Do you struggle to follow conversations, mishear instructions, or zone out, despite normal hearing? ADHD and auditory processing disorder (APD) share many symptoms and often co-occur.
A structured assessment can tell you which condition is driving your difficulties, or whether it’s both, get clarity now:
Our clinicians offer flexible assessment options to suit your schedule and preferences.
While ADHD and APD are separate conditions, they frequently co-occur and share several outward behaviours. Both can cause a person to appear as if they are ‘zoning out’ or ‘not listening’, which is why they are often mistaken for one another. However, while ADHD affects attention and impulse control more broadly, APD specifically impacts how the brain interprets sounds and speech, particularly in noisy environments.
50% of children with APD show significant ADHD symptoms² Up to 70% of children with ADHD show auditory processing difficulties¹
Understanding whether a struggle is rooted in a lack of focus or a processing delay is essential for getting the right support.
Symptoms vary by age and environment. While auditory processing disorder symptoms involve how the brain interprets sound rather than hearing loss, ADHD affects attention, organisation, and impulsivity more broadly.
Note: Every person’s experience of APD and ADHD is different. The patterns below are intended to help you recognise and name what you might be going through, not to replace a professional assessment.
The primary signs of auditory processing disorder in children and adults involve difficulty making sense of what is heard, even if a standard hearing test shows normal results. This struggle is most intense in noisy environments or when instructions are complex and multi-layered.
In children:
In adults:
Living with ADHD often feels like your brain is jumping between several channels at once, making it difficult to regulate focus or physical energy. ADHD symptoms in children often manifest as visible restlessness, while ADHD symptoms in adults tend to appear as internalised struggles with time and planning.
In children:
In adults:
Difficulties with listening can arise from ADHD, APD, or a combination of both.
Auditory Processing Disorder is a difficulty with how the brain interprets sound. Even with “normal” hearing, it makes following speech in noisy environments or complex instructions a major challenge.
It is a neuro developmental condition affecting attention, activity, and impulse control. It can manifest as physical restlessness in children or chronic organisational struggles in adults.
Recognise yourself in both columns? If you’re seeing symptoms of both APD and ADHD, the only way to know for certain is a structured assessment. Our clinicians look at the full picture — not just one condition in isolation.
Both conditions can look like 'not listening' or missing details during conversations, especially in noisy group settings. Because of these shared symptoms, ADHD and auditory processing disorder are often confused and mislabelled as a lack of effort or laziness.
The core difference lies in why the information is missed. ADHD affects broad attention and focus regulation across all senses. In contrast, APD is specifically about how the brain handles sound; it is a difficulty with accessing the auditory signal correctly rather than a lack of motivation.
It is possible to have ADHD and auditory processing disorder at the same time. Because symptoms are so intertwined, a specialist assessment, including cognitive screening and listening tests, is the only way to tease them apart and target the root cause.