risk, or when medication needs close adjustment that outpatient visits cannot provide. Our Roseville program admits adults 18 and older who need 24-hour support to stabilize.