Main Home How it works The science Pricing FAQ Blog Services ADHD Brain Screening Comprehensive Assessment Family Package Medication Scan Who it\'s for Children (6+) Adults Women & girls Teenagers Guides NHS waiting list alternatives ADHD evidence for your GP EHCP evidence for ADHD Access to Work & ADHD Right to Choose ADHD Psychiatric assessment ADHD diagnosis guide Book a scan
Home NHS Waiting List
177,404 people waiting

Stuck on the NHS ADHD waiting list? You have options.

The average NHS wait for an ADHD assessment is 2–5 years. Your child’s exams, your career, your mental health — none of them can wait that long. Here’s what you can do right now.

Get brain data now → See your options
★★★★★ 4.9/5 (199 reviews)
Same-week appointments
📄 Same-day PDF report

The NHS ADHD waiting list crisis in numbers

Let’s be honest about what you’re facing. The NHS ADHD assessment pathway is in crisis. Not because clinicians don’t care, but because demand has massively outstripped capacity. Here’s the current situation:

177,404
Children and young people on NHS ADHD and autism assessment waiting lists in England as of 2024, according to NHS Digital data.

Children (CAMHS pathway)

Average waiting time from GP referral to first CAMHS assessment: 2–3 years in most NHS trusts. Some areas (including parts of the North West) report waits of 4–5 years. The NICE guidelines (NG87) recommend timely assessment — but the system can’t deliver it. That means a child referred at age 7 may not be assessed until they’re 10–12 — missing the entire primary school window for support. For teenagers, the wait often extends past their GCSEs.

Adults

Adult ADHD assessment is even more backlogged. Many NHS trusts have 3–5 year waits for adult assessment. Some trusts have temporarily closed their adult ADHD referral lists entirely. For adults who’ve been struggling for decades, being told to wait another 5 years is devastating.

What happens while you wait

Nothing. That’s the problem. While you sit on the waiting list, there is no interim support, no provisional medication, no school accommodations, and no workplace adjustments. Your child continues to fall behind. Your career continues to suffer. Your mental health continues to deteriorate. The waiting list isn’t just an inconvenience — it’s actively harmful.

Four things you can do right now instead of just waiting

Option 1: Right to Choose (NHS-funded private assessment)

Right to Choose is a legal right under the NHS Constitution that allows you to be assessed by a qualified private provider at NHS expense. Your GP submits the referral to a provider like Psychiatry-UK or Clinical Partners. Waiting times are typically 3–6 months rather than years.

The catch: your GP needs to agree to refer. Some GPs are unfamiliar with Right to Choose or reluctant to use it without strong evidence. This is where objective brain data makes a difference — a professional screening report with z-scores and peer-reviewed citations gives your GP the evidence to justify the referral confidently. Read our full guide on presenting ADHD evidence to your GP.

Option 2: Private psychiatric assessment (£700–£1,500)

You can bypass the NHS entirely and pay for a private assessment with a psychiatrist. This typically involves a 60–90 minute clinical interview, behavioural rating scales, and developmental history review. Waiting times are usually 2–8 weeks.

The limitation: private assessments are expensive and are entirely based on conversation. There is no brain measurement. A qEEG screening beforehand can provide your psychiatrist with objective neurological data they wouldn’t otherwise have — making their assessment more informed and potentially more efficient.

Option 3: qEEG brain screening (£595–£845)

This is what we provide. A 30-minute brain screening that measures the theta/beta ratio — the FDA-referenced biomarker for ADHD — and compares your results against published normative data from 311+ research subjects. You receive a same-day professional PDF report.

This is not a diagnosis. But it’s the one thing neither the NHS nor a private psychiatrist currently offers: actual brain data. It serves three purposes:

  • 1. Evidence for your GP to justify an urgent referral or Right to Choose application
  • 2. Data for your private psychiatrist to use alongside their clinical assessment
  • 3. Evidence for schools to support EHCP applications and exam access arrangements while you wait

Option 4: Gather evidence while you wait

Even if you stay on the NHS list, you don’t have to wait passively. Use the waiting time to build a comprehensive evidence file:

  • Get a qEEG brain screening (objective neurological data)
  • Complete validated questionnaires (Conners, SNAP-IV, DIVA-5)
  • Get teacher observations and school reports documenting difficulties
  • Keep a symptom diary with specific examples
  • Request school-based support (SEN register, classroom adjustments) using available evidence

When your NHS appointment finally arrives, you’ll have a comprehensive file that makes the assessment process faster and more conclusive.

Woman sitting calmly in GP waiting room holding ADHD screening report ready to request a referral instead of waiting on the NHS list
The waiting list won’t move. But you can.
Walk into your GP appointment with objective brain data, a completed ASRS questionnaire, and your chosen Right to Choose provider’s referral form. Most people get referred within 1–2 attempts with proper evidence.

Waiting passively vs taking action now

Wait on the NHS list

  • 2–5 year average wait
  • No interim support or data
  • No evidence for school meanwhile
  • No workplace adjustments possible
  • Child falls further behind each year
  • Adult mental health deteriorates
  • Assessment based on questionnaires only
  • Free (eventually)

Screen now + stay on list

  • Brain data in your hands this week
  • Evidence for GP to fast-track referral
  • Data for school support and exam access
  • Evidence for Access to Work applications
  • Strengthens your Right to Choose case
  • Objective data for private psychiatrist
  • Comprehensive file ready when NHS calls
  • From £595 (one-off, same-day report)

Important: We never suggest leaving the NHS waiting list. Stay on it. But don’t wait passively. A brain screening gives you actionable data while you wait — data that can open doors to support that would otherwise remain closed until your NHS appointment arrives in 2–5 years.

What you can do with a brain screening report while you wait

🩺 Take it to your GP

Objective brain data with z-scores and peer-reviewed citations gives your GP the evidence to write a stronger referral, request urgent assessment, or submit a Right to Choose application. Read our full GP evidence guide.

🏫 Give it to the school

SENCOs can use our reports to support EHCP applications, SEN register placements, classroom adjustments, and JCQ exam access arrangements — all without waiting for a formal diagnosis.

💼 Support workplace claims

Adults can use our clinical letter for Access to Work applications, reasonable adjustment requests, and occupational health assessments while awaiting formal diagnosis.

🧑‍⚕️ Brief your private psychiatrist

If you opt for a private assessment, presenting brain data upfront gives the psychiatrist an additional objective data point. It can make the assessment more focused and potentially faster.

📊 Build your evidence file

When your NHS appointment eventually arrives, you’ll walk in with a comprehensive evidence file including neurological data. The assessment becomes faster and more conclusive because the groundwork is already done.

🧠 Understand what’s happening

Perhaps most importantly: you stop guessing and start knowing. Whether for yourself, your child, or your teenager, objective brain data provides clarity during a period of uncertainty.

Flat lay of ADHD brain screening report clinical letter and referral form representing evidence to bypass NHS ADHD waiting list
Build your evidence while the NHS catches up
Screening report, clinical letter, GP referral form, symptom log. Every piece of evidence you gather now strengthens your position — whether you go Right to Choose, private, or stay on the NHS list with a stronger case.
4.9
★★★★★
Based on 199 verified reviews
★★★★★
We’d been waiting 3 years on the NHS CAMHS list. This scan showed elevated theta/beta in our son and the GP fast-tracked the referral within a week of seeing the report. Life-changing.
RB
Richard & Kate Bradley
Parents, 3 years on waitlist · Feb 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
My GP had dismissed ADHD twice because I “didn’t seem hyperactive.” The brain data changed his mind. Right to Choose referral accepted within two weeks. Objective evidence is powerful.
NR
Nicola Richardson
Adult, GP had dismissed · Feb 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
Three months on from the scan, I’m now formally diagnosed and on medication. That 30-minute brain scan fast-tracked a process that would have taken 4+ years on the NHS. Best money I’ve ever spent.
TG
Tom Gallagher
Adult, now diagnosed · March 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
Our daughter sat her mock GCSEs with zero support because we were still on the waiting list. This scan gave us the evidence for exam accommodations. She got 25% extra time for her real exams. The difference was enormous.
SF
Sarah & James Foster
Parents of girl (16) · March 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
The NHS told us 4-year wait for our twins. The family package screened both in one morning. Both showed elevated TBR. GP fast-tracked both referrals. Now both in the CAMHS pipeline instead of nowhere.
AC
Andrew & Sarah Collins
Parents of twins · March 2026
Verified client
★★★★☆
Worth noting this doesn’t replace the NHS assessment — you still need a formal diagnosis for medication. But it gave us evidence to get school support immediately rather than waiting years with nothing.
DP
Diane Porter
Parent, realistic review · Jan 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
I’d been on the adult ADHD waiting list for 2 years with no end in sight. Used this report for a Right to Choose referral to Psychiatry-UK. Assessed within 4 months. Now on Elvanse and functioning.
SC
Sophie Campbell
Adult, Right to Choose · March 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
As a GP, I appreciate when patients bring objective data. These reports are well-structured and give me what I need to write a strong referral letter. Much better than “I think I might have ADHD.”
RK
Dr Robert Keane
General practitioner · March 2026
Healthcare professional
★★★★★
I’m a SENCO. While families wait years for CAMHS, I can use these reports to get classroom support and exam accommodations in place now. It’s practical, evidence-based, and it helps kids who can’t afford to wait.
EH
Emma Hughes
SENCO · February 2026
Education professional
★★★★★
Took the report to my private psychiatrist alongside my NHS referral. She said the brain data was “exactly the kind of evidence I wish more patients brought.” Made the private assessment faster and more focused.
AK
Amir Khan
Adult, private + NHS · Feb 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
We used the Access to Work route while waiting for NHS diagnosis. The clinical letter from the comprehensive package was accepted as evidence. Got workplace coaching and noise-cancelling headphones within weeks.
PJ
Priya Jayawardena
Adult, Access to Work · Jan 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
Both our kids are now diagnosed ADHD. These brain scans were the catalyst. Before this we were stuck on a waiting list going nowhere. The reports broke the deadlock and got things moving with our GP.
SW
Steve & Marie Williams
Parents of 2 · January 2026
Verified client
★★★★★
I was sceptical about paying for something the NHS should provide. But after 18 months of waiting and my mental health declining, this was the best £845 I’ve spent. Diagnosed within 5 months via Right to Choose.
JL
Jamie Lewis
Adult, was sceptical · March 2026
Verified client
Scroll for more reviews →

Common questions about NHS ADHD waiting times

As of 2024, average waits are 2–3 years for children via CAMHS and 3–5 years for adults. Some NHS trusts have waits exceeding 5 years. Over 177,000 people were on waiting lists in England. The situation varies by region but is consistently long nationwide.

Not directly — we can’t change the NHS queue. But the report gives your GP objective evidence to request urgent assessment, reclassify priority, or support a Right to Choose application that bypasses the standard wait. Many clients report their referrals being fast-tracked after presenting our reports.

Right to Choose is a legal right allowing you to be assessed by a qualified private provider at NHS expense. Your GP submits the referral. Providers like Psychiatry-UK typically assess within 3–6 months. Our clinical letter provides the evidence your GP needs to initiate this.

Yes. We always recommend staying on the list while pursuing other options. The NHS pathway leads to fully-funded ongoing care including medication and follow-up. A brain screening gives you evidence and support in the meantime — it doesn’t replace the NHS process.

No. Our screening provides objective neurological data — not a diagnosis. ADHD diagnosis requires comprehensive clinical assessment. Our report is designed as supporting evidence to present to clinicians, schools, and employers. Full details in our disclaimer.

Yes — this is one of our most common scenarios. A comprehensive screening with clinical letter can provide evidence for JCQ exam access arrangements (extra time, rest breaks). The school’s SENCO can apply for these using our report without waiting for a formal NHS diagnosis. Read our EHCP and exam evidence guide.

Adult waiting times are often worse — 3–5 years in many trusts. Some have closed referral lists. Adult ADHD screening is particularly valuable because Right to Choose and Access to Work provide routes to support that don’t depend on NHS diagnosis.

Our standard screening is £595, comprehensive (with clinical letter) is £845. A full private psychiatric assessment is typically £700–£1,500. The key difference: we provide brain data, they provide diagnosis. Many clients do both — screening first for evidence, then private assessment for diagnosis. See our pricing page.

Yes — our Family Package (£1,095) covers two children or teenagers in one visit with individual reports. For three or more, contact us for a custom quote.

Macclesfield, Cheshire — accessible from Manchester (30 min), Stockport (20 min), Wilmslow (10 min), Warrington (35 min), Chester (45 min), and the wider North West. Free parking. Same-week appointments usually available. Get in touch.

The waiting list won’t move. But you can.

Get objective brain data this week. Same-day report. Evidence that opens doors while you wait.

Book your scan → View pricing