In this study, we have carried out fundamental research on lubricant depletion due to laser heating in thermally assisted magnetic recording. In particular, we investigated the effects of lubricant film thickness and lubricant bonding ratio on lubricant depletion. Conventional lubricants Zdol2000 and Ztetraol2000 were used. The lubricant depletion characteristics due to laser heating were found to depend largely on the lubricant film thickness and material. That is, for films thicker than one monolayer, the lubricant depletion depth increased with the laser-irradiation duration, whereas the thickness of the lubricant after laser irradiation on the diamond-like carbon (DLC) films tended to remain at a constant film thickness of one monolayer. The lubricant depletion width gradually increased as the laser irradiation duration increased. The increasing trends for the lubricant depletion width were quantitatively very similar and almost independent of the initial lubricant film thickness. However, for lubricant films with thicknesses less than one monolayer, the lubricant depletion depth was very small. The lubricant depletion width increased remarkably to several hundred micrometers as the laser irradiation duration increased. The lubricant depletion depth and width were much smaller for Ztetraol2000 than Zdol2000. In addition, the lubricant-bonding ratio was found to greatly affect the lubricant depletion characteristics due to laser heating. In other words, the lubricant depletion depth and width decreased as the bonding ratio increased. The lubricant depletion mechanism involves the evaporation of mobile lubricant molecules when the maximum attained temperature is less than 100 A degrees C. Another suggested lubricant depletion mechanism involves the thermocapillary stress effect, which is induced by the disk surface temperature gradient resulting from the non-uniformity of the laser spot intensity distribution.