Background and PurposeAntipsychotics like olanzapine are associated with significant metabolic dysfunction, attributable to gut microbiota dysbiosis. A recent notion that most psychotropics are detrimental to the gut microbiota has arisen from consistent findings of metabolic adverse effects. However, unlike olanzapine, the metabolic effects of lurasidone are conflicting, with most reports observing weight loss rather than gain. Thus, this study investigates the contrasting effects of olanzapine and lurasidone on the gut microbiota to explore the hypothesis of “gut neutrality” for lurasidone exposure.Experimental ApproachUsing a Sprague-Dawley rat model, the impact of olanzapine and lurasidone administration on the gut microbiota was explored. Faecal and blood samples were collected weekly over a 21-day period to analyse changes to the gut microbiota and related metabolic markers.Key ResultsLurasidone triggered no significant weight gain or metabolic alterations, instead positively modulating gut microbiota through increases in mean OTUs (+50 OTUs) and alpha diversity (+0.5 increase in Shannon’s index). This novel finding suggests an underlying mechanism for lurasidone’s metabolic inertia. In contrast, olanzapine triggered a statistically significant decrease in mean OTUs (−75 OTUs) and substantial compositional variation, suggesting a decrease in microbial richness. Microbiota alterations correlated with metabolic dysfunction, evidenced through a statistically significant 30% increase in weight gain, increase in pro-inflammatory cytokine expression, and increase in blood triglycerides and glycaemic levels.Conclusion and ImplicationsThe study challenges the notion that all antipsychotics disrupt the gut microbiota similarly and highlights the potential benefits of gut positive or neutral antipsychotics like lurasidone in managing metabolic side effects. Further research is warranted to validate these findings in humans to guide personalised pharmacological treatment regimens for schizophrenia.Bullet point summary-What is already known:Olanzapine induces weight gain by disrupting the gut microbiome.The impact of lurasidone on the gut microbiome is unknown and weight gaining propensities unclear.-What this study adds:Lurasidone positively modulates gut microbiota through enhancement of microbial diversity and richness.Potential mechanisms underlying lurasidone’s weight and metabolic neutrality are elucidated.-Clinical significance:Gut neutral antipsychotics like lurasidone could be favourable alternatives for patients unable to tolerate olanzapine.Personalised treatment for schizophrenia considering individual sensitivities to metabolic effects is emphasised.