If reading has always felt harder than it should, or your child struggles to get words off the page despite clearly being bright, dyslexia and ADHD are two of the most common explanations, and they frequently occur together.
A structured ADHD assessment can help clarify what is driving the difficulties. Get clarity now:
Our clinicians offer flexible assessment options to suit your schedule and preferences.
If your child is working hard but still falling behind, or if you have always found learning and staying focused harder than it seems to be for others, you are not alone.
ADHD and Intellectual Disability (a.k.a. learning disability in the UK) share several symptoms, which means ADHD is frequently missed in people who already have an Intellectual Disability diagnosis.
A structured ADHD assessment can help clarify what is driving the difficulties, get clarity now:
Our clinicians offer flexible assessment options to suit your schedule and preferences.
Dyslexia and ADHD co-occur at striking rates. Research estimates that between 25% and 40% of people with ADHD also have dyslexia, and conversely, children with dyslexia are significantly more likely to meet criteria for ADHD than those without.¹ Both are neurodevelopmental conditions, present from childhood, and both affect how the brain processes and organises information, though in different ways.
The overlap is not coincidental. Researchers have identified shared genetic factors between dyslexia and ADHD, and neuroimaging studies point to overlapping differences in frontal and parietal brain regions involved in attention and reading.² When both are present, difficulties in the classroom can be significantly compounded, and one condition is frequently missed because the other draws the clinical attention first.
The DSM-5 groups specific learning disorders into three domains. Each has its own presentation and its own relationship with ADHD. This page covers the full picture, with Dyslexia briefly signposted here as it has a dedicated page.
The most common SLD. Affects reading accuracy, fluency, and spelling.
Between 25–40% of people with ADHD also have dyslexia.
Both conditions impair working memory and processing speed, which is why they are so frequently found together.
A specific difficulty with number sense, arithmetic, and mathematical reasoning; not explained by low intelligence or poor teaching.
Significantly more common in children with ADHD than in the general population.
A specific difficulty with the physical act of writing and with translating thoughts into written language.
Closely connected to ADHD because both conditions impair the fine motor control, working memory, and executive planning that writing requires.
Symptoms vary by age and setting. Dyslexia affects how the brain processes written language, while ADHD affects attention, activity, and impulse control across all areas of life.
Note: Every person’s experience of dyslexia and ADHD is different. The patterns below are meant to help you recognise and name what you or your child may be going through, not to replace a professional assessment.
Dyslexia is a specific learning difficulty that primarily affects reading, spelling, and writing fluency. It is not related to intelligence and it does not go away with effort or practice alone.
In children:
In adults:
ADHD affects the regulation of attention, activity, and impulse control in a consistent way across all settings and moods.
In children:
In adults:
Difficulties with reading, written work, and classroom performance can arise from dyslexia, ADHD, or a combination of both.
Dyslexia is a specific learning difficulty affecting the accuracy and fluency of reading and spelling. It arises from differences in how the brain processes phonological information, the sounds that make up words. It is not caused by poor teaching, low effort, or low intelligence. In fact, many people with dyslexia have strong verbal reasoning, creativity, and problem-solving abilities. Dyslexia is lifelong, but with the right support, its impact on daily functioning can be significantly reduced.
ADHD is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting attention, activity levels, and impulse control. It begins in childhood and frequently continues into adulthood. ADHD does not affect reading directly, but the inattention and distractibility it produces can make reading more effortful and inconsistent, which is why it is often confused with dyslexia, and why both can be missed when only one is identified. A thorough assessment explores both possibilities.
Seeing overlap in both columns? When both conditions are present, a child can struggle enormously in the classroom for reasons that are genuinely neurological, not a lack of effort or ability. An ADHD assessment is a clear first step toward understanding the full picture.
Both dyslexia and ADHD affect how the brain manages information, though at different stages of processing. Dyslexia disrupts phonological decoding, the ability to convert written symbols into sounds. ADHD disrupts the executive systems that regulate sustained attention and working memory. When both are present, every reading task requires the brain to overcome two simultaneous challenges at once.
The overlap matters clinically because one condition can mask the other. A child with significant ADHD may appear to have reading difficulties simply because they cannot sustain attention long enough to read accurately. A child with significant dyslexia may appear inattentive because the effort of reading is so exhausting that they disengage. Without assessing both carefully, the underlying driver remains unclear.
Research consistently finds that children with both dyslexia and ADHD show greater academic underachievement than those with either condition alone.¹ This makes early identification of both conditions one of the most protective things a parent or teacher can do for a child who is struggling.