Why is my brain unable to hold onto recent information with ADHD?
Many people with ADHD describe a frustrating sense that information “slips away” moments after hearing or learning it. This difficulty is not about poor long-term memory but about how attention and working memory, the brain’s short-term information workspace, function together. According to NICE guidance, ADHD affects the ability to sustain attention and organise tasks, which can make it harder to hold new details in mind long enough to act on them.
How ADHD affects the brain’s short-term “workspace”
Working memory keeps information active for a few seconds so we can follow instructions, plan actions and link one idea to the next. Research published in PubMed Central shows that people with ADHD have reduced working-memory capacity, meaning this mental workspace fills up more quickly. When attention drifts or the environment is distracting, parts of new information are dropped before they are fully encoded.
The NHS explains that adults with ADHD often find it hard to concentrate, follow through on instructions and stay organised. This is because working memory and attention compete for limited resources, making it difficult to maintain focus while simultaneously processing and storing information. Studies in Frontiers in Psychology report that when people with ADHD are asked to listen, think and respond at once, working memory becomes overloaded and small details, like the next step of a task or part of a conversation, are easily lost.
Why attention drift disrupts recent information
Neuroscience studies show that ADHD involves differences in dopamine and noradrenaline activity in prefrontal and fronto-striatal networks, areas responsible for attention and working-memory stability. When dopamine signalling is reduced or unstable, the neural representations of new information become less robust and more easily displaced by distractions. Functional MRI research has found that adults with ADHD show reduced suppression of irrelevant sounds under high cognitive load, suggesting that even background noise can interrupt information encoding.
How this differs from ordinary forgetfulness
Everyone experiences lapses in attention occasionally, but in ADHD the issue is more consistent and widespread. In typical short-term forgetfulness, the information was encoded but is temporarily inaccessible. In ADHD, it often was never stored properly because attention drifted or working-memory limits were exceeded. As a result, the information is not available for recall, even moments later.
Strategies that can help
According to NHS neurodiversity toolkits and clinical guidance, practical supports such as breaking tasks into smaller steps, writing down instructions, using visual reminders and reducing distractions can significantly ease working-memory strain. Medication that increases dopamine and noradrenaline in prefrontal regions, such as methylphenidate, has also been shown to improve attention and short-term recall by stabilising neural activity.
Key takeaway
Struggling to hold onto recent information with ADHD reflects challenges in attention and working-memory coordination, not a fault in intelligence or long-term memory. Evidence from NICE and the NHS shows that with structure, targeted treatment and environmental adjustments, people with ADHD can strengthen their ability to retain and act on new information more effectively.

