Why do I have difficulty recalling recent events with ADHD?
Many people with ADHD describe a frustrating sense of “blank moments,” where a recent conversation, task or event feels hazy or hard to recall. This is not because of damaged long-term memory but because ADHD affects how information is captured, organised and stored in the short term. According to NICE guidance, ADHD is defined by persistent inattention and impulsivity that interfere with focus, follow-through and organisation, processes that are essential for forming strong, retrievable memories.
Working memory and attention in recalling recent events
Working memory acts as a short-term mental workspace that temporarily holds new information so it can be processed and recalled. Research in PubMed Central and Frontiers in Psychology shows that ADHD is associated with reduced working-memory capacity and slower encoding of information. When attention drifts, details of conversations or experiences are not held in mind long enough to be properly stored.
The NHS explains that adults with ADHD are often “easily distracted or forgetful,” struggle to follow instructions and frequently lose things. These difficulties mean that parts of recent events are never fully encoded, leading to patchy or incomplete recall later on.
Why ADHD affects encoding more than storage
Experimental studies using brainwave recordings show that people with ADHD have weaker attention-related P3 signals during encoding tasks. This indicates that their brains allocate less focus to new information, so it is not prioritised for storage. As a result, many “memory lapses” are actually encoding failures, not true memory loss. Unlike degenerative conditions such as dementia, the long-term store in ADHD remains intact, the problem occurs at the moment of recording, when attention is easily pulled away by distractions or internal thoughts.
What happens in the brain
Neuroscience studies show that ADHD involves differences in prefrontal, parietal and hippocampal regions, which work together to support attention and episodic encoding. Reduced dopamine and noradrenaline activity in these areas makes it harder to sustain the focus required for forming complete mental representations of events. fMRI research has found that fronto-striatal and frontoparietal networks in ADHD are less synchronised during memory tasks, which leads to weaker and less stable memory traces.
How to strengthen recent-event recall
Medication that increases dopamine and noradrenaline levels in prefrontal and striatal regions, such as methylphenidate, can improve working memory and attention stability, helping people encode information more effectively. Practical strategies recommended by NHS neurodiversity services include writing down key points, repeating or paraphrasing information, using visual reminders, and breaking discussions or tasks into smaller steps. These techniques reduce cognitive load and provide external supports for recall.
Key takeaway
ADHD-related difficulty recalling recent events comes from encoding inefficiency and attention drift, not from long-term memory loss. Evidence from NICE and the NHS shows that improving focus through structured habits, repetition and, where appropriate, medication can help strengthen how new experiences are recorded and remembered

