Understanding AuDHD: When Autism and ADHD Overlap
AuDHD is the commonly used term for having both autism and ADHD. The overlap is far more common than most people realize, research estimates suggest somewhere between 20 to 60 percent of autistic people also meet criteria for ADHD, depending on the study and population.
Why this combination can be tricky to recognize
Autism and ADHD can pull in different directions in the same person. Autism is often associated with a strong preference for routine and predictability; ADHD is often associated with difficulty maintaining routines and seeking novelty. A person with both may experience these traits as constantly working against each other, craving structure while simultaneously struggling to maintain it, which can be confusing both to the person experiencing it and to professionals trying to assess it using criteria built for one condition at a time.
Because the two conditions share some surface-level traits, like difficulty with social timing or appearing not to listen, it is easy for an evaluator focused on only one condition to miss the other entirely.
What AuDHD can look like in practice
- Intense focus on specific interests (common in autism) alongside difficulty sustaining attention on less-preferred tasks (common in ADHD)
- A strong need for routine, paired with genuine difficulty following through on that same routine consistently
- Sensory sensitivities combined with sensory-seeking behavior, sometimes both, depending on the sense involved or the day
- Social communication differences layered with impulsivity, which can make social situations feel doubly difficult to navigate
- Executive function challenges that show up differently depending on which traits are more dominant in a given moment
Getting evaluated for both
If you suspect both conditions may be part of the picture, whether for yourself or your child, it is worth asking directly whether an evaluator assesses for both together rather than only the condition you originally suspected. A comprehensive evaluation that considers both from the start tends to produce a more accurate and complete picture than two separate, unconnected evaluations.
Why an accurate picture matters for support
Support strategies designed for autism alone, or ADHD alone, do not always translate directly to someone with both. For example, a rigid visual schedule (a common autism support) might clash with executive function challenges that make sticking to any fixed schedule difficult (a common ADHD experience). Effective support for AuDHD often means building in real flexibility around structure, rather than choosing one approach and expecting it to cover everything.
This combination is not “double the difficulty”
While AuDHD can mean navigating competing needs, many AuDHD individuals also describe real strengths in the combination: intense creativity paired with the persistence to follow through, or strong pattern recognition paired with the energy to act on it quickly. The goal of understanding AuDHD is building support around the whole, specific person, not assuming either label fully explains them on its own.
Key words to know
AuDHD: Common shorthand for the co-occurrence of autism spectrum disorder and ADHD in the same person.
Executive function: The mental skills involved in planning, organizing, starting tasks, and managing time, which can be affected differently by autism and ADHD.
Comorbid / co-occurring: Clinical terms for two conditions present in the same person at the same time.