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Medication guide · UK and US · Non-stimulant

Atomoxetine and ADHD.

Active ingredient: atomoxetine hydrochloride · Brand name: Strattera · Generic available worldwide

Atomoxetine is a non-stimulant ADHD medication that works by selectively blocking the reuptake of norepinephrine. It does not have a daily peak-and-trough cycle. Instead, it builds up over weeks to provide steady, around-the-clock coverage.

WeeksOnset
No dailyPeak
24hCoverage
10100mgDoses
1×Daily
How it works

How atomoxetine works in plain English.

Atomoxetine works by selectively blocking the reuptake of norepinephrine in the prefrontal cortex. This increases norepinephrine availability in the synaptic gap, which translates into improved attention and impulse control for many people with ADHD.

Unlike stimulants, atomoxetine does not have a fast onset. The first dose does not produce a noticeable effect. The medication builds up over four to six weeks before reaching its full therapeutic level. During those weeks, what matters is consistent daily dosing and patient observation.

Once the medication is at steady state, it provides 24-hour coverage. There is no daily peak to time around. The question shifts from "where am I in my day" to "is this working overall, week by week".

Genetics matter. Atomoxetine half-life varies significantly by individual genetics. Most people are extensive metabolisers (half-life around five hours). Approximately 7% of Caucasian populations are poor metabolisers (half-life up to 22 hours), which can affect dosing.

The non-stimulant family

Atomoxetine's close relations.

Other non-stimulant ADHD medications. Different mechanisms but similar 'weeks-to-effect' framing.

Titration and timing

Finding your dose.

Titration

Atomoxetine titration typically starts at 40mg daily for adults and increases to a target of 80mg after seven to fourteen days, then potentially up to 100mg if needed. Starting dose for body weight under 70kg is dose-banded.

Available doses: 10mg, 18mg, 25mg, 40mg, 60mg, 80mg, 100mg.

Timing your dose

Atomoxetine is once daily. Some prescribers split the daily dose into morning and evening administrations, particularly during titration. The exact schedule comes from your prescriber.

The four-to-six-week window

The single most important thing about atomoxetine is patience. The first dose does not work. The first week does not work. Many people see no effect at all in the first two to three weeks. The decision about whether atomoxetine is working should be made at four to six weeks, not earlier.

Food and atomoxetine

Atomoxetine can be taken with or without food. Some prescribers suggest taking it with food during titration to reduce stomach side effects. The capsule contents should not be opened.

How ADHDose tracks atomoxetine

ADHDose does not model a daily concentration curve for atomoxetine because there isn't one to track. Instead, it focuses on the metrics that actually matter for non-stimulants: daily focus, sleep, mood, energy and side effects. Across the four-to-six-week titration window, the patterns become visible. The Clinician Summary export pulls that history into a structured PDF for your prescriber.

Live in the app

Tracking what doesn't have a daily peak.

Atomoxetine has no daily curve to model. Instead, what matters is daily focus, sleep, mood and side effects across the weeks it takes to reach full effect. ADHDose tracks that for you.

ADHDose Pro · Live tracking

Daily tracking, weekly trends, real evidence.

Atomoxetine takes four to six weeks to reach full effect. Daily logging across that period is how you and your prescriber will know whether it's working. ADHDose makes the logging structured and the patterns visible.

  • Daily focus, sleep, mood and side-effect tracking
  • Pattern detection across the weeks-to-effect window
  • Clinician Summary PDF for appointments
  • Free core features. No account required.
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What to watch for

Common side effects.

Most people tolerate Atomoxetine well, especially after the first few weeks. Here are the patterns worth noticing — and the ones that warrant a call to your prescriber.

Common · usually settles

Early weeks

  • Mild stomach upset or nausea, especially with the first doses
  • Drowsiness or fatigue in the first one to two weeks
  • Dry mouth
  • Reduced appetite
  • Mild dizziness on standing up quickly

Most ease in the first two to four weeks. Logging them daily helps you and your prescriber decide whether they are settling or sticking.

Mention to your prescriber

Worth raising at review

  • Persistent fatigue beyond the first three weeks
  • Mood changes — low mood, increased anxiety, irritability
  • Sleep changes that do not improve with consistent dosing time
  • Notably low blood pressure on home readings
  • Sexual side effects

Not emergencies, but worth bringing up. ADHDose tags recurring patterns automatically in your daily logs.

Call your prescriber promptly

Don't wait for review

  • Suicidal thoughts (any new or worsening)
  • Signs of liver problems — jaundice, dark urine, severe abdominal pain
  • Severe allergic reaction — rash, swelling, breathing difficulty
  • Heart rhythm changes — pounding, irregular or skipped beats

Rare, but worth knowing. If you see any of these, contact your prescriber rather than stopping on your own.

What to expect

Titration, week by week.

The first weeks of Atomoxetine have a recognisable shape. Knowing what is normal at each stage stops you reading too much into a single bad day.

  1. Days 1 to 7

    First week

    Non-stimulants do not work like stimulants. The first dose does not produce a noticeable effect. The first week is mostly about managing initial side effects (mild nausea, fatigue, dry mouth) while your body adjusts.

  2. Week 2 to 3

    Side effects ease

    Initial side effects typically settle by week two or three. Still no clinically meaningful effect on attention or impulse control yet — that is the nature of non-stimulants.

  3. Week 4

    Effect emerges

    Most people start noticing real effect around the four-week mark — sometimes earlier with Qelbree, sometimes later with atomoxetine. The effect tends to feel less dramatic than stimulants and more like a gradual improvement in baseline function.

  4. Week 6 to 8

    Full effect

    Most non-stimulants reach their full therapeutic effect by six to eight weeks. By this point you and your prescriber should have a clear sense of whether the medication is working for you.

  5. Month 3 onwards

    Maintenance

    Once at steady state, non-stimulants are typically reviewed at three to six month intervals. Daily logging across the first eight weeks gives the prescriber the evidence they need to confirm response.

ADHDose makes the milestone view concrete. Daily logs of focus, sleep, energy and side effects across the titration window show the trajectory clearly — to you, and to your prescriber when review day arrives.

Common questions

Quick answers.

No. Atomoxetine is a non-stimulant. It works through a different mechanism (selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibition) and is not a controlled substance in most jurisdictions.
Atomoxetine typically takes four to six weeks to reach its full therapeutic effect. The first dose does not produce a noticeable change. Patience and consistent dosing are essential during titration.
Atomoxetine should be tapered rather than stopped abruptly. Sudden discontinuation can cause withdrawal-like effects. Your prescriber will guide the taper.
Yes. Strattera is the original brand name. Atomoxetine is the generic name and the term most commonly used in UK prescriptions following NICE guidance.
Studies show stimulants are generally more effective for ADHD on average. Atomoxetine has comparable efficacy for some people, particularly those who tolerate stimulants poorly or who have co-occurring anxiety. The decision is individual and made with your prescriber.