My ASRS Screener report
Many adults have been living with Adult Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (Adult ADHD) and don't recognize it. Why? Because its symptoms are often mistaken for a stressful life. If you've felt this type of frustration most of your life, you may have Adult ADHD – a condition your doctor can help diagnose and treat.
The following questionnaire can be used as a starting point to help you recognize the signs/symptoms of Adult ADHD but is not meant to replace consultation with a trained healthcare professional. An accurate diagnosis can only be made through a clinical evaluation. Regardless of the questionnaire results, if you have concerns about diagnosis and treatment of Adult ADHD, please discuss your concerns with your physician.
This Adult Self-Report Scale-V1.1 (ASRS-V1.1) Screener is intended for people aged 18 years or older.
Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale v1.1, 6-Question Screener · Last taken 2026052722 · Retake
Your screening result
5 of 6 of your answers fell in the screening range, the official instrument's darkly shaded area.
This is a positive screen. Four or more is the screening threshold.
Add the number of checkmarks that appear in the darkly shaded area. Four (4) or more checkmarks indicate that your symptoms may be consistent with Adult ADHD. It may be beneficial for you to talk with your healthcare provider about an evaluation.
This is a screening questionnaire, not a diagnosis. An accurate diagnosis can only be made through a clinical evaluation.
Your responses
The owner of this report has not shared the raw item responses publicly. Summary scores, cutoffs, and subscale interpretation are visible above; the per-item breakdown and full response table are hidden.
About this screener
The Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale v1.1 (ASRS-v1.1) was developed by the World Health Organization in conjunction with the Workgroup on Adult ADHD. The 6-Question Screener used here is the subset of the 18-question ASRS-v1.1 Symptom Checklist found most predictive of ADHD. It is reproduced verbatim under licence; it is administered and scored exactly as published.
Reference: Kessler RC et al. The World Health Organization Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale (ASRS): a short screening scale for use in the general population. Psychol Med. 2005;35(2):245-256. PMID 15841682. Background on the instrument: Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale.
The 6-question Adult Self-Report Scale-Version1.1 (ASRS-V1.1) Screener is a subset of the 18-question Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale-Version1.1 (Adult ASRS-V1.1) Symptom Checklist. © New York University and President and Fellows of Harvard College. All rights reserved