Header Image
ADHD diagnostics for girls and women

ADHD diagnostics for girls and women

1. Boys diagnosed more frequently

Boys are diagnosed with ADHD much more frequently than girls. The ratio is reported to be between 2:1 and 10:1,1
In adulthood, on the other hand, the diagnosis rate is balanced.2 However, as only new diagnoses are equalized in adulthood, i.e. the over-diagnosis of men in childhood and adolescence persists, overall 2.3 times more men than women are diagnosed with ADHD.

It remains to be seen whether the strong catch-up of women in ADHD diagnosis compared to men in adulthood to the then balanced diagnosis frequency2 is based solely on unrecognized ADHD in childhood and adolescence, or whether there are also cases of late onset ADHD. More on this at Late Onset ADHD: first occurrence in adulthood

2. Externalizing symptoms easier to recognize and more unpleasant

Independent of ADHD, boys show significantly more externalizing disorders (ODD, conduct disorder), while girls show more disorders with internalizing symptoms (depression, anxiety). Even within the ADHD spectrum, boys more frequently show presentation forms (formerly: subtypes) with externalizing symptoms, i.e. ADHD-H or ADHD-C, while girls show ADHD-I more frequently than boys.3
Externalizing symptoms (hyperactivity, impulsivity, aggressiveness) are more stressful for other people than internalizing symptoms and are perceived as more serious.4 However, hyperactivity was rated by parents as lower than it actually was in girls diagnosed with ADHD and higher than it actually was in boys diagnosed with ADHD.1 This could be interpreted as hyperactivity being perceived as more unpleasant in boys than in girls.
Therefore, the environment of boys with ADHD is more likely to seek a diagnosis of the child than the environment of girls with ADHD, or it takes stronger symptoms in girls for parents to seek a diagnosis.5

Motor hyperactivity is a symptom that is also recognizable to people who do not know a person well. Hyperactivity can also be observed from a distance. To detect inattention, you need to be closer. This means that the circle of people who can perceive externalizing symptoms is larger than the circle that can perceive internalizing symptoms.

3. Symptoms in women tend to be underestimated

Relatives of women with ADHD have a higher risk of ADHD than relatives of men with ADHD.5

1.4. Tests for ADHD in childhood assess internalizing symptoms more weakly

In adulthood, the presence of ADHD symptoms in childhood/adolescence must be established.
The WURS (free, 6 - 10 years) or the WURS-K (chargeable, part of the HASE, 8 - 10 years) can be used for this purpose.
At 86%, the WURS-K shows a diagnostic accuracy for ADHD in childhood that is 10% worse than the WURS6

The WURS-K is said to systematically lead to diagnostic problems, as women and girls in particular, as well as men with the predominantly inattentive presentation form ADHD-I, fall minimally below the scores despite otherwise clear ADHD symptoms6
The WR-SB self-report questionnaire is also designed not to recognize the predominantly inattentive ADHD-I presentation form6
Even if the score is only slightly below the required level, the automated evaluation via the Hogrefe test system determines that the ADHD criteria are not met.
The same applies to the widespread Wender-Reimherr interview.6

1.5. Women compensate better for ADHD with social traits

On average, women are more socially oriented than men. Personal interaction with other people is more important to girls than boys. On average, girls and women find it easier to take the other person’s point of view and anticipate the expectations of others. 7 On average, girls and women have stronger pro-social skills.8
This correlates with the “tend and befriend” stress response, which occurs significantly more frequently in women than in men. When under great stress, women seek the closeness of the group more often and assure themselves that they belong to it. More on this under Tend and befriend in the section Self-esteem problems in the article Perceptual symptoms in the chapter Symptoms of ADHD.
This causes women to use greater resources in social interaction with other people so as not to burden others. This leads to coping with their own ADHD symptoms.

1.6. Hormones protect girls

Girls are better protected from mental disorders than boys due to their gender-specific hormonal make-up in childhood.
More on this at Gender differences in ADHD In the chapter on neurological aspects.


  1. Mowlem F, Agnew-Blais J, Taylor E, Asherson P (2019): Do different factors influence whether girls versus boys meet ADHD diagnostic criteria? Sex differences among children with high ADHD symptoms. Psychiatry Res. 2019 Feb;272:765-773. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2018.12.128. PMID: 30832197; PMCID: PMC6401208.

  2. Bachmann CJ, Philipsen A, Hoffmann F (2017): ADHD in Germany: Trends in Diagnosis and Pharmacotherapy. Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2017 Mar 3;114(9):141-148. doi: 10.3238/arztebl.2017.0141. PMID: 28351466; PMCID: PMC5378979.

  3. Arnold LE (1996): Sex differences in ADHD: conference summary. J Abnorm Child Psychol. 1996 Oct;24(5):555-69. doi: 10.1007/BF01670100. PMID: 8956084. REVIEW

  4. Ohan JL, Johnston C (2005): Gender appropriateness of symptom criteria for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, oppositional-defiant disorder, and conduct disorder. Child Psychiatry Hum Dev. 2005 Summer;35(4):359-81. doi: 10.1007/s10578-005-2694-y. PMID: 15886870.

  5. Martin J, Walters RK, Demontis D, Mattheisen M, Lee SH, Robinson E, Brikell I, Ghirardi L, Larsson H, Lichtenstein P, Eriksson N; 23andMe Research Team; Psychiatric Genomics Consortium: ADHD Subgroup; iPSYCH–Broad ADHD Workgroup; Werge T, Mortensen PB, Pedersen MG, Mors O, Nordentoft M, Hougaard DM, Bybjerg-Grauholm J, Wray NR, Franke B, Faraone SV, O’Donovan MC, Thapar A, Børglum AD, Neale BM (2018): A Genetic Investigation of Sex Bias in the Prevalence of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. Biol Psychiatry. 2018 Jun 15;83(12):1044-1053. doi: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2017.11.026. PMID: 29325848; PMCID: PMC5992329.

  6. Semmler: ADHS-Testverfahren im Test. Letzter Aufruf 25.09.24.

  7. Stollhoff K (2022): Eine übersehene ADHS belastet Mädchen ihr Leben lang. Pädiatrie 34, 12–13 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s15014-022-4769-7

  8. Arnold V (2024): AD(H)S im Kindes- und Jugendalter, neue AKZENTE Nr. 128, 2/2024, 5-10

Diese Seite wurde am 11.01.2026 zuletzt aktualisiert.