Tourette Syndrome, Tic Disorders, and ADHD
If your child has involuntary movements or sounds alongside restlessness, impulsivity, and difficulty focusing, you may be dealing with a tic disorder, ADHD, or both. These conditions share a neurological foundation and co-occur in the majority of those with Tourette Syndrome.
Understanding what is driving which difficulty is the clearest path to the right support.
Get clarity now:
- Takes 2 minutes
- Not a diagnosis
- Helps you decide whether to speak to a clinician
ADHD Assessment
Our clinicians offer flexible assessment options to suit your schedule and preferences.
Tourette Syndrome, Tic Disorders, and ADHD
If your child has involuntary movements or sounds alongside restlessness, impulsivity, and difficulty focusing, you may be dealing with a tic disorder, ADHD, or both. These conditions share a neurological foundation and co-occur in the majority of those with Tourette Syndrome.
Understanding what is driving which difficulty is the clearest path to the right support.
Get clarity now:
- Takes 2 minutes
- Not a diagnosis
- Helps you decide whether to speak to a clinician
ADHD Assessment
Our clinicians offer flexible assessment options to suit your schedule and preferences.
Is There a Link Between Tic Disorders and ADHD?
Tic disorders and ADHD are among the most closely linked neurodevelopmental conditions. ADHD is the single most common co-occurring condition across the entire tic disorder spectrum.
In Tourette Syndrome specifically, research estimates that between 35% and 90% of children also have ADHD.¹ Both conditions involve differences in the brain’s dopamine systems and share overlapping neural circuits, which explains why they appear together so frequently rather than by chance.
What makes this co-occurrence clinically important is the asymmetry in impact. Research consistently shows that in children with both conditions, ADHD, not tic severity, is the stronger predictor of academic difficulty, social impairment, and behavioural challenges.¹ Identifying ADHD in a child with tics is therefore one of the most practically significant steps available for improving their everyday outcomes.
The Tic Disorder Spectrum
Tic disorders exist on a spectrum defined by the type of tics present and how long they have lasted. Tourette Syndrome is the most clinically complex and most frequently associated with ADHD, but all tic disorders can co-occur with ADHD and deserve assessment.
Tourette Syndrome
Both motor and vocal tics present for more than one year, beginning before age 18. The most studied in relation to ADHD, with the strongest and most well-documented comorbidity data.
Persistent Motor or Vocal Tic Disorder
Motor or vocal tics (but not both together) present for more than one year. Shares the same ADHD co-occurrence pattern as Tourette Syndrome.
Provisional Tic Disorder
Tics of any type present for less than twelve months. The most common form in childhood. Often resolves on its own, but should still be assessed in the context of ADHD where relevant difficulties are present.
Tic Disorders and ADHD Symptoms
Symptoms vary by tic disorder type and individual profile. Tic severity in Tourette Syndrome tends to wax and wane across weeks and months, while ADHD presents more consistently across all settings and all moods.
Note: Every person’s experience of tic disorders 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.
What Are Common Tic Disorder Symptoms?
A tic is a sudden, rapid, repetitive, non-rhythmic movement or vocalisation. Tics are involuntary in the sense that they cannot be indefinitely controlled. This is often described as similar to the feeling before a sneeze: buildable pressure that eventually needs release.
1. Simple motor tic: Eye blinking, facial grimacing, head jerking, shoulder shrugging, mouth opening.
2. Complex motor tics: Coordinated sequences of movements such as touching objects, jumping, or more elaborate gestures.
3. Simple vocal tics: Throat clearing, sniffing, coughing, snorting, barking.
4. Complex vocal tics: Repeating words or phrases, repeating sounds heard from others. In a small minority of Tourette Syndrome cases, involuntary use of obscene words (coprolalia), which is far less common than popular depictions suggest and affects fewer than 15% of those with Tourette Syndrome.²
Important features to understand:
- Tics typically begin between ages 5 and 7 and peak around ages 10 to 12.
- For many people, tic severity reduces significantly through adolescence.
- Stress, excitement, fatigue, and illness tend to worsen tics temporarily.
- Tics can be suppressed for short periods, but doing so requires effort and builds pressure.
What Are Common ADHD Symptoms?
In children:
- Often fidgety or unable to stay seated for expected periods.
- Easily distracted by background noise, movement, or thoughts.
- Frequently forgets or loses track of instructions and belongings.
- Rushes through tasks, leading to careless errors.
- Blurts out answers or struggles to wait their turn.
In adults:
- Persistent difficulty with organisation, planning, and meeting deadlines.
- Frequently losing items like keys, phones, or documents.
- Making impulsive decisions without fully considering consequences.
- Feeling internally restless even when sitting still.
- Trouble sustaining focus during long tasks or conversations.
How to Know If It Is a Tic Disorder, ADHD, or Both
Restlessness, impulsivity, and difficulty focusing can arise from tic disorders, ADHD, or a combination of both.
Tourette Syndrome
Tourette Syndrome is a neurodevelopmental condition characterised by multiple motor tics and at least one vocal tic, present for more than one year, beginning before age 18. Tics are not deliberate behaviour, though they are sometimes misread as such. Most people with Tourette Syndrome do not have coprolalia. Tic severity often reduces with age, and many adults experience minimal daily impairment from tics alone. The greatest functional difficulty in Tourette Syndrome typically comes not from the tics themselves but from co-occurring conditions, particularly ADHD.¹
ADHD
ADHD is a neurodevelopmental condition affecting attention, activity levels, and impulse control. It begins in childhood and frequently continues into adulthood. ADHD typically involves three core areas: inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity. It does not reflect a person’s intelligence or character, and it responds well to appropriate support and treatment. In children with tic disorders, ADHD often predates the tics by several years.
Seeing overlap in both columns? In children with tic disorders, ADHD is often more impairing than the tics themselves. An ADHD assessment is a practical and important first step toward the right support.
Tic Disorders and ADHD: Understanding the Overlap
Both conditions involve differences in the brain's dopamine systems and the cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical circuit, which governs movement, attention, and impulse control. This shared neurobiological ground explains both the high co-occurrence rate and the fact that some treatments address both conditions simultaneously.
A key clinical insight from the research is that ADHD, not tic severity, is consistently the stronger predictor of functional impairment in children with Tourette Syndrome.¹ Children with both conditions have more academic difficulty, more psychosocial stress, and poorer global outcomes than those with tic disorders alone. Identifying and treating ADHD is therefore not a secondary concern; it is often the most important clinical step available.
One concern that historically influenced clinical decisions was whether stimulant medication for ADHD might worsen tics. Current evidence does not support this for most individuals. Multiple randomised controlled trials have found that stimulants at appropriate doses do not significantly worsen tic severity in the majority of children with both conditions.³ Alpha-2 agonists such as clonidine and guanfacine are often considered first because they address both tics and ADHD simultaneously, offering a useful starting point when both conditions are present. A thorough ADHD assessment is the right starting point for any family navigating this picture.