How Do Adults Get Tested for ADHD?
Adult ADHD is one of the most under-diagnosed conditions in mental health, especially for women and for adults who learned to compensate well in school. A proper evaluation can be life-changing — not because of the label, but because of the clarity it brings and the doors it opens to effective treatment.
ADHD testing for adults is typically done by a licensed psychologist. It's more involved than a 15-minute checklist at a primary care visit, and intentionally so — adult attention problems can be caused or amplified by anxiety, depression, trauma, sleep disorders, or thyroid issues. A thorough evaluation rules those in or out.
Most evaluations include three things: a detailed clinical interview that covers your developmental history, school experience, work patterns, and current functioning; standardized self-report rating scales (and often a scale completed by someone who knows you well); and performance-based cognitive testing that measures attention, working memory, and processing speed. Some evaluations add screening for mood, anxiety, or learning differences depending on what shows up.
Plan on roughly 4 to 8 hours of testing, usually split across one or two appointments, plus a feedback session where the psychologist walks you through what they found. You leave with a written report that includes diagnostic impressions, specific recommendations, and — when appropriate — documentation that can be used for accommodations at work, school, or on standardized exams.
If you've been wondering whether what you're dealing with is ADHD, anxiety, both, or something else, a full evaluation is usually the fastest way to a clear answer and a workable plan. We're happy to talk you through what testing would look like in your situation.