Depressive syndromes in schizophrenia are reported in the prodromal stage of the early course, during the first or later psychotic episodes, but also after the fading out of an acute episode and as a precursor of relapse. According to these multiple conditions several explanations also exist as to how to understand depression in schizophrenia. Some authors interpret it as an elementary part of the schizophrenic symptomatology, which is only masked by positive symptoms (revealed depression). However, it can also be understood as a reactive depression or as caused by neuroleptic treatment, as part of the negative syndrome or as co-morbidity. In the ABC-Schizophrenia-Study, depression in the early course was analysed for patients in their first psychotic episode at index admission and an ICD-9 diagnosis of schizophrenia (ICD 295). In 81 % of this sample depression was observed, beginning on average 4.3 years prior to index admission. In 42 % of the patients depression began in the prepsychotic phase. In 18 % the positive and the depressive syndrome developed within one month, and in 21 % depression started after the first positive symptom occurred. We could only observe a clear sequence of depressive, negative and positive symptoms in the subgroup characterised by prepsychotic depression. A clear order of negative and positive symptoms was not observed in the other groups. Patients without depression in the early course have lower symptom levels at index admission. They present less positive symptoms (CATEGO-subscore DAH), fewer behavioural disturbances (subscore BSO) and also lower scores of non-specific symptoms (subscores SNR and NSN). More than 80 % of the patients with depression in the early course also had a simple depression (as defined by the CATEGO-syndrome SD). Contrary to this, only 20 % of the patient group without depression in the early course have positive SD values. Comparable percentages of males and females have depression in the early course, but in females depression begins more frequently in the prepsychotic phase, whereas in the male subgroup it more often starts postpsychotically, i. e. after the onset of the first psychotic symptom.