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What To Do After Your ADHD Screening — The Complete UK Action Plan for 2026

Updated April 2026 · 20 minute read · Written by ADHD Brain Scan UK · Covers NHS, Right to Choose & private pathways

You have your screening results. Now you need a plan. This guide walks you through every pathway from screening to formal diagnosis, medication and ongoing support — with real costs, real waiting times and real advice based on how the UK system works in 2026.

735k+
Open referrals waiting
62%
Adults waiting 1yr+
8–12wk
Right to Choose (fastest)
2–6wk
Private assessment

In this guide

  1. Understanding what your screening means
  2. The three pathways at a glance
  3. Step 1 — Book your GP appointment
  4. Step 2 — Right to Choose (England)
  5. Step 3 — Private assessment
  6. Step 4 — Diagnosis and medication
  7. Step 5 — Shared care agreement
  8. Step 6 — Follow-up and ongoing support
  9. Pathway for children
  10. Scotland, Wales & Northern Ireland
  11. Your rights as a patient
  12. What to do while you wait
  13. Frequently asked questions

Understanding what your screening means

Before diving into pathways, it helps to understand what your screening results actually represent. A qEEG screening measures the theta/beta ratio — the balance between slow-wave (theta) and fast-wave (beta) brain activity at electrode sites over the prefrontal cortex. An elevated ratio suggests that your brain’s frontal regions may be underactivated during concentration tasks, which is a pattern consistently associated with ADHD in the published research literature.

Your screening is not a diagnosis. It is objective neurophysiological evidence that supports or informs the diagnostic process. Think of it as a blood test that reveals an abnormal marker — the blood test does not diagnose the condition, but it provides evidence that guides your doctor’s next steps. Similarly, your elevated theta/beta ratio provides evidence that guides and strengthens your referral for formal clinical assessment.

Your support pack includes a GP letter with your data embedded, formatted for clinical communication. This letter is designed to be handed directly to your GP at your appointment. It presents your results in language that GPs understand, references the FDA-cleared NEBA system that uses the same biomarker, and makes a clear case for specialist referral.

The three pathways at a glance

There is no single route to ADHD diagnosis in the UK. Your choice depends on your budget, your location, and how quickly you need answers. Here is an honest comparison of all three options as of April 2026.

FactorNHS StandardRight to ChoosePrivate
Cost to you£0£0 (NHS funded)£600–£900
Typical wait2–5+ years8 weeks – 14 months2–6 weeks
AvailabilityAll UKEngland onlyAll UK
GP referral neededYesYesNo (most providers)
Medication includedYesYes (titration funded)First prescription, then shared care
Shared care successN/A85–90% of GPs accept70–85% of GPs accept
Video assessmentSome trustsYes (standard)Yes (most providers)
NICE compliantYesYes (CQC regulated)If CQC registered
Our recommendation: If you are in England, start with Right to Choose — it is free, clinically equivalent to NHS assessment, and dramatically faster. If you cannot wait at all or live outside England, private assessment gives you answers within weeks. Either way, start with your GP — you need a referral for both NHS and Right to Choose.

Step 1 — Book your GP appointment

Whatever pathway you choose, your GP is the starting point. They need to make the referral (for NHS and Right to Choose) or you may want their input before going private. Our GP appointment guide covers this in detail, but here is the summary:

1

What to bring

2

What to say

Be direct. Tell your GP: “I have had a qEEG brain screening that shows an elevated theta/beta ratio consistent with ADHD. I would like to be referred for a formal ADHD assessment. I would like to exercise my Right to Choose to be referred to [provider name].”

If your GP is unfamiliar with Right to Choose, your screening report and GP letter provide the clinical justification. The referral is a clinical decision, not an administrative one — your GP should not refuse simply because of local commissioning preferences.

If your GP refuses to refer: Ask for the refusal in writing. Contact your chosen Right to Choose provider — many, including Care ADHD, will contact your GP on your behalf. You can also make a formal complaint to the practice manager citing the NHS Constitution. See our full GP guide for handling pushback.

Step 2 — Right to Choose (England only)

Right to Choose is the most important pathway most people do not know about. It is a legal right enshrined in the NHS Constitution allowing you to choose which provider assesses you, with the NHS paying for everything.

How it works

  1. Your GP sends a referral to your chosen approved provider
  2. The provider adds you to their waiting list and contacts you when an appointment is available
  3. Assessment is conducted by video consultation (typically 60–90 minutes)
  4. If diagnosed, the provider begins medication titration (still NHS funded)
  5. Once stable, care transfers to your NHS GP via a shared care agreement

Approved providers and current wait times (April 2026)

ProviderWait TimeNotes
Care ADHD8–12 weeksNewer provider, currently shortest waits. CQC regulated.
Innovate ADHD8–10 weeksCQC regulated. Some regional restrictions.
Psychiatry-UK18–20 weeksLargest provider, most established. National coverage.
ADHD3608–14 monthsLonger waits but strong shared care acceptance rate.
Clinical Partners10–16 monthsRegional availability. Variable by location.

Important caveats: Wait times change frequently. Some Integrated Care Boards (ICBs) have placed restrictions on Right to Choose — ADHD UK is actively challenging these restrictions as they believe them to be unlawful. Right to Choose is not available in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland.

Pro tip: You can join multiple waiting lists simultaneously and accept whichever appointment comes first. You can also switch your referral from standard NHS to Right to Choose at any time — ask your GP to cancel the existing referral and resubmit to your chosen provider.

Step 3 — Private assessment

If Right to Choose is not available to you (Scotland, Wales, NI), if you cannot wait months, or if you simply want the fastest possible answers, a private assessment is the most direct route.

What to expect

Choosing a private provider

Cost-saving strategy: Get assessed privately (£600–£900 once) then transfer to NHS GP for ongoing prescriptions via shared care. This avoids the multi-year NHS wait while keeping long-term costs near zero. 10 years of NHS prescriptions costs around £0–£1,200 versus £9,000–£22,000 privately.
Close-up of lightweight EEG cap with four electrodes during ADHD brain screening session
Your screening report supports every pathway
Whether you choose NHS, Right to Choose, or private assessment — objective brain data strengthens your referral, speeds up the process, and gives your clinician evidence that subjective reports alone cannot provide.

Step 4 — Diagnosis and medication

If you are diagnosed with ADHD, your assessing psychiatrist will discuss treatment options. For most adults, this includes medication alongside behavioural strategies. Our medication guide covers this in full detail, but here is the overview:

First-line medications in the UK

The titration process

Titration is the process of finding the right medication and dose. It typically takes 3–6 months and involves starting at a low dose, gradually increasing, and monitoring symptoms and side effects. Under Right to Choose, titration is NHS funded. Privately, follow-up appointments cost £150–£250 each.

Follow-up scan: Once stable on medication, a repeat qEEG screening can objectively show whether your theta/beta ratio has normalised. This provides powerful evidence for medication reviews and gives you concrete data that treatment is working at a neurological level.

Step 5 — Shared care agreement

A shared care agreement transfers your ongoing prescribing from the specialist (private or Right to Choose provider) to your NHS GP. This is critical for long-term affordability.

How it works

  1. Your specialist writes to your GP with a treatment plan, including diagnosis, medication, dose and monitoring requirements
  2. Your GP reviews the plan and agrees (or declines) to take over routine prescriptions and blood tests
  3. Once accepted, you receive NHS prescriptions (£9.90 per item, or free if exempt)
  4. Your specialist remains available for complex issues, dose changes or annual reviews

Around 85–90% of GPs accept shared care from established providers like Psychiatry-UK. Acceptance rates for lesser-known private providers may be lower — this is one reason to choose a CQC-registered, well-established provider.

If your GP refuses shared care: Ask for the reason in writing. Request they review NICE NG87 which supports shared care. You can register with a different GP practice that is more supportive. Some private providers offer ongoing prescribing at £40–£60 per month while you resolve shared care.

Step 6 — Follow-up and ongoing support

ADHD is a lifelong condition, and a diagnosis is the beginning of a journey, not the end. Here is what ongoing support looks like:

Pathway for children

If your child’s screening showed elevated results, the pathway is slightly different. Our parent’s guide covers this comprehensively, but here are the key points:

Scotland, Wales & Northern Ireland

Right to Choose is an England-only policy based on the NHS Constitution for England. If you live in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland, your options are different but your screening report is equally valid across all UK nations.

Scotland

ADHD services in Scotland are delivered through NHS boards. Waiting times vary significantly by health board, with some areas reporting waits of 12–24 months. The Scottish Government has acknowledged the need for improved adult ADHD services. Private assessment via UK-wide telehealth providers is the fastest alternative, with shared care transfer to your Scottish GP following the same process as in England.

Wales

NHS Wales has invested in neurodevelopmental assessment pathways, but capacity remains limited. Waiting times are typically 18–30 months. The Welsh Government introduced specific neurodevelopmental condition pathways, though implementation varies by health board. Private assessment is widely available via telehealth, and Welsh GPs generally accept shared care agreements from established providers.

Northern Ireland

Adult ADHD services in Northern Ireland are among the most limited in the UK. Health and Social Care Trusts deliver services, but provision is inconsistent. Waiting times can exceed 2 years. Private assessment via telehealth is often the most practical route, though some patients travel to Dublin or Belfast for in-person appointments with specialist providers.

If you are close to the English border, some patients register with an English GP to access Right to Choose, though this is not straightforward and we would recommend seeking advice from ADHD UK before attempting this route.

Your rights as a patient

Navigating the ADHD system in the UK can feel overwhelming, but you have clear legal protections:

Knowing your rights transforms your interaction with the system. You are not asking for a favour — you are exercising legal entitlements. Our GP appointment guide includes word-for-word scripts for asserting these rights professionally.

Person jogging on a tree-lined path in early morning light as an ADHD coping strategy while waiting for assessment
The waiting period is preparation time
Daily exercise, sleep optimisation, coping strategies and evidence gathering — every step you take now strengthens your position at assessment and improves your daily functioning immediately.

What to do while you wait

Whether you are waiting weeks or months for your assessment, you do not have to put life on hold. The waiting period is not wasted time — it is preparation time. Start building your toolkit now:

The waiting period has a purpose. Every piece of evidence you gather, every strategy you learn, and every conversation you have about your experience strengthens your position at assessment. Arrive at your appointment with a symptom log, childhood evidence, your screening report and a clear understanding of your symptoms — and you give the assessor the best possible chance of making an accurate determination.

Frequently asked questions

How long is the NHS ADHD waiting list in 2026?+

As of early 2026, NHS Digital reports over 735,000 open referrals waiting for ADHD assessment in England. Around 62% of adults have waited over a year. Standard NHS waiting times range from 2 to 7 years depending on region. Right to Choose reduces this to 8 weeks – 14 months depending on provider.

Is Right to Choose really free?+

Yes. Right to Choose assessment, diagnosis and initial medication titration are 100% NHS funded. There is zero cost to you. The only potential cost arises later if your GP refuses shared care and you need to continue seeing the provider privately for prescriptions (typically £150–£200 per appointment every 1–3 months), though 85–90% of GPs accept shared care.

How much does a private ADHD assessment cost?+

Private ADHD assessment in the UK typically costs £600–£900 for the initial consultation. London/Southeast tends toward £750–£900, Midlands/North £600–£750. Telehealth assessments are clinically equivalent and often at the lower end. After diagnosis, transferring to NHS GP via shared care keeps long-term costs minimal.

Will my GP accept a shared care agreement?+

Around 85–90% of GPs accept shared care from established providers. The key factors are: the diagnosing clinician being a GMC-registered psychiatrist, the report meeting NICE NG87 standards, and the provider being CQC registered. If your GP refuses, ask for the reason in writing, review NICE guidelines together, or consider registering with a different practice.

Can I use my screening report to skip the assessment queue?+

Your screening report cannot replace a formal assessment, but it significantly strengthens your referral. It provides objective brain data that most referrals lack. However, under NHS guidelines, a privately funded screening cannot bypass the assessment stage — it supports and accelerates it. Most providers view qEEG data favourably as additional evidence.

Can I get a diagnosis for my child through Right to Choose?+

Right to Choose applies to children, but fewer providers offer under-18 assessments via this route. Psychiatry-UK currently does not accept under-18 Right to Choose referrals. Some newer providers do. The standard route for children is GP referral to CAMHS. See our parent’s guide for the full children’s pathway.

What if I live in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland?+

Right to Choose is England-only. Your options are NHS standard referral (18–30 months typically) or private assessment (£600–£900, 2–6 weeks). Many UK-wide telehealth providers offer video assessments regardless of location. Shared care works the same across all UK nations.

Need a screening to start your journey?

Objective brain data gives your GP the evidence they need to refer you. Same-week appointments available.

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