Depression Mood Journal Template: Daily Wellness Check-In

A Journal That Actually Works for Depression

You have probably tried journaling before. Maybe you bought a beautiful notebook with every intention of using it. Maybe you wrote in it for three days and then stopped because it felt too vague, too heavy, or like one more thing you were failing at.

Key Takeaways

  • A mood journal captures daily emotional patterns that memory alone distorts, especially during depressive episodes.
  • Tracking sleep, appetite, and energy alongside mood reveals physical patterns connected to depressive cycles.
  • Writing even one or two sentences per day builds a record that makes therapy sessions more focused and productive.
  • Reviewing your journal weekly helps you notice small improvements that depression makes you overlook.

That is not a reflection of your discipline. It is a reflection of what generic journaling asks of someone in the middle of depression. When your mind is foggy and your motivation is low, a blank page is not an invitation. It is a wall.

A structured depression mood journal template changes this. Instead of asking you to produce something from nothing, it gives you specific prompts and categories to respond to. Your job is to fill in the blanks, not to write eloquently, not to process deeply, not to solve anything. Just to record what is true right now.

Over time, those records become something genuinely useful. For understanding your patterns. For your treatment conversations. For yourself.

What Makes a Mood Journal Actually Useful for Depression

Symptom to Track How to Measure Why It Matters
Mood level Rate 1-10 at the same time each day Reveals daily and weekly mood patterns
Sleep duration and quality Hours slept, time to fall asleep, nighttime waking Sleep disruption drives depression and vice versa
Appetite and eating Meals eaten, overeating or undereating Changes in appetite signal symptom shifts
Physical activity Type and duration, even brief walks Movement correlates with mood improvement
Social interaction Who you talked to, whether you went out Isolation often deepens depression gradually

Not all journaling is created equal when it comes to depression. There is actually research suggesting that unstructured expressive journaling can sometimes increase rumination in people with depression, particularly when the writing focuses on searching for meaning in distress without resolution.

A structured mood journal sidesteps this by keeping you in observation mode rather than analysis mode. You are recording, not interpreting. You are noting facts: I slept six hours, my mood is a four, I did not want to eat lunch, I had one text conversation that felt okay. That factual recording is lower-stakes and cognitively lighter than asking yourself “why do I feel this way?”

The interpretation can come later, with a therapist, or when you have more data to look at.

The Daily Wellness Check-In Template

Use this every day. Morning takes about ninety seconds. Evening takes about two minutes. That is it. The goal is consistency over depth.

Morning Check-In (First 30 Minutes of the Day)

Answer these before you check your phone, if possible:

  • Sleep hours (approximate): ___
  • Sleep quality (1-5): ___ (1 = terrible, 5 = actually rested)
  • Woke during the night? (Y/N): ___
  • Current mood (1-10): ___ (1 = lowest I’ve felt, 10 = genuinely okay)
  • Physical feeling right now: Circle one: Heavy / Tense / Numb / Okay / Rested
  • One word for how I woke up feeling: ___
  • What is the first hard thing about today? (One sentence, practical or emotional)

Evening Check-In (Before Bed)

  • Mood at end of day (1-10): ___
  • Energy level today (1-10): ___
  • Appetite (1-5): ___ (1 = could not eat, 5 = normal)
  • Did I leave the house today? (Y/N): ___
  • Social contact today: Circle: None / Text only / Phone call / In person
  • Anything I did that helped, even slightly: ___
  • Anything that made today harder: ___
  • One honest sentence about today: ___

Weekly Reflection (Sunday or any day you choose)

This one takes about five minutes. It is worth it.

  • Average mood this week (rough estimate 1-10): ___
  • Best day this week: Which day? What made it slightly better?
  • Hardest day this week: Which day? Any guess at why?
  • Sleep pattern this week: Consistent, fragmented, or mostly sleeping too much?
  • One thing I noticed that I had not noticed before: ___
  • What do I need more of next week? ___
  • What am I willing to try, even small? ___

Optional Add-Ons for Specific Situations

Depending on what your depression tends to look like, some of these extra fields may be worth adding.

If You Have Hormonal Patterns

Add a cycle day number or a simple “period week / pre-period week / other” marker. You may find your most difficult days cluster predictably within your cycle. That pattern is worth documenting because it changes the treatment conversation.

If Medication Is Part of Your Treatment

Add a simple medication adherence field: “Took medication today? Y/N.” This is not about judgment. It is about correlation. If you miss three days and then crash, you want to see that in the data.

If Anxiety Rides Alongside Your Depression

Add an anxiety rating alongside your mood rating. Many people with depression experience significant anxiety, and the two can fluctuate somewhat independently. Knowing whether a bad day was more depressive heaviness or more anxious dread helps you and your provider understand what is happening.

If You Track Substances or Alcohol

A simple “drinks today: 0 / 1 / 2 / 3+” field. No judgment attached. It is data, and it can reveal connections that are important to understand.

How to Actually Keep Up With This

The single biggest reason mood journals fail is friction. Too many fields, too much thinking required, no consistent time built in. Here is how to keep the habit alive.

Pick a specific trigger for each check-in. Not “in the morning” but “after I pour my coffee.” Not “before bed” but “when I plug in my phone.” Attach the habit to something you already do without thinking.

Keep the journal accessible. A physical notebook works only if it is on your nightstand or kitchen table, not in a drawer. An app works because it is always with you. The fewer steps between you and the journal, the more likely you are to actually open it.

Give yourself permission to write badly. One-word answers are fine. Incomplete sentences are fine. Writing “I don’t know” is fine. The bar for completion is low: you filled in something. That counts.

What to Do With the Data You Collect

After two weeks, look for patterns. You do not need to be a data analyst. Just ask yourself these questions:

  • Are there days of the week that consistently score lower?
  • Does my mood tend to be better or worse in the morning versus evening?
  • Are there specific things I did on my slightly better days?
  • Do my sleep scores and mood scores tend to track together?
  • Are there recurring entries in the “what made today harder” field?

Bring your journal to your next appointment. Show your therapist or psychiatrist the weekly trends. You will have more to work with than you would from memory alone, and that specificity helps treatment decisions.

Going Deeper: Connecting the Pieces

This template works best as part of a broader picture. If you have not read the guide on depression symptom tracking, that post walks through the larger framework for logging and pattern recognition across all your symptoms. And if you want to understand what your sleep data specifically is telling you, the post on depression and sleep patterns digs into the specific patterns worth knowing about.

For broader information about treatment approaches and resources, Clarity DTX’s depression page is a useful starting point.

A Tool to Hold This for You

If you want to track your mood journal digitally, with reminders, visual pattern graphs, and your data stored over time in one place, the Depression Tracker app is built for exactly this. It structures the daily check-in for you and surfaces patterns in a way that is genuinely useful for appointments and for self-understanding.

You can also explore the broader toolkit available through the Clarity DTX app.

Start With Today

Right now, before you close this tab: what is your mood on a scale of one to ten? Write it down somewhere. That one number is your first data point. Add one sentence about how you feel. That is your entry for today.

Tomorrow, do the same thing. The day after, again. Not because you need to earn recovery through discipline, but because you deserve to understand what your own experience looks like over time. That understanding is something worth building.


This content is for informational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your treatment plan.