Reports on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of Asian populations after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and its predictors are rare. We describe the longitudinal HRQOL course after AMI, hypothesizing that post-discharge depressive symptoms predict poor recovery of HRQOL in Japan.AMI survivors participated in a prospective cohort study of AMI patients admitted to 5 hospitals in Japan. Data from 218 consecutive male patients were analyzed. HRQOL was measured with Short-Form Health Survey-36 at 1, 6, and 12 months post-discharge. Five-question Mental Health Inventory (MHI-5) assessed presence of depressive symptoms. Multiple linear regression analyzed the relationship between depressive symptoms at 1 month and recovery of HRQOL at 6 months.AMI patients at 12 months after discharge had lower HRQOL in physical function (47.8), role-physical (44.1), general health (46.4), social function (47.4), and role-emotional (45.8) than the Japanese national norm. Impairment of each domain of HRQOL was seen in 36%–71% of patients. Multivariate analysis showed that depressive symptoms at 1 month post-discharge adversely affected recovery of physical function (β=−2.62; CI: −5.00 to −0.23), role-physical (β=−3.50; CI: −6.94 to −0.06) and bodily pain (β=−2.92; CI: −5.26 to −0.59) at 6 months.Despite good prognosis for survival of discharged AMI patients, HRQOL did not recover to the national norm. Post-discharge depressive symptoms were significantly associated with poor recovery of the physical component of HRQOL. Increasing awareness of depressive symptoms in discharged AMI patients may improve survivor HRQOL.