Behavioral flexibility is the ability of an animal to adapt to changes in its environment. One example is altering a strategy to achieve a goal when the previously chosen strategy no longer works. A hallmark of many psychiatric diseases, such as depression, is a distinct decrease in behavioral flexibility (Uddin, 2021). This contributes to individuals feeling “stuck” and not being able to adapt to dynamic environments. One structure that plays a crucial role in negative emotion and depression is an epithalamic structure called the lateral habenula (LHb). In fact, LHb hyperactivity is a consistent neural marker of depression (Caldecott-Hazard et al., 1988). Interestingly, the LHb is implicated in a variety of contexts, including memory formation and spatial navigation (Mathis et al., 2017, Goutagny et al., 2013, Baker et al., 2019). We sought to discover precisely how the LHb contributes to behavioral flexibility with the use of a complex strategy switching task. This task is performed on an elevated plus maze, requiring rats to recognize changes in reward contingency and adapt their strategy accordingly. Animals must either alternate between reward locations (e.g. east or west maze arms) or go the same reward arm (e.g. only east or only west), regardless of start location. After animals were fully trained on the task, we inactivated the LHb using muscimol, a GABA-A agonist. Our preliminary results (n=6 rats) show that strategy switching and other behavioral metrics are impaired when the LHb undergoes inactivation, indicating that the LHb and its downstream circuitry play an important role in behavioral flexibility.