ADHD with Dyslexia
Managing ADHD Together With Dyslexia
When ADHD and Dyslexia occur together, the most effective approach manages both at once through one coordinated plan: behaviour and attention support (and, where a paediatrician advises, medication) alongside structured, multisensory reading instruction. Each part helps the other, and a single assessment clarifies what to prioritise first. Diagnosis and a clinical AbilityScore® are formed only at a Pinnacle centre under clinician care.
When attention and reading both feel like uphill work, families often wonder which one to tackle first — the reassuring answer is that you support both, together.
In short
ADHD and Dyslexia frequently travel together, and when they do, the most effective approach treats them side by side, not one after the other. ADHD is managed through behaviour support, classroom strategies and — where a paediatrician advises — medication; Dyslexia is supported through structured, systematic reading instruction. The two plans are coordinated so that improved attention helps reading practice land, and the right reading method reduces the frustration that fuels inattention. With a clear shared plan, most children make steady, visible progress.How the two are managed together
Treat the whole child, in one coordinated plan. When ADHD and Dyslexia co-occur, fragmented care is the biggest risk — a child bounced between separate programmes that don't talk to each other. The most effective support brings everyone around one set of goals.- For attention (ADHD): consistent routines, short focused work bursts, movement breaks, visual schedules, and classroom accommodations. A paediatrician or developmental specialist will advise whether medication has a role — and when attention improves, the brain has more capacity for the hard work of decoding text.
- For reading (Dyslexia): structured, multisensory literacy teaching that explicitly builds phonological awareness, letter–sound links and fluency, delivered in small steps with lots of repetition.
- Why order matters less than coordination: better attention makes reading practice stick; the right reading method lowers failure and frustration, which in turn eases attention and behaviour. Each lever helps the other.
- Protect confidence: children with both often work twice as hard for the same result, so celebrating effort and rebuilding self-belief is part of the therapy, not a nice extra.
When to seek a structured assessment
If your child struggles with attention and with reading well beyond what you'd expect for their age, a single coordinated assessment is far more useful than two separate opinions. It clarifies how much each part is contributing and what to prioritise first — saving months of guesswork.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are established only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an app or an online form. Our teams build one shared plan across attention, learning and confidence, so support pulls in the same direction. Explore [how we work](/), our special education and learning support and what the AbilityScore® is and how it's formed.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 framework for neurodevelopmental conditions; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on ADHD evaluation and care; ASHA resources on literacy and language support.Next step — Worried about both attention and reading? Book a coordinated assessment with a Pinnacle clinician.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch for a child who works hard but tires quickly, avoids reading, loses focus mid-task, mixes up letters or sounds, and shows growing frustration or low confidence — especially when both attention and reading struggles appear across home and school.
Try this at home
Break reading practice into short, predictable bursts with a movement break between — five focused minutes done daily beats one long, frustrating session.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Should we treat the ADHD or the Dyslexia first?
Neither in isolation — they're best managed together. Better attention helps reading practice stick, and the right reading method reduces the frustration that fuels inattention. A coordinated plan addresses both, with a clinician advising what to prioritise day to day.
Does my child need medication for ADHD if they also have Dyslexia?
Not necessarily. Medication is one option a paediatrician or developmental specialist may consider for ADHD, but it does not treat Dyslexia. Reading still needs structured, multisensory teaching. Any medication decision is made by a qualified doctor alongside the wider support plan.
Will having both mean slower progress?
Children with both often work harder for the same result, but with one coordinated plan most make steady, visible progress. Protecting confidence and celebrating effort is part of the support, not an afterthought.