Addiction Awareness Check

Free and fully confidential addiction awareness self-check.

🔒 100% Confidential – No Data Saved
💡 For self-awareness and reflection
🙅 No registration is required
⏱️ Takes 3-5 minutes to complete

Just So You Know...

These addiction checks are for education and self-reflection only. Think of them like a personality quiz for your habits - interesting insights, but not medical advice or diagnosis. If you have real health concerns, please chat with a qualified healthcare professional.

Do I Have an Addiction?

Have you ever asked yourself if you have an addiction? Research shows that early recognition and self-awareness of addictive patterns leads to much easier recovery. Do any of these scenarios sound familiar?

Just One More
You tell yourself you'll have one drink, place one bet, or check your phone for five minutes. Hours later, you're still going. Afterwards you feel regret and promise yourself it won't happen again, but somehow it does.
I've Got It Under Control
"It's just on weekends." "Everyone does it." "I can stop any time." You keep saying this to yourself and your friends, but deep down you know it happens more often than you would like.
It's Not That Bad
No big dramatic rock bottom, but small things keep piling up. Sleeping worse, snapping at loved ones, spending more than planned, avoiding social situations. Nothing catastrophic on its own, but together they start painting a picture.

Addictions often creep up gradually, quietly embedding themselves into daily life before we even notice. The common signs below can help you see the full picture more clearly.

Common Signs of Addiction

Recognizing the signs of addiction is the first step to recovery and regaining control. Here are the most common patterns associated with addiction:

1. Loss of Control
You've tried to cut down or stop but can't seem to follow through.
2. Intense Cravings
Strong urges that pop up, especially in familiar places or situations.
3. Growing Tolerance
Needing more over time to get the same effect you used to get with less.
4. Withdrawal Symptoms
Feeling anxious, irritable, or physically unwell without it.
5. Neglecting Responsibilities
Work, school, or home obligations start taking a back seat.
6. Losing Interest
Giving up hobbies, activities, and social events you used to enjoy.
7. Using Despite Harm
Continuing even when it's hurting your health, relationships, or finances.
8. Constant Preoccupation
Spending lots of time thinking about, using, or recovering from it.
9. Secrecy & Denial
Hiding your use, lying about it, or getting defensive when asked.
10. Risky Behavior
Driving under the influence, using alone, or mixing substances.