If you’ve ever had a nagging feeling that something isn’t quite right with your daughter, but nobody seems to be taking it seriously, you’re not imagining it. ADHD symptoms in girls are harder to spot than in boys, and as a result, thousands of girls across the UK are either diagnosed late or missed altogether. This article explains why that happens, what to look for, and what you can do about it.

ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) is a neurodevelopmental condition, meaning it affects how the brain develops and functions. If you’d like a full introduction to the condition, our guide to ADHD in Children covers the foundations in detail.

Why Does ADHD Look Different in Girls?

Most people’s idea of ADHD is a restless, impulsive boy who can’t sit still in class. That image isn’t wrong, but it’s incomplete. It reflects how ADHD was first studied — primarily in boys. This means the diagnostic frameworks that followed were built around male presentations of the condition.

Research consistently shows that girls diagnosed with ADHD display fewer hyperactive and impulsive symptoms and more inattentive symptoms when compared with boys with the same condition. Where a boy with ADHD might be disruptive and impossible to ignore, a girl with ADHD is far more likely to be quietly struggling, daydreaming, forgetting things, feeling overwhelmed, and internalising her difficulties rather than acting them out.

What Are the ADHD Symptoms in Girls That Parents Should Know?

The symptoms of ADHD in girls tend to be quieter, more emotional, and far easier to explain away as personality traits or teenage behaviour.

Inattentive symptoms — the ones most common in girls:

  • Daydreams frequently or zones out, even mid-conversation
  • Forgets things constantly — homework, belongings, what she was just doing
  • Takes much longer than expected to complete tasks due to difficulty sustaining focus
  • Finds it hard to get started, particularly on things she finds boring or difficult
  • Is disorganised despite appearing to try hard

Emotional and social symptoms – often mistaken for something else:

  • Has emotional reactions that feel out of proportion to the situation
  • Worries excessively — anxiety that may be rooted in the daily stress of unmanaged ADHD rather than a separate condition
  • Finds social dynamics confusing or exhausting, often becoming a people-pleaser to fit in
  • Feels like she is “too much” or “not enough” and internalises this as a personal failing

Over time, unaddressed anxiety and low self-esteem can develop as a direct consequence. In some cases this progresses to depression — a persistent low mood that affects day-to-day functioning. These are real and serious conditions, but they are often symptoms of a deeper cause rather than the root problem.

Girls with ADHD Boys with ADHD
Most common presentation Predominantly Inattentive Hyperactive or Combined
Hyperactivity Internal – restlessness felt rather than seen External – fidgeting, running, acting out
Emotional expression Internalised — anxiety, low mood, self-criticism Externalised — frustration, outbursts
Visibility in school Quiet, dreamy, or distracted Disruptive or difficult
Risk of being missed High Lower
  • Most common presentation: girls most often present with Predominantly Inattentive ADHD; boys more commonly present as Hyperactive or Combined

  • Hyperactivity: in girls this is often internal, a restlessness that is felt rather than seen; in boys it tends to be external through fidgeting, running, and acting out
  • Emotional expression: girls tend to internalise, showing anxiety, low mood, and self-criticism; boys tend to externalise through frustration and outbursts
  • Visibility in school: girls are more often described as quiet, dreamy, or distracted; boys are more often flagged as disruptive or difficult

  • Risk of being missed: high for girls, lower for boys

What Is Masking and Why Does It Make Things Worse?

Masking is the term used to describe hiding or suppressing ADHD symptoms to appear more “typical” in social or academic settings. Girls don’t choose to do it deliberately — they learn from an early age that certain behaviours attract criticism, and they adapt.

From a young age, girls are often socialised to be polite, helpful, and emotionally controlled, which can encourage them to hide behaviours that might be labelled as disruptive, dramatic, or inappropriate. A girl with ADHD might sit perfectly still in class while her mind is racing, or spend enormous energy keeping up with peers, then collapse at home when nobody is watching.

Some research has suggested that in school settings, females camouflage ADHD symptoms more, making signs easier to miss, and that hidden ADHD symptoms in females often lead to a referral bias in favour of males, which means males are diagnosed more often.

Masking works on the surface. Teachers see a well-behaved, conscientious girl. What nobody sees is the cost. Over time it can take a toll.

What Happens When ADHD Symptoms in Girls Go Undiagnosed?

When a girl spends years working twice as hard just to keep up, without ever understanding why, the impact compounds.

Adolescent girls with ADHD are at higher risk for mental health problems than boys with the same diagnosis and neurotypical girls, and camouflaging scores strongly predicted anxiety and depression symptoms.

Signs that undiagnosed ADHD may be affecting your daughter:

  • Persistent anxiety with no clear cause
  • Low self-esteem or a strong sense of being “different”
  • Withdrawal from friends or activities she used to enjoy
  • Emotional burnout, particularly after school or social events
  • Described by teachers as “not working to her potential” despite clearly trying

Research found that girls were older at their first visit to specialist services and at the point of ADHD diagnosis compared to boys, and had more often been prescribed non-ADHD medication before a diagnosis was made. Girls are frequently treated for anxiety or low mood before anyone considers ADHD as the underlying cause.

How Is ADHD Diagnosed in Girls, and Is It Any Different?

The diagnostic process follows the same framework for girls as for boys. In the UK, diagnosis is guided by NICE (the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence), the independent body that sets clinical standards for healthcare in England and Wales. Qualified healthcare professionals, including specialist psychiatrists and paediatricians, use either the DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition) or the ICD-11 (the equivalent framework from the World Health Organization) as their criteria.

The challenge is not the framework but how symptoms are reported and perceived. Girls with ADHD may not be identified with rating-scale measures which are more subject to sex-biased perceptions of behaviour, and emotional problems should not be used to rule out an ADHD diagnosis.

Being specific about what you observe at home makes a real difference. Before a GP appointment or assessment, it helps to document:

  • 1

    Specific examples of inattention: moments where focus or follow-through broke down

  • 2

    Emotional patterns: triggers, how long reactions last, how she recovers

  • 3

    School feedback: what teachers have said, in their words

  • 4

    Social difficulties: friendship struggles, social exhaustion, people-pleasing

  • 5
    How long these patterns have been present: symptoms need to be consistent over at least six months, across more than one setting

What Are the Options If You’re Struggling to Get a Diagnosis?

The NHS route runs through your GP (General Practitioner, your family doctor), who refers to CAMHS (Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services), the NHS service responsible for children’s mental health and neurodevelopmental assessments. As covered in our guide to ADHD in children, waiting times are significant, with most children waiting over a year.

If you need answers sooner, a private assessment is an option many families are taking. KPI:Access is a healthcare connector service that links families with qualified specialists who carry out ADHD assessments for children in London and Croydon. No GP referral is needed, and appointments can often be arranged within days. Specialists work to the same standards set by NICE and the Royal College of Psychiatrists, the professional body that sets standards for psychiatric care in the UK.

KPI:Access is part of KPI:Health, a wider healthcare group that has connected over 300,000 people with assessments and treatments across the UK, with 99.2% rating their experience as good or very good.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Many girls with ADHD manage to perform adequately at school by working significantly harder than their peers or by masking their difficulties. Academic performance alone does not rule out ADHD, particularly the inattentive presentation.

Anxiety and ADHD frequently coexist, and in girls the two are often confused. Anxiety can be a symptom of undiagnosed ADHD rather than a separate condition. A specialist assessment will look at the full picture rather than treating each symptom in isolation.

NICE guidance covers children from age 5 upwards. There is no minimum age for seeking an assessment, and getting one early means earlier access to support at school and at home.

A diagnosis opens the door to several things. The SENCO (Special Educational Needs Coordinator, the staff member in every school responsible for pupils with additional needs) can put practical adjustments in place. An EHCP (Education, Health and Care Plan), a legal document issued by your local council setting out what support your daughter is entitled to from her school, can be applied for if a higher level of support is needed — parents request this directly from their local authority. Treatment may also include parent training programmes, behavioural strategies, and medication where a specialist recommends it. Stimulant medications are the most commonly prescribed option and work by regulating the brain chemicals involved in attention and impulse control.

No. You can get in touch with KPI:Access directly without a GP referral. The process is straightforward from the first point of contact.

If you’re concerned about your daughter and want to explore next steps, our team is here to help. Book an appointment or learn more about ADHD assessments for children through KPI:Access.

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