← Blog · 2026-04-22 · 7 min read · BrainSnack Team

Adult ADHD test: 18 questions to self-assess (scientifically validated)

Adult ADHD test: 18 questions to self-assess (scientifically validated)

Key takeaway: A self-test doesn't replace medical diagnosis, but it can guide you in 5 minutes. If 4+ Part A questions match you, see a specialist.

You read an ADHD article and recognized yourself. A lot. Too much? Before booking a 6-month-wait psych appointment, here's the ASRS-v1.1, the official WHO and Harvard self-test. 5 minutes. Valuable indication.

What is ASRS-v1.1?

The Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale is a validated questionnaire developed by WHO and Prof. Ronald Kessler (Harvard). Used in 80+ countries as initial screening tool.

It has 18 questions split in two parts: part A (6 most predictive questions) and part B (12 complementary questions).

For each question, you answer: Never / Rarely / Sometimes / Often / Very often. For part A, from 4 « Often » or « Very often » answers, ADHD risk is statistically high.

Part A — The 6 key questions

Answer thinking about the last 6 months:

Part B — The 12 complementary questions

How to interpret your results

Part A: if you have 4+ answers in the shaded zones (Often/Very Often for questions 1-3 and 4-6, Sometimes/Often/Very Often for others), there's a strong presumption of ADHD.

Part B: doesn't diagnose but enriches medical evaluation.

Important: a positive score doesn't make a diagnosis. It indicates a thorough professional evaluation is warranted.

What's next after the self-test?

If you scored high:

If your score is low but you still recognize yourself: keep digging. Standardized questionnaires mostly capture classic male ADHD. If you're a woman, an inattentive profile or a heavy masker, the score can mislead.

The limits of self-tests

ASRS, like all self-tests, has limits:

It's a starting point, not a conclusion. But a scientifically validated starting point.

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Frequently asked questions

Where to take the official ASRS online? The test is freely available on the Harvard Medical School site and several ADHD associations (CHADD in the US, ADHD Foundation UK). Avoid paid apps charging for the same content.

If I don't score positive, does it mean I don't have ADHD? Not necessarily. ASRS has about 70% sensitivity. This means 3 in 10 ADHD people score below threshold. If you recognize yourself despite a low score, consult anyway.

How much does an official diagnosis cost? Varies by country. France: €60-150 per session, 2-4 sessions, partially reimbursed. US/Canada: $800-3000.

Can ADHD be mild? Yes. Presentations range from subtle to disabling. Mild ADHD that doesn't significantly impair life doesn't necessarily require treatment, but understanding your wiring is still useful.

Does using BrainSnack count as a test? No, BrainSnack isn't a diagnostic tool. It's a daily action tool for brains that love micro-actions — ADHD or not. If in doubt, take ASRS and consult.