If you have struggled with persistent low mood, lack of motivation, and the chronic sense of not living up to your potential, you may be wondering whether depression, ADHD, or both are at play. These conditions frequently co-occur and are often mistaken for one another.
An ADHD assessment can help bring much-needed clarity.
Our clinicians offer flexible assessment options to suit your schedule and preferences.
Depressive disorders and ADHD are separate conditions, but they co-occur at a striking rate. Research shows that the prevalence of depression among people with ADHD ranges from 18% to over 53%, far higher than in the general population.¹ Adults with ADHD are significantly more likely to experience major depressive disorder than those without ADHD, and having both conditions is associated with greater severity and poorer treatment outcomes than having either alone.²
Where ADHD involves persistent difficulties with attention and impulse regulation, depression is characterised by low mood, loss of interest, and a slowing of energy and motivation. Their outward signs overlap considerably, which is why one frequently masks the other. Many people spend years being treated only for depression when ADHD is also present, or vice versa. Understanding both is essential for effective support.
The term depression covers a family of distinct conditions. This page focuses on the two most closely linked to ADHD:
1. Major Depressive Disorder: Episodic, significant depression lasting at least two weeks, covered in detail on this page.
2. Persistent Depressive Disorder: Lower-level but chronic depression lasting two or more years, covered in detail on this page.
For other depressive conditions, please refer to:
Symptoms vary by age, gender, and which type of depressive disorder is present. While depression primarily affects mood, energy, and motivation, ADHD affects attention, impulse control, and activity regulation.
Note: Every person’s experience of depression 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.
In children:
In adults:
In children:
In adults:
Difficulties with concentration, motivation, and daily functioning can arise from depressive disorders, ADHD, or a combination of both.
A depressive disorder is a mood condition characterised by persistent low mood, loss of interest or pleasure, and changes in energy, sleep, and thinking. Major Depressive Disorder involves distinct episodes of significant depression. Persistent Depressive Disorder involves a chronic, lower-level depressive state lasting at least two years. Both are recognised medical conditions that respond well to the right treatment and are not a sign of weakness or personal failure.
In the UK, healthcare professionals tend to use the term DCD, while many individuals and families prefer dyspraxia. Both refer to the same condition.
ADHD is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting attention, activity levels, and impulse control. It begins in childhood and frequently continues into adulthood. Its difficulties are persistent and consistent across all moods and all settings. ADHD does not cause low mood directly, but the chronic frustration, underachievement, and social difficulties that often come with unmanaged ADHD create real vulnerability to depression over time.³
Seeing overlap in both columns? Many people are treated for depression for years without anyone exploring whether ADHD is also present. An ADHD assessment is a structured step toward understanding the full picture.
Both conditions can significantly impair daily functioning, work, and relationships. When they co-occur, the combined impact is typically greater than either condition alone. People with both ADHD and depression tend to experience more severe depressive episodes, earlier onset, greater resistance to antidepressants, and a higher risk of hospitalisation.²
The crucial distinction lies in what is persistent and what is episodic. ADHD difficulties are consistent, present across all moods, and traceable back to childhood. Depression comes and goes in episodes or, in the case of persistent depressive disorder, settles as a chronic low-level state. A person with ADHD may have concentration difficulties that improve between depressive episodes but never fully resolve, because the ADHD is always there regardless of mood.
There is also a directional relationship worth understanding. Research shows that ADHD significantly increases the risk of developing depression, with one study reporting a more than six-fold increased risk of MDD in the first year following an ADHD diagnosis.³ This is why identifying and treating ADHD is not only valuable in itself, but also protective against the depression that so commonly follows unmanaged ADHD. A professional assessment is the clearest path toward understanding both.