Abstract Background A wide range of host restriction factors (RF) become upregulated upon HIV-1 infection to suppress viral infectivity and may aid viremic control in vivo. This cross-sectional study evaluated HIV-1 RFs and dependency factors in HIV infected individuals with progressive or non-progressive infection, as well as in early and late treated cohorts that exhibit different viro-immunological profiles due to differences in timing of treatment-initiation. Methods The expression profile of IFIT1, MX1, APOBEC3G, SAMHD1, BST2 (encoding TETHERIN), TRIM5, MX2, SLFN11, PAF1, PSIP1 (encoding LEDGF/p75), and NLRX1 was measured by qPCR in 104 HIV-1 positive individuals: seroconverters (SRCV; n = 19), long term non-progressors (LTNP; n = 17), viremic progressors (VP; n = 12), patients treated during seroconversion (Early treated; n = 24) or chronic infection (Late treated; n = 32), and non-infected controls. Findings Expression levels of early treated HIV-1 positive individuals were significantly upregulated in comparison to late treated patients (IFIT1: p = 0·0003; MX1: p = 0·008; APOBEC3G: p = 0·002; SAMHD1: p = 0·0008; SLFN11: p Interpretation Early treatment initiation maintains initial RF elevation even after a decade of ART. Elevated expression of SLFN11, BST2, and SAMHD1 in LTNP and early treated subjects implies that these RFs may be associated with spontaneous virological control.