Britney Spears has been struggling with pills for several years now

In early March, Britney Spears was arrested on suspicion of a DUI, after she was caught swerving in and out of traffic and behaving recklessly in her BMW. She was hospitalized then taken to jail overnight. She will be in court in early May and no one knows what the California courts will do about Britney at this point. Her conservatorship ended in 2021, and while all of us wanted Britney to be freed of the conservatorship, many of us also wanted to ensure that there were some guardrails to protect Britney and protect everyone else from Britney. So much of the legal system is all or nothing though – there’s no halfway-guardianship or “conservatorship-lite.” Well, Us Weekly’s cover story this week is all about Britney and how she’s really been doing since her conservatorship ended. It’s a pretty rough read.

Britney’s next steps: “It’s a delicate situation,” says a source. “Everyone around Britney wants her to be healthy and stable, but you can’t force her to do anything.” Spears’ family and friends were bracing themselves for something bad to happen prior to her arrest, says a second source. Spears showed “signs of impairment” after she underwent a series of sobriety tests by the California Highway Patrol on March 4, and was booked into the Ventura County Jail for “driving under the influence of a combination of drugs and alcohol.” (Chemical tests were pending as of press time.) “It wasn’t a matter of ‘if’ but ‘when’ she would get arrested,” the source says, adding that loved ones “are just relieved no one was hurt.”

She’s gone from bad to worse in recent months. “She spends a lot of time alone at home, which leads her to make bad choices,” says the first source. “She has this tendency to think she’s kind of invincible, especially since she’s been free from the conservatorship. For a while, she felt like there were no real consequences, but lately, it’s started to catch up with her.”

Popping pills in Mexico: In her 2023 memoir, The Woman In Me, Spears said she “never had a drinking problem” and that her “drug of choice” was Adderall, which is used to treat ADHD symptoms. “[Pills] are her real vice,” says the second source, noting that when Spears’ conservatorship was terminated, she stopped being drug tested, and that’s when “she started falling back into old habits.” Adds the source: “She’s been privately struggling with it for two to three years now.” The first source says things began to escalate when she started spending long stretches in Mexico. (Spears celebrated her last two birthdays in Mexico; in a December 2024 video she posted to Instagram, she said she’d moved there to escape paparazzi attention in the States.) “That environment wasn’t good for her,” says the first source. “She had access to all kinds of pills, and there wasn’t anyone really keeping things in check.” Adds a third source: “It’s not a safe place for her because there’s a lot of access to over-the-counter things. Who knows what she is getting and how it’s making her act.” Another insider says that her trips to Mexico raised alarm bells even in 2024 as she’d been “going to the pharmacy there for pills, including Adderall, because it’s more accessible than in the States.”

What happened after she divorced Sam Asghari: The source said Spears changed for the worse when she started dating her former handyman Paul Richard Soliz soon after she and Asghari, 32, parted ways (another source told Us at the time that she’d cheated on Asghari with Soliz). “[That’s when] she began going downhill,” said the source. Spears and Soliz, who has a criminal record, ended their on-off relationship in early 2025 after sources told Us her inner circle had been pushing her to stop associating with him.

On Kevin Federline’s memoir: Spears, says a fourth source, was “deeply upset” about Federline’s assertions but notes that his book “wasn’t the catalyst” for her recent spiral. “It didn’t help matters, but her issues predate it.”

[From Us Weekly]

To their credit, Us Weekly quoted various guardianship and conservatorship experts and lawyers about what could be done and whether Britney needs something like that again. Those experts didn’t really have the answers, because so much of it is contingent on what Britney would agree to and whether she would stick with any program or guardian. There’s also a big, looming question over what the court will do about Britney’s DUI, given her history. I don’t know, I really don’t. Britney has rights and agency and she fought long and hard for her freedom, but I keep coming back to this: what happens if and when she hurts someone? That, more than the DUI, will be what really changes things.

Photos courtesy of Britney’s Instagram. Cover courtesy of Us Weekly.

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22 Responses to “Britney Spears has been struggling with pills for several years now”

  1. Brassy Rebel says:

    She needs a conservatorship. Just not the one she had. A legal guardian appointed by a court and closely supervised by that court. I guess there’s a difference between a guardianship and a conservator but that can be sorted out also by a court. It was always predictable that just liberating her after years of tight control would lead to disaster. And here we are.

    • Ohwell says:

      No, she does not need to be in a conservatorship. A lot of her problems now are because of the conservatorship!

      • Brassy Rebel says:

        I think I said that. “It was always predictable that just liberating her after years of tight control would lead to disaster.” Unless she voluntarily submits to the intensive therapy and rehab she obviously needs, she is going to harm herself or others. What is the alternative to get her the help she so desperately needs? I am not a believer in forcing people to do things against their will unless they are a danger to themselves and others. The main issue with the first conservatorship was that her abusive father controlled it. He had a conflict of interest given that he saw her as his cash cow. A proper legal framework (no relatives involved) can and should be set up and she should have full legal representation for her interests to protect against further abuse.

  2. Starry Owl says:

    Brittany was hurt for years. By her family, by the legal system, by the industry and by the psychiatric system.

    I don’t know if she will ever be able to trust any of it again. Not enough to actually involve any of them in any sort of healing process.

    The system is so all or nothing. I have no idea what could be done to help stabilize or help her.

    She’s been a danger to herself for so long. And now it’s clear she’s a danger to others as well.

    I wish we had more compassionate and empathetic options for healing in this country, available to the legal system.

    As always – I wish her healing and peace.

    • Kitten says:

      She has the resources that your average person who struggles with addiction and/or mental illness does not. The issue isn’t that there’s no help for her, the issue is that she doesn’t appear to want the help. I wouldn’t be surprised if friends and family have tried to intervene but she’s isolated herself presumably to avoid the possibility of an intervention.

  3. Normades says:

    We see over and over how child stardom scares people for life. Justin Beiber is still struggling but seems to have a good support system and enough self awareness to get help. Unfortunately Britney has neither and tragedy seems the most likely outcome at this point.

    • Mightymolly says:

      ITA about child stars but I feel like Britney had it especially bad. She had this bewildering virgin/whore dichotomy forced on her in early puberty. Her horrible family didn’t cause her bipolar disorder, but they didn’t offer appropriate support either.

      The sister who got pregnant at sixteen and retreated from public life has fared better. What does that say?

  4. Amy Bee says:

    All this talk about conservatorship and guardianship for Britney doesn’t sit right with me.

    • Graphinya Heather says:

      When done properly, that system can really work and be beneficial. Like Amanda Bynes. She was under a conservatorship for nine years with her mother as the conservator after her mental health and behavior got out of control. Instead of drugging Amanda and making her perform so mom could get paid, they seem to have worked within a therapeutic environment. When she stabilized, her mom supported the petition to end the conservatorship and it ended. (yes there have been some issues with Amanda, but mental illness is never a straight path, the point is she was actually helped by the conservatorship). It was all done properly and very low key.

      Britney’s family did the exact opposite with her, which did not help her and made her mental health, in my opinion, worse.

      But it can be done right.

    • OriginalMich says:

      Me neither.

    • Ohwell says:

      Right!!!

      You don’t just severely restrict a persons right’s because they are addict.

  5. Graphinya Heather says:

    Yes this is a tabloid but I appreciate that they used a nice picture of Britney instead of snatching a screen grab of her IG twirling videos or a mug shot.

    All legitimate therapies, psychiatric and medication, have been weaponized against her for so long and so hard I don’t think she can trust the process, build a bond, and work within those systems to help herself.

    Her family is a non starter as they all spent their lives profiting off her, especially within the conservatorship – which made her into a circus animal instead of helping her.

    She needs rehab but again with the trust thing.

    • I agree with you that “ all legitimate therapies, psychiatric and medication have been weaponized against her”!! So now when she really really needs this kind of help she trusts none of it and doesn’t want or believe that she needs that kind of help. It’s a truly sad situation and I believe that it’s going to get worse.

    • OriginalMich says:

      Rehab usually isn’t run by qualified mental health professionals.

      I don’t know her and am not going to pretend that I know what is going on specifically with her. I’m pretty certain, however, that I would be dealing with severe PTSD/C-PTSD if I had gone through what she did. Self-medication is very common in those circumstances. Been there. Done that.

      It can take years to unravel and heal from a single trauma. She has them stacked like cordwood.

      Who knows, maybe this arrest will be the catalyst for something positive.

  6. Eurydice says:

    Well, if she ends up hurting somebody, prison is a kind of conservatorship.

  7. Sue says:

    I don’t see how she is going to get better unless she has some structured program. I don’t know what or who can help her as I agree with above commenters that her father’s conservatorship probably has her never trusting psychiatric help or even a conservatorship under an impartial party ever again. She is clearly very alone and very lost. I don’t want this to end badly but it isn’t looking good.

  8. JanetDR says:

    I’m always rooting for Britney and hope there is a way to help her help herself.

  9. Stef says:

    Aside from the DUI and potentially hurting other people, it’s really none of our business how she wants to live her life. We may not like it, we may worry about her and want a better support system around her, but that is no one’s choice but Britney’s.

    Men go off the rails with drugs and mental illness all the time, there are too many to list, and yet no one seems to demand they need a conservatorship. The double standard is so sickening and rooted in misogyny.

  10. Tiffany :) says:

    In 2009, a judge stated about Britney, “Based on the evidence presented, the court finds that there is a habitual, frequent, and continuous use of controlled substances and alcohol”.

    She’s had addiction issues for years, and people don’t want to believe it. The public has different kinds of sympathy for mental health illness in comparison with substance issues. Because accountability plays such a large role in recovery from substance abuse, I think dodging acknowledgment and responsibility in that area has probably hurt her progress. I hope she accepts the help that she needs.

  11. Flamingo says:

    If someone asked me in 2015 who would be in a better place in 2026 Britney Spears or Lindsay Lohan. I would have thought Britney. I would have lost that bet.

    I just see this as a very mentally ill women who does not think she is sick. That manifested in her 20’s like so many others that suffer from being bipolar or schizophrenia. And if she does not actually have ADHD or is overmedicating herself. As a I understand the Adderall just feels like speed. She likes the rush and if she is with a shady guy that can get her coke or other drugs for that rush. Its just a really bad combination for disaster.

    I don’t think she needs a conservatorship. Which as I understand it’s really reserved as an example for someone in a coma to make decisions on their behalf. While they are incapacitated. It is also meant for short term not 13 years.

    I think she could live a good and healthy life if she commits to sobriety and not use drugs or alcohol to self soothe. And stick to her medication plan and therapy.

    I honestly don’t know who is the person that can get through to her now. I really hoped that lawyer that freed her. Would have some good influence on her. But it seems he did his job and dipped out.

    I would also love to know who encouraged her to sell her catalog. What cut she got and who benefited the most from it. That never smelled right to me. She’s only 44, if someone badly invests it or steals it like Kathy Ireland is going through right now. She will lose everything. And she does not have the education or financial acumen to handle it.

    I am still rooting for her and hope things turned for her with the DUI arrest. As a wakeup call her life is out of control.

  12. ooshpick says:

    Anytime I’ve seen her talking she seems to be arrested in a very young phase of development. It would be very hard to use any talk therapy to work with her. From the state she’s in she does not seem to have insight into her own condition. I doubt that she can develop that. It is therefore important to have people in her life that can protect her best interests and help to navigate a safe lifestyle for her given her addiction and cognitive state.

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