Why Are So Many Women Diagnosed with ADHD or Autism Later in Life?
Late-Diagnosed Neurodivergent Women: ADHD, Autism, Menopause and the Neuroqueer Journey
For many women, diagnosis is more than a clinical explanation. It becomes a framework through which decades of experiences suddenly make sense. Behaviours once interpreted as personal failings can be re-understood as adaptations to living in a world not designed for neurodivergent minds.
For many late-diagnosed neurodivergent women, receiving an ADHD, autism, or AuDHD diagnosis after the age of 50 can feel like finding the missing piece of a puzzle that never quite made sense. It is often about far more than understanding a condition. It can become a profound moment of self-discovery that reshapes how they understand their identity, relationships, gender, and life experiences.
After decades of navigating careers, relationships, parenting, and social expectations, many women discover that what they believed were personal shortcomings were actually signs of neurodivergence. The diagnosis often brings relief, validation, and understanding. But it can also open the door to deeper questions about authenticity, belonging, and who they are beneath years of adaptation and masking.
For some women, this period of self-discovery coincides with perimenopause or menopause. Hormonal changes can affect executive functioning, emotional regulation, sensory processing, and coping strategies, making previously hidden neurodivergent traits more noticeable. As a result, many women seek assessment for the first time during midlife, opening the door to a deeper understanding of themselves.

Many late-diagnosed women describe feeling as though they have spent much of their lives performing. From a young age, they learned how to observe, adapt, and fit in. Society often expects women to be socially intuitive, emotionally regulated, organised, nurturing, and accommodating. Neurodivergent women frequently become experts at masking, carefully studying social rules and presenting a version of themselves that meets these expectations.
Why Are ADHD and Autism Often Missed in Women?
Let’s briefly discuss:
- masking
- gender expectations
- diagnostic bias
- internalised symptoms
Google loves direct question headings.
What is neuro-queer?
This is where the concept of neuro-queer can be particularly helpful.
Coined by autistic scholar and activist Nick Walker,
neuroqueer is not simply an identity. It is also a practice of questioning assumptions about what is considered “normal.” Neuroqueering invites us to examine societal expectations around brains, communication, relationships, sexuality, and gender.
Neuroqueer was developed by autistic scholar and activist Nick Walker as a way of understanding how neurodivergence and queerness can intersect. For some people, being neuroqueer describes both an identity and a practice of challenging assumptions about what is considered normal. It invites people to explore authenticity beyond conventional expectations of gender, communication, relationships, and behaviour.
Prefer video? Watch the YouTube Short version of this conversation, where I explore what neuro-queer, anti-queer and gender queer mean in relation to neurodiversity, authenticity, professionalism, and being human. Subscribe to the channel to get notified about the Empauher conversations videocast and podcast coming soon at the start of July
Then continue reading for a deeper exploration of neurodiversity, workplace inclusion, and how gender plays a part in neurodivergence.
The challenge is that after decades of masking, many begin to ask:
Who am I underneath all of this?
When someone has spent a lifetime questioning why they feel different, a diagnosis often creates permission to explore other aspects of identity that may previously have gone unexamined. As the pressure to maintain a carefully constructed version of oneself begins to ease, questions about gender, sexuality, relationships, values, and belonging can naturally emerge.
This process of self-discovery often extends beyond understanding neurodivergence alone. It can lead to a broader examination of gender, relationships, sexuality, and the roles that have shaped a person’s life.
Research has consistently found higher rates of gender diversity among autistic people than in the general population. This does not mean that neurodivergence causes someone to be transgender, non-binary, or gender diverse. Rather, neurodivergent people are often more inclined to question social norms and less motivated by conformity for its own sake.
For some cisgender women, this exploration reinforces their connection to womanhood.

For others, it raises new questions:
- What aspects of femininity genuinely feel authentic to me?
- Which behaviours have I adopted to fit societal expectations?
- Why have I often felt different from other women?
- What does gender mean to me beyond cultural assumptions?
What is double unmasking?
For some women, late diagnosis initiates a process of what might be called a “double unmasking.” The first involves recognising and releasing the strategies used to hide neurodivergent traits. The second involves examining the social expectations attached to gender and deciding which genuinely reflect their identity and which were adopted as a means of acceptance, safety, or belonging.
The first mask involves hiding neurodivergent traits, suppressing sensory sensitivities, masking autistic communication styles, or compensating for executive functioning challenges.
The second mask involves performing gender expectations, being agreeable, emotionally available, attractive in the “right” way, and prioritising the needs of others.
As diagnosis brings greater self-awareness, both masks may begin to loosen. This can lead to new boundaries, changes in appearance, shifts in relationships, and a stronger sense of self-acceptance.
Importantly, not every late-diagnosed neurodivergent woman will identify as LGBTQIA+, nor will everyone question their gender identity. However, many recognise a shared experience: the courage to examine inherited social rules and decide which ones truly belong to them.
Diagnosis is often viewed as a medical event, but for many women over 50 it becomes something far more transformative. It offers an opportunity to revisit assumptions that may have shaped an entire lifetime—about success, relationships, femininity, communication, and self-worth.
Whether this journey leads to a deeper connection with womanhood, an exploration of gender identity, or simply a greater understanding of oneself, the common thread is authenticity. Late diagnosis can create space to ask questions that were never previously available and to build a life that feels more aligned with who one truly is.

Women over 50 are not a single story. Their experiences, identities, strengths, and journeys are as varied and vibrant as the colours in this portrait series, challenging stereotypes about ageing and visibility.
At its heart, this journey is not simply about neurodivergence or gender. It is about reclaiming the right to define yourself on your own terms, free from expectations that no longer fit, and embracing a version of yourself that feels genuine, visible, and whole.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is neurodiversity?
Neurodiversity recognises that human brains naturally think, learn, communicate, and process information differently.
Can you be neurodivergent but not autistic?
Yes. Neurodivergence includes autism, ADHD, dyslexia, dyspraxia, Tourette’s syndrome, and other neurological differences.
How do neurodivergent people behave?
There is no single way neurodivergent people behave. Behaviour varies between individuals, environments, and circumstances.
Why does everyone seem neurodivergent now?
Awareness, research, and representation have increased, helping more people recognise and understand their experiences.
Why are autistic women diagnosed later in life?
For decades, autism was thought to be mostly a boys’ condition. Diagnostic frameworks, research studies, and clinical training were all built around a male-centred model. Many women grow up feeling “different” without knowing why, only to discover in adulthood – sometimes after years of misdiagnoses or self-doubt – they were autistic all along.
Can menopause make ADHD symptoms worse?
Yes many symptoms of ADHD overlap with those of perimenopause and menopause, for instance: sharp fluctuations in neurotransmitters, trouble with focusing, negative self-image, fatigue, forgetfulness, anxiety, mood changes, sleep issues and libido changes.
What is neuroqueer?
Neuroqueer is an emerging concept that brings queer theory and queering practices towards the interwoven experiences of neurodiversity, disability, gender, and sexuality.
Is there a connection between autism and gender diversity?
Research confirms a strong, meaningful overlap between autism and gender diversity. Studies show that transgender and gender-diverse individuals are three to six times more likely to be autistic than cisgender people, and autistic individuals report significantly higher rates of gender variance.
What is AuDHD?
AuDHD is a term used to describe someone who has both Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). It highlights the unique, often complex experience of living with traits from both neurodevelopmental conditions simultaneously.
Can you discover you are neurodivergent after 50?
Yes, it is very common to discover you are neurodivergent after 50. Many “lost generation” adults, especially women and those assigned female at birth, go through life without a diagnosis because they learned to mask their traits to blend in, or their symptoms were dismissed as personality quirks or anxiety
About the Author
Ginny Evans-Pollard is the founder of Empauher, a neurodiversity and LGBTQIA+ inclusion consultancy helping individuals and organisations create more inclusive, human-centred systems. With over 20 years of experience in education, coaching, leadership development, and inclusion, she specialises in neurodiversity, psychological safety, authentic leadership, and transformative systems thinking.

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