Think you might have ADHD?

… if so, you deserve some answers.

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Adult ADHD Evaluations for Adults

Many adults come to ADHD testing after years of feeling overwhelmed, scattered, exhausted, or chronically behind—despite being capable, intelligent, and trying very hard.

If you’ve wondered whether ADHD explains your struggles with attention, organization, time, emotions, or follow-through, an adult ADHD assessment can help bring clarity and relief. Not by labeling you—but by helping you understand how your brain works.

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ADHD in adults often looks like:

  • Difficulty starting or finishing tasks, even ones you care about

  • Feeling mentally busy, distracted, or “always on”

  • Chronic overwhelm, anxiety, or burnout

  • Trouble with time, organization, or prioritizing

  • Emotional intensity, sensitivity, or reactivity

  • A long history of being told you’re “too much,” “lazy,” or not living up to your potential

For many adults—especially women and late-diagnosed individuals—ADHD was missed earlier in life due to masking, compensating, or being misattributed to anxiety or depression.

A Thoughtful, Adult-Centered Process

This ADHD assessment is designed specifically for adults—not adapted from child models.

The process focuses on your lifelong patterns, lived experience, and how ADHD shows up in real life, not just on checklists. We take into account masking, coping strategies, and the ways you’ve learned to get by.

An ADHD assessment may be appropriate if:

  • You strongly suspect ADHD

  • You want diagnostic clarity

  • You’re seeking accommodations, documentation, or self-understanding

  • You’re trying to untangle ADHD from anxiety, depression, or burnout

If ADHD alone does not fully explain your experience, we will discuss next steps thoughtfully and collaboratively.

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This evaluation is:

  • Neurodivergence-affirming

  • Strengths-based

  • Collaborative

  • Grounded in clinical experience with neurodivergent adults

What This Is — and What It Isn’t

It is not:

  • A one-size-fits-all test

  • Focused on “proving” anything

  • About fixing or pathologizing who you are

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Not Sure If ADHD Is the Whole Picture?

Next Steps

Understanding your brain can be a powerful first step toward self-compassion, clarity, and meaningful support. Click here to see your evaluation options.

Some adults find that ADHD explains much of their experience—but not all of it. If autism or a combined ADHD/autism (AuDHD) profile may be relevant, that can be explored and discussed.

If you’re unsure which assessment fits best, we’ll help you determine the most appropriate path.

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