Home Medications Learn Get notified at launch
Medication guide · UK · Methylphenidate

Concerta XL and ADHD.

Active ingredient: methylphenidate hydrochloride · Equivalent UK brands: Matoride XL · Xaggitin XL · Delmosart XL · Xenidate XL · Affenid XL

Concerta XL (methylphenidate) is the most-prescribed long-acting methylphenidate in the UK. A once-daily tablet using a gradual-release pump system that delivers a steady release across most of the working day.

3060mOnset
~6hPeak
1012hDuration
1854mgUK doses
1×Daily, morning
The OROS pump

How the gradual release actually works.

Concerta XL uses an osmotic-controlled release oral system. The tablet is engineered with three working parts.

Stage one

Immediate-release coating

The outer coating contains 22% of the dose. It dissolves on contact and provides the initial effect within the first hour.

Stage two

Osmotic pump

Water is drawn through a semipermeable membrane into the tablet core. This pressurises the drug compartment and pushes the medication out steadily.

Stage three

Laser-drilled release hole

The medication exits through a precisely sized laser-drilled hole. This produces a gradual release across roughly ten to twelve hours.

The empty tablet shell passes through your digestive system intact. Some people notice this. It is normal and does not mean the medication has not been absorbed.

How it works

The methylphenidate mechanism, in plain English.

Methylphenidate works by blocking the reuptake of dopamine and norepinephrine in the brain. Both neurotransmitters are involved in attention, motivation and impulse control. By blocking their reuptake, methylphenidate increases their availability in the synaptic gap, which translates into improved focus and reduced impulsivity for most people with ADHD.

Concerta XL is a gradual-release formulation that delivers the same active molecule but with a release profile engineered to last most of a working day from one morning dose. Onset is within thirty to sixty minutes, the medication builds gradually, holds an effective range across the middle of the day, and tapers gently into the evening.

Equivalent generic brands. Matoride XL, Xaggitin XL, Delmosart XL, Xenidate XL and Affenid XL all use the same gradual-release pump as Concerta XL. They are pharmacologically equivalent. Pharmacies may dispense any of them depending on availability. ADHDose models the same release profile because the underlying PK is identical.

The methylphenidate family

Concerta XL's close relations.

Concerta XL is one of several methylphenidate formulations prescribed in the UK. They share an active molecule but differ in how it is released.

Titration and timing

Finding your dose.

UK titration

UK Concerta XL titration typically starts at 18mg and increases in defined steps to 27mg, 36mg and 54mg, based on response. Each dose level is usually maintained for two to four weeks before review. Titration can take several months depending on availability of appointments and how cleanly the dose-response settles.

Available UK doses: 18mg, 27mg, 36mg, 54mg.

Timing your dose

Most people take Concerta XL first thing in the morning. The combination of a thirty- to sixty-minute onset and a ten- to twelve-hour duration means the dose timing decides where the medication's effective range sits in your day. Taking it at 6am rather than 9am moves the entire profile three hours earlier. ADHDose models that exact relationship for your specific dose.

Food and Concerta XL

Concerta XL can be taken with or without food. Tablets must be swallowed whole — do not crush, chew or split. Splitting the tablet breaks the gradual-release mechanism and effectively converts the dose into an immediate-release dump, which is both ineffective and unsafe at higher dose levels.

How ADHDose tracks Concerta XL

ADHDose models your Concerta XL release using the published pharmacokinetic profile, calibrated to your dose, your timing and your individual metabolism. The app translates that into real-time guidance through your day, calculates a personalised wind-down window, and exports a Clinician Summary PDF in NHS prescriber format for review appointments.

Live in the app

The Concerta XL release, your dose, your day.

Concerta XL releases gradually through the day rather than spiking. The exact build-up depends on your dose, your metabolism and the time you took it. ADHDose calibrates that picture for your prescription and updates it through your day.

ADHDose Pro · Live tracking

Your Concerta XL day, tracked live.

The app reads your prescription, learns your individual response and tells you where you are in your medication day, minute by minute. The Clinician Summary export pulls 28 days of patterns into NHS prescriber format for your reviews.

  • Live tracking calibrated to your dose and timing
  • Personalised wind-down window for sleep onset
  • Clinician Summary PDF for review appointments
  • Free core features. No account required.
Get notified at launch →
What to watch for

Common side effects.

Most people tolerate Methylphenidate 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

  • Reduced appetite, especially around peak hours
  • Mild jitteriness or feeling 'wired' for the first few days
  • Dry mouth and increased thirst
  • Trouble winding down at bedtime if dosed late
  • Mild headache during titration steps

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 appetite loss leading to weight loss
  • Sleep onset that does not settle after timing adjustments
  • Mood changes — irritability, low mood or emotional flatness
  • Increased blood pressure or heart rate at home readings
  • Reduced effect over time at the same dose (tolerance signal)

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

Call your prescriber promptly

Don't wait for review

  • Chest pain, palpitations or fainting
  • Severe agitation, paranoia or hallucinations
  • Suicidal thoughts (any new or worsening)
  • Signs of allergic reaction — rash, swelling, breathing difficulty
  • Sudden visual changes

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 Methylphenidate 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 3

    First doses

    Most people feel something within the first hour of the first dose. The first few days often involve small wobbles — appetite changes, sleep shifts, occasional headaches. None of this is unusual. Daily logging helps separate first-dose nerves from real side effect patterns.

  2. Week 1 to 2

    Settling in

    Side effects from days one to three usually start to ease. The dose-response becomes more predictable. Track focus, sleep and energy daily. This is the data your prescriber wants at your first review.

  3. Week 3 to 4

    First review

    Most UK and US protocols schedule the first review around week two or four. Your prescriber will ask about effect, side effects, sleep and appetite. Bringing tracked data — rather than relying on memory — turns the review from vague impressions into something concrete.

  4. Week 4 to 8

    Dose adjustment

    If the first dose is not quite right, your prescriber will adjust upward in defined steps. Each step is usually held for two to four weeks before the next adjustment. The same daily logging continues.

  5. Month 3 onwards

    Maintenance

    Once the dose is settled, reviews shift to every six to twelve months. Daily logging becomes lighter — focus and sleep are usually enough. The Clinician Summary export gives prescribers a 28-day window of evidence at each review.

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.

Most people notice the effects of Concerta XL within thirty to sixty minutes of taking it. The outer coating delivers an immediate-release dose within the first hour, and the gradual-release pump takes over from there. The effect builds gradually rather than spiking sharply.
Concerta XL is designed to provide effective coverage for ten to twelve hours from a single morning dose. Some people report effective coverage closer to nine hours, others closer to twelve. Individual metabolism, food and dose all influence the actual experience.
No. Concerta XL tablets must be swallowed whole. Splitting, crushing or chewing the tablet destroys the osmotic pump that controls the gradual release. Doing so converts the dose into an immediate-release dump, which is both ineffective and unsafe at higher dose levels.
The Concerta XL tablet shell is designed to remain intact as it passes through your digestive system. The medication is released through the laser-drilled hole; the shell is then excreted. Seeing the empty shell is normal and does not mean the medication has not been absorbed.
Yes, pharmacologically. Matoride XL, Xaggitin XL, Delmosart XL, Xenidate XL and Affenid XL all use the same osmotic-controlled release pump as Concerta XL. They are therapeutically equivalent and may be substituted by pharmacies depending on availability.