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ADHD and Phone Addiction: Why You Can’t Just Put It Down

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  3. ADHD and Phone Addiction: Why You Can’t Just Put It Down
three adults using their phone

You know you should put it down. You’ve told yourself a hundred times. But your thumb keeps scrolling, and an hour disappears before you’ve even noticed it starting.

This is one of the most common patterns we see in adults who come to us for ADHD assessments. They arrive talking about procrastination, or feeling like they’re underperforming at work, or relationships that keep running into the same friction. And somewhere in the conversation, the phone comes up. The hours lost to scrolling. The inability to start tasks because “I’ll just check this one thing first.” The shame of knowing it’s a problem and feeling completely unable to change it.

What’s striking is how many of them have already tried the usual advice. Screen time limits. App blockers. Leaving the phone in another room. Grayscale mode. Digital detoxes. None of it stuck.

And they’ve concluded, as people often do, that they must lack discipline. That this is a character flaw.

It isn’t. Not one bit.

Why ADHD and Phone Addiction Go Together

The ADHD brain is not simply a distracted brain. It’s a brain with a fundamentally different relationship to reward, motivation, and impulse control. And smartphones are engineered, quite precisely, to exploit exactly those differences.

The dopamine problem

ADHD involves dysregulated dopamine signalling in the brain’s reward circuitry. There’s typically lower baseline dopamine activity, which creates a constant, often unconscious, search for stimulation. The brain is looking for something that will make it feel engaged, alert, awake.

Smartphones deliver exactly that. Every notification, every new post, every refresh of the feed provides a small, unpredictable hit of dopamine. The unpredictability is key. Variable rewards are far more compelling to the brain than predictable ones. It’s the same principle that makes gambling addictive. You never quite know when the next interesting thing will appear, so you keep checking.

Immediate reward always wins

For someone with ADHD, the phone offers immediate reward with zero effort. The alternative, whatever task you were meant to be doing, offers delayed reward and requires sustained attention that the ADHD brain finds genuinely difficult to produce.

It’s not a fair fight.

The brake that doesn’t engage

The prefrontal cortex handles impulse control and the ability to stop yourself from doing things you know you shouldn’t. In ADHD, this system functions differently. Brain imaging studies consistently show altered activation in the networks that support behavioural inhibition.

This means the internal brake that might stop a neurotypical person from picking up their phone for the fifteenth time in an hour simply doesn’t engage as reliably.

This isn’t about willpower. Willpower is a prefrontal function. If the prefrontal cortex isn’t firing as it should, telling yourself to “just resist” is like telling someone with a broken leg to just walk normally.

What Does Science Say?

The research on ADHD and phone addiction has grown substantially in recent years. The findings are consistent and sobering.

People with ADHD are significantly more vulnerable

A 2019 study by Kim and colleagues looked at over 4,500 Korean adolescents and found that ADHD showed the strongest association with smartphone addiction of any variable they measured. Even after adjusting for depression and anxiety, adolescents with ADHD were more than six times more likely to meet criteria for smartphone addiction than their peers.

That’s not a modest elevation. That’s a profound vulnerability.

The relationship runs both ways

Here’s what makes this particularly difficult: the relationship between ADHD and phone use is bidirectional.

ADHD increases vulnerability to problematic phone use. But problematic phone use also appears to worsen ADHD symptoms. It’s a feedback loop, and once you’re in it, the cycle can be very hard to break.

A large longitudinal study of American teenagers found that high-frequency digital media use predicted roughly double the rate of ADHD-like symptoms over a two-year period compared to low-use peers. A 2024 study on internet addiction and ADHD found the same reciprocal pattern: higher ADHD symptoms predicted more internet addiction over time, and more internet addiction predicted higher ADHD symptoms.

Each feeds the other.

How phones make ADHD worse

The mechanisms are fairly clear. Heavy phones use fragments of attention. It trains the brain to expect constant stimulation and frequent task-switching, which is precisely the opposite of what someone with ADHD needs.

It disrupts sleep, which is already commonly disrupted in ADHD, and poor sleep amplifies every attentional and emotional difficulty.

It can also become a way of avoiding difficult emotions, which prevents the development of more sustainable coping strategies.

What this means in practice is that someone with ADHD who uses their phone heavily isn’t just dealing with distraction. They’re dealing with a pattern of use that actively makes their underlying condition harder to manage.

The phone becomes both a symptom and cause.

Why Most Advice Doesn’t Work

If you’ve tried the standard phone addiction advice and found it didn’t stick, you’re not alone. Most of that advice assumes a brain that works differently from yours.

“Set a limit and stick to it”

This requires the ability to hold a rule in mind and enforce it against competing impulses. It requires the prefrontal cortex to override the reward system reliably, hour after hour.

For someone with ADHD, this is asking the weakest part of the system to control the strongest.

“Delete distracting apps”

This can help, but it also assumes you won’t simply reinstall them, or find new ways to get the same stimulation. People with ADHD are often remarkably creative at finding workarounds to their own rules.

“Use your phone intentionally”

The word “intentionally” is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. Intention requires executive function. It requires pausing before acting, holding a goal in mind, and directing behaviour toward that goal.

These are precisely the capacities that ADHD compromises.

What works better

The advice isn’t wrong, exactly. It’s just incomplete. It addresses the behaviour without addressing the underlying neurology that makes the behaviour so difficult to change.

What tends to work better for ADHD brains is environmental scaffolding rather than self-control. External structures that make the unwanted behaviour harder, rather than relying on internal willpower to resist it.

A phone that’s physically locked in another room is more effective than a phone that’s in your pocket with a screen time warning you’ll dismiss. A router that cuts off internet access at a certain hour is more effective than a personal commitment to stop scrolling by 10pm.

But even these strategies have limits. They address the behaviour. They don’t address the underlying need for stimulation, or the emotional patterns that drive phone use, or the broader difficulties with attention and impulse control that ADHD creates.

What This Looks Like in the Therapy Room

When someone comes in struggling with phone addiction alongside ADHD, there are usually several things happening at once.

Phones as emotional regulation

There’s often a pattern of using the phone to regulate internal states. Boredom, restlessness, anxiety, the discomfort of a task that feels overwhelming.

The phone becomes a way of managing those feelings in the moment. It works, briefly. And because it works briefly, it gets repeated, even though it makes everything worse in the longer term.

Time blindness

There’s usually significant time blindness. The person genuinely doesn’t perceive the hours passing. They intend to check something for five minutes and surface an hour later with no clear sense of where the time went.

This isn’t carelessness. It’s a genuine perceptual difference in how time is experienced.

The shame cycle

There’s often shame. A lot of it.

People with ADHD have typically spent years being told they’re not trying hard enough, that they just need more discipline, that their struggles are a choice. By the time they reach a therapy room, many have internalised those messages. They believe their phone use is a moral failing rather than a predictable consequence of how their brain works.

Emotional dysregulation

There’s frequent emotional dysregulation. The same dopamine and prefrontal issues that drive phone addiction also make it harder to manage emotions.

The phone becomes a tool for soothing, for escape, for avoiding feelings that feel too big to sit with. Addressing phone use without addressing emotional regulation often doesn’t get very far.

What therapy offers

What therapy can offer that tips and apps cannot is a way of working with all of this together. Understanding the patterns. Developing strategies that account for how the ADHD brain actually works rather than how we might wish it worked. Addressing the shame that keeps people stuck. Building emotional capacity so the phone isn’t needed as a constant escape hatch.

When It’s Worth Getting Assessed

Many adults with ADHD are undiagnosed or were diagnosed late in life. They’ve spent years trying to manage symptoms they didn’t understand, developing coping strategies that may have helped in the short term but caused problems in the long term.

Phone addiction is often one of those coping strategies.

Understanding the full picture, including whether ADHD is part of that picture, makes it possible to address what’s actually going on rather than just treating surface behaviours.

If you’ve tried everything and nothing has worked, it may not be a discipline problem. It may be that you’ve been trying to solve the wrong problem entirely.

How The Private Therapy Clinic Can Help

If what’s described here sounds familiar, it may be worth exploring whether ADHD is part of what you’re dealing with. Our ADHD assessments provide a comprehensive evaluation that can clarify what’s happening and open up more targeted ways of addressing it. We also offer therapy that works with the specific patterns ADHD creates, including the kind of phone and screen use that can feel impossible to change. If you’re not sure where to start, a free 15-minute consultation can help you think through your options.

About the author

Dr Becky Spelman, Counselling Psychologist

Dr Becky Spelman is an HCPC-registered Counselling Psychologist and founder of the Private Therapy Clinic, with over 22 years of experience helping clients successfully manage and overcome a wide range of mental health difficulties.

References

Kim, J. H., Seo, M., & David, P. (2019). The relationship between smartphone addiction and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in Korean adolescents. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 28(2), 432-442.

Islam, M. S., et al. (2024). Prevalence, associated factors and consequence of problematic smartphone use among undergraduate students. PLOS ONE.

Panagiotidi, M., & Overton, P. G. (2020). Attention deficit hyperactivity symptoms predict problematic smartphone use. Current Psychology.

Ra, C. K., et al. (2018). Association of digital media use with subsequent symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder among adolescents. JAMA, 320(3), 255-263.

University of Illinois Brain Matters (2025). Neural mechanisms of smartphone use, ADHD, and dopamine.

Categories: ADD/ADHD, Addictions - By Dr Becky Spelman - March 6, 2026

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