This is one of the questions I get asked most often — by clients, by parents, and frankly, by other clinicians. ADHD and anxiety can look almost identical on the surface, and they co-occur so frequently that trying to separate them can feel like trying to untangle a knot without knowing where one thread ends and another begins.
But the distinction matters enormously. Treating anxiety when the underlying driver is undiagnosed ADHD rarely leads to lasting change. And treating ADHD when anxiety is actually running the picture can miss the most important piece entirely. Getting the diagnosis right is not a formality — it determines the entire direction of treatment.
Where They Look the Same
Both ADHD and anxiety can cause difficulty concentrating, restlessness, avoidance of challenging tasks, sleep disturbances, and irritability. Both can produce what looks like procrastination. Both can make someone appear distracted, disengaged, or unreliable. If you read a symptom list for either condition in isolation, you might find yourself nodding along — which is exactly what makes the differential so difficult, and why a symptom checklist alone is never enough.
Where They Come Apart
The most important clinical distinction is not the behavior — it’s the source of the behavior. Here’s how that plays out across the three areas of greatest overlap:
| ADHD | Anxiety | |
| Concentration difficulty | Pervasive — present even in low-stress situations, even for tasks the person wants to do | Triggered — worsens when worry is activated; often much better in calm, low-stakes environments |
| Avoidance | Driven by boredom, overwhelm, or difficulty initiating — even when outcome is genuinely desired | Driven by fear — of failure, embarrassment, or judgment — even when the person is capable |
| Developmental onset | Symptoms present before age 12, often since childhood, regardless of life circumstances | Can emerge at any life stage in response to stressors; may have no childhood history at all |
Attention and concentration
In ADHD, difficulty concentrating is pervasive — it shows up even in environments with no obvious pressure, for tasks the person genuinely wants to complete. In anxiety, concentration problems are state-dependent: they worsen when worry is activated and often improve significantly in calm, structured, low-stakes situations. A person with anxiety may concentrate quite well when they are not anxious.
The driver behind avoidance
When someone with anxiety avoids a task, the internal experience is usually fear — of failure, criticism, or not being good enough. When someone with ADHD avoids a task, the internal experience is more often boredom, a genuine inability to initiate, or overwhelm at the scale of what’s required — even when they want the outcome and are entirely capable of achieving it. The behavior looks identical from the outside. The internal experience is completely different, and treatment needs to target the right one.
The developmental history
ADHD is a neurodevelopmental condition — by definition, it requires that symptoms were present before age 12. When I take a developmental history with an adult client, I’m specifically looking for childhood evidence: school reports, parent memories, how the person described themselves as a student. Anxiety disorders, by contrast, can emerge at any point in life in response to circumstances. That retrospective history — whether childhood symptoms are present or not — is often the clearest clinical signal separating the two.
When Both Are Present — Which Is Common
Comorbid ADHD and anxiety is not the exception — it may be closer to the rule. Research consistently suggests that close to 50% of adults with ADHD also meet criteria for an anxiety disorder. When both are present, treating only one typically produces partial results at best. The ADHD feeds the anxiety — missed deadlines, social missteps, chronic underperformance — and the anxiety in turn makes the ADHD harder to manage. You need a treatment plan that addresses both, which requires an assessment that has correctly identified both.
“I had been in therapy for anxiety for three years and made real progress — but something was still off. It wasn’t until my ADHD was identified that the remaining pieces started making sense.” — A common experience among adults assessed at McDowall Health
Why a Questionnaire Cannot Answer This Question
The problem with online ADHD and anxiety quizzes is not just their clinical limitation — it’s that they measure symptoms, not sources. A checklist can tell you whether you experience concentration difficulties. It cannot tell you whether that difficulty is pervasive or triggered, present since childhood or emerged with life pressure. And for adhd vs anxiety diagnostic purposes, that distinction is everything.
A thorough psychological assessment integrates a clinical interview, developmental history, cognitive testing, and validated measures across multiple informants and contexts. That process is specifically designed to answer questions that no self-report tool can.
To understand what the full assessment process looks like: Do You Actually Have ADHD? What a Real Assessment Looks Like
If you’ve been wondering whether your experience is ADHD, anxiety, or both — and whether gender plays a role in why it’s been hard to identify: Undiagnosed ADHD in Women: Why It Gets Missed for Decades
What Happens Once You Have Clarity
Most people who receive a clear differential diagnosis — whether that’s ADHD, anxiety, or both — describe the experience as profoundly relieving. Not because the diagnosis itself is welcome news, but because it replaces years of vague uncertainty with a framework that actually fits. Treatment becomes more targeted, more efficient, and more likely to produce the changes that years of less-directed effort couldn’t achieve.
If you’re also wondering how ADHD presentation type affects the picture: Not All ADHD Looks the Same: Understanding Your Presentation
Ready to get clarity? McDowall Integrative Psychology & Healthcare offers ADHD assessments for adults and children in Toronto, Mississauga, and Brampton — and virtually across Ontario. If anxiety is part of the picture, our anxiety therapy services can be integrated into your care plan. Call (416) 485-5555 or book online to get started.
Related reading:
- Do You Actually Have ADHD? What a Real Assessment Looks Like
- Undiagnosed ADHD in Women: Why It Gets Missed for Decades
- Not All ADHD Looks the Same: Understanding Your Presentation
- Anxiety Therapy at McDowall Health
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you have ADHD and anxiety at the same time?
Yes — and it’s more common than most people expect. Research suggests that close to half of adults with ADHD also have a diagnosable anxiety disorder. The two conditions interact: ADHD-related difficulties often generate anxiety, and anxiety can in turn make ADHD harder to manage. When both are present, a comprehensive assessment identifies both, and treatment is planned accordingly.
How does a psychologist clinically tell ADHD and anxiety apart?
The primary tools are a detailed developmental history, a structured clinical interview, cognitive testing (which can reveal the type and consistency of attention difficulties), and validated rating scales completed across multiple informants — including collateral report from a parent, partner, or teacher where relevant. The combination of these sources gives a picture that no single questionnaire can provide.
Can anxiety look like ADHD in children?
Yes. Children with anxiety who are avoidant, restless, or inattentive in the classroom are sometimes referred for ADHD assessment when anxiety is actually the primary driver. A careful evaluation looks at context — whether concentration difficulties are consistent across settings or appear only in specific high-pressure situations — which is one of the key signals in distinguishing the two.
Does treatment differ for ADHD vs anxiety?
Significantly. ADHD is typically addressed through a combination of stimulant or non-stimulant medication (managed by a physician or psychiatrist), executive functioning coaching, and ADHD-specific psychotherapy. Anxiety responds best to evidence-based approaches like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). When both are present, treatment is sequenced and integrated — the order and emphasis depending on which condition is more impairing at the time.







