Sleep Issues & ADHD
Sleep issues in ADHD are not about poor sleep hygiene — they're rooted in the same neurological differences that affect attention, regulation, and impulse control during the day. ADHD brains often have a delayed circadian rhythm, difficulty transitioning from wakefulness to sleep (your brain doesn't have an 'off switch'), and racing thoughts that intensify the moment your head hits the pillow. Add revenge bedtime procrastination — staying up late to reclaim the quiet, undemanding time you didn't get during the day — and you have a recipe for chronic sleep deprivation that makes every other ADHD symptom worse.
How it shows up
- Lying awake for hours because your brain won't stop thinking
- A delayed sleep pattern — naturally wanting to stay up late and sleep in
- Difficulty waking up in the morning, often needing multiple alarms
- Revenge bedtime procrastination — staying up late because nighttime feels like 'your' time
- Feeling unrested even after a full night of sleep
Common misconceptions
Myth: “ADHD sleep problems are just poor sleep habits”
Reality: Research shows that 50-75% of adults with ADHD have a genuine circadian rhythm delay that makes early sleep biologically difficult. It's not about discipline — it's about your brain's internal clock being set differently.
Myth: “If you exercised more and put your phone away, you'd sleep fine”
Reality: While sleep hygiene helps, it doesn't address the neurological components of ADHD insomnia: racing thoughts, difficulty with transitions, delayed melatonin release, and the need for stimulation before sleep.
Myth: “Sleep issues and ADHD are separate problems”
Reality: Sleep and ADHD are deeply interconnected. Poor sleep worsens ADHD symptoms, and ADHD symptoms worsen sleep. Treating one without addressing the other often fails.
What actually helps
Create a wind-down runway
Your brain can't go from stimulated to asleep in minutes. Build a 60-90 minute wind-down routine with decreasing stimulation: bright activities first, then dimmer, softer, quieter ones. Think of it as a landing approach, not an emergency stop.
Give your brain something to do
Racing thoughts at bedtime need somewhere to go. Try audiobooks, sleep stories, body scanning, or visualization exercises. Your brain needs gentle occupation, not silence, to settle down.
Address revenge bedtime procrastination
If you stay up late because nighttime feels like your only free time, the solution isn't earlier bedtime — it's carving out restorative alone time during the day. You need that time; just not at 2 AM.
Anchor your wake time, not your bedtime
Trying to force an earlier bedtime often leads to lying in bed frustrated. Instead, fix your wake-up time (even on weekends) and your body will eventually adjust when it falls asleep. Consistency in waking creates consistency in sleeping.
Connected profiles
The Scattered Mind
The Burnout Cycle
The Emotional Reactor