Why do I struggle to recall recent details with ADHD?
Many people with ADHD find it difficult to remember recent conversations, instructions or events, even when they were paying attention at the time. This does not mean long-term memory is damaged. Instead, ADHD affects how attention and working memory handle new information in the moment. According to NICE guidance, ADHD is defined by persistent inattention, impulsivity and hyperactivity, all of which disrupt the brain’s ability to encode and maintain short-term information.
How working memory affects recall
Working memory acts like a short-term workspace that holds information for a few seconds while the brain decides what to do with it. Research in PubMed Central and Frontiers in Psychology shows that people with ADHD have reduced working-memory capacity, especially when they need to listen, think and respond simultaneously. When this temporary storage becomes overloaded, important details are dropped before they are properly encoded. This explains why people may forget parts of a conversation or lose track of what they were about to say.
Neuroscientific studies have found that ADHD involves differences in dopamine and noradrenaline regulation in prefrontal and fronto-striatal networks. These regions are responsible for sustaining attention, updating working memory and filtering distractions. When dopamine activity is low, the brain’s ability to maintain recent information becomes unstable. As a result, what seems like a “memory problem” is often a problem of attention and information encoding.
Encoding failure rather than true memory loss
Evidence suggests that most ADHD-related forgetfulness reflects encoding failure rather than retrieval failure. In other words, the information was never fully stored because attention drifted or working memory was already full. Studies using brainwave measures such as the P3 component show that attention-related activity during encoding is weaker in ADHD, meaning new information is not prioritised effectively. Long-term memory remains relatively intact, but if something was never encoded, there is nothing for the brain to retrieve later.
Why recent details slip away so easily
The NHS explains that adults with ADHD are often easily distracted or forgetful and may lose things, struggle to finish tasks or forget what they were just told. Cognitive-load studies show that when attention is unstable or divided, the brain switches between internal and external states, fragmenting how recent events are processed. This is why recall feels “patchy,” especially during busy or noisy moments.
Strategies to strengthen recall
Practical strategies recommended by NHS neurodiversity services include breaking information into smaller steps, using written checklists, repeating key details aloud, reducing distractions and scheduling brief pauses between tasks. Medication such as methylphenidate can enhance dopamine and noradrenaline signalling, improving attention and working-memory stability. These approaches help new information “stick” by supporting the encoding process rather than trying to fix a storage problem.
Key takeaway
Struggling to recall recent details with ADHD does not mean your memory is failing. It reflects how the ADHD brain encodes and manages attention in real time. Evidence from NICE and the NHS shows that strengthening attention, reducing distractions and using structured supports can significantly improve the ability to remember and act on new information.

