Is a "dopamine detox" the answer for ADHD motivation?
The term “dopamine detox” is everywhere. It’s sold as a reset for your fried brain, a way to find joy in boring things again. If you have ADHD, that probably sounds like a miracle cure.
But it’s not real.
You can't "detox" from dopamine. You need it to live. It’s the neurotransmitter that lets you feel motivation and reward.
When people say “dopamine detox,” they just mean taking a break from easy, high-stimulation habits. Think endless TikTok scrolling, video games, or binge-watching an entire season in one night.
The ADHD brain’s relationship with dopamine is complicated. The issue usually isn't a simple lack of it. It’s more that the brain's reward system is holding out for a bigger, better prize, which makes it incredibly hard to start a task that isn't immediately interesting.
So a dopamine "fast" isn't about getting rid of dopamine. It’s about teaching your brain it doesn’t need a constant firehose of novelty to get moving.
What you're really trying to do is change your behavior.
Instead of a "detox," think of it as a strategic retreat from the noise. This is where you’ll see a real difference. When you intentionally step away from the high-dopamine stuff, you can actually hear yourself think. The constant buzz of notifications fades, and you get your attention back. You might even find that you don't feel as anxious or that you start to enjoy simpler things more, because you're not always chasing the next digital high.