Am I An Addict?

Take our free, confidential quiz
If you are asking yourself am I an addict or am I addicted, the question itself is significant. People who do not have a problem with drugs or alcohol rarely ask it. The quiz below takes about five minutes and gives you a clear, personalized result with next steps.

About 5 minutes

Completely confidential

Free, no signup

What you'll get

5 min

A few short questions

About your patterns of use and how they affect your life

3 levels

A personalized result

Low, moderate, or high concern, scored automatically

Clear

Honest next steps

What to consider, with no pressure and no obligation

The Am I An Addict Quiz

This addiction questionnaire scores automatically and gives you an immediate, personalized result. There are no right or wrong answers, only an honest look at your own patterns. Take your time and answer as truthfully as you can.
This quiz is an educational self-assessment, not a clinical diagnosis. Only a licensed clinician can diagnose a substance use disorder. If you are in crisis or thinking about harming yourself, call or text 988 for the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline.

What is addiction? Understanding the brain and behavior of substance use disorder

Addiction is a chronic, treatable medical condition, not a moral failing or a simple lack of willpower.
Reward and stress circuits rewire with repeated use, which is why the signals keep firing long after a person wants to stop.

The American Psychiatric Association defines addiction as a chronic, treatable mental health condition. Clinically known as substance use disorder, it involves changes in brain chemistry that affect judgment, decision making, memory, and behavior. This is the core reason people who experience it often keep using even when they genuinely want to stop.

The field of addiction medicine focuses on these brain-level changes. Willpower alone rarely resolves addiction, not because a person is weak, but because the brain’s reward and stress systems have adapted to the substance. The National Institute on Drug Abuse describes addiction as a disease of these brain circuits, and American Addiction Centers describes the same underlying mechanism.

Many causes, not one

Addiction rarely develops from a single cause. Genetics, environmental factors, early exposure, trauma, and other factors all shape how it takes hold. These factors affect both how addiction develops and how a person responds to treatment.

Rarely on its own

Co-occurring mental health conditions are common. Anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, and PTSD frequently appear alongside substance use. Each is a mental health condition, or mental disorder, that can fuel addiction and be fueled by it.

Chronic, but treatable

Because the changes are physical, effective care treats the whole person, addressing the substance use, the mental health conditions, and the behaviors built around it together. The brain that adapted to a substance can adapt back.

How do I know if I am addicted?

Most people in active addiction avoid this question. Asking it is already a step toward honesty.

If you have found yourself wondering am I addicted, or quietly asking am I a drug addict or am I addicted to drugs, you are already doing something most people in active addiction avoid: looking honestly at your own use. The signs are rarely dramatic at first. They tend to show up as small, repeating patterns, like the ones in this self-check.

No single item here means you have a substance use disorder. What matters is the pattern: how many are true, how often, and whether it is reaching into your physical health, your responsibilities, and the people you love. The Am I A Drug Addict Quiz is built to give you an honest, evidence-informed read on that pattern in a few minutes. The National Institute on Drug Abuse notes that recognizing the signs of addiction early is one of the strongest predictors of successful recovery, which is why asking the question now matters.

Does any of this sound familiar?

If even a few of these ring true, that is worth paying attention to. The quiz above turns these patterns into a clear, personalized result.

Common signs of addiction

Addiction shows up across four areas of life: behavior, physical health, mental and emotional state, and relationships. Most people notice signs in more than one. The more areas affected, the more important it is to take an honest look.

Behavioral

Behavioral signs

Physical

Physical signs and increased tolerance

Mental & emotional

Mental and emotional signs

Relational & life

Relational and life signs

Physical consequences of long-term drug use

The physical consequences of sustained drug use and alcohol abuse go far beyond a bad day. Over time, ongoing substance use can affect nearly every system in the body.

Heart disease

and elevated blood pressure

Liver damage

often from alcohol abuse or certain prescription medications

Weakened immune function

and slower healing

Digestive problems

that erode overall well being

Disrupted sleep

fatigue, and cognitive fog

Increased overdose risk

as use escalates

These consequences tend to feed a cycle. People in active addiction feel physically sick when the substance wears off, so they take more drugs in larger amounts to feel normal again. The body adapts to those larger doses, tolerance climbs, and the harmful consequences deepen.

01

Feel physically sick

02

Take more drugs

03

Body adapts to larger doses

04

Harmful consequences deepen

And the encouraging part

Many physical consequences can stabilize or reverse with proper treatment. A medically supervised detox is often the safest first step, and the body frequently begins to recover once substance use stops.

Substance cravings and increased tolerance

Two of the most telling signs of a developing problem are substance cravings and increased tolerance. Both are rooted in how the brain adapts to a substance over time.

Substance cravings

A craving is the brain demanding more of a substance, often right when the substance wears off. Cravings can be intense and intrusive, crowding out other thoughts. They are frequently triggered by stress, poor sleep, certain people or places, and other environmental factors. Cravings are not a sign of weakness; they are a measurable feature of how brain chemistry changes with repeated use.

Same effect Dose ↑

Increased tolerance

Increased tolerance means the body needs larger doses to produce the same effect it once got from a small amount. As tolerance builds, people often use multiple times a day, or in larger amounts, simply to feel normal. Rising tolerance is one of the clearest physical markers that use is moving from casual toward compulsive.

Both substance cravings and increased tolerance respond to proper treatment. They weaken with time, structure, behavioral therapies, and the right support. The brain that adapted to a substance can also adapt back, especially when professional guidance is in place.

When does drug or alcohol use become substance abuse?

Modern clinical practice does not draw a hard line between casual use, substance abuse, and addiction. Instead, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, DSM-5, places substance use on a single spectrum and defines addiction as a chronic, treatable medical condition rather than a moral category.

Whether the concern is drug use or an alcohol use disorder, the DSM-5 lists eleven criteria, and the number a person meets determines how severe the substance abuse is. American Addiction Centers and federal health agencies use this same framework. It is worth understanding roughly where you might fall.

No diagnosis

0–1 criteria

Mild

2–3 criteria

Moderate

4–5 criteria

Severe · addiction

6+ criteria

Severity reflects how many of the 11 DSM-5 criteria a person meets, not a single bright line.

Mild substance abuse

Early signs of substance abuse are present, and use is starting to create friction. This is the easiest stage to address.

Moderate

Substance abuse is established and beginning to affect daily life, relationships, and responsibilities.

Severe (addiction)

Use has become compulsive and is consistent with a substance use disorder that benefits from a structured treatment program.

Wherever your substance abuse falls on this spectrum, severity is not destiny. People who try to quit cold turkey multiple times without professional support relapse far more often than people who get into the proper treatment program up front.

Mental health, family, and the people you love

A mental health condition can fuel addiction and be fueled by it. Treating one side alone rarely holds.

Addiction rarely affects just the person using. It reaches into relationships with family members, partners, and loved ones, often straining the connections that matter most. The people closest to someone in active addiction frequently carry stress, worry, and hurt of their own.

Many people who experience addiction also live with a co-occurring mental health condition. Anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, and PTSD show up alongside substance use disorder far more often than by chance. Each is a mental health condition that can fuel addiction and be fueled by it, creating a loop that is difficult to break by treating only one side.

fuels fuels Substance use Mental health
Each side feeds the other, which is why effective care addresses both at once.

Common patterns to watch for

This is why the standard of care for co-occurring conditions is integrated dual diagnosis treatment, addressing the substance use and the mental health condition together, with one team and one plan.
A quiz can’t diagnose you, but if your results gave you pause, that feeling is worth taking seriously. Reaching out doesn’t commit you to anything but a conversation.
imgi 54 Kayla Borja Frosst

Kayla Borja Frost, LMHC, IADC

Chief Clinical Officer, Radix Recovery

Understanding your quiz results

The quiz sorts your answers into three levels of concern. None of them is a diagnosis. Each is a starting point for understanding where you stand, whether you may be addicted, and what might help.
Your answers point to one of three levels of concern.

Low risk

Your current use does not yet show major warning signs. This is a good moment to stay aware and keep healthy habits in place.

Moderate concern

Your answers show patterns associated with developing addiction. This is the stage where early action makes the biggest difference.

High concern

Your answers show patterns consistent with a substance use disorder, the clinical term for being addicted. Speaking with a licensed clinician is the recommended next step.

Recovery options and the right addiction treatment

If your quiz suggests you may need help, the natural next questions are: what are my recovery options, and what does addiction treatment actually look like? The honest answer is that the right treatment options depend on the severity of use, your body, your mental health, your relationships, and other life factors. Proper treatment meets you where you are, and there is no single path that fits everyone.

Stabilize

Medically supervised detox

A safe, monitored withdrawal for substances where stopping suddenly can be dangerous.

Treat

Residential inpatient care

A structured, immersive treatment program with 24/7 support, away from everyday triggers.

Treat

Behavioral therapies

Evidence-based approaches like CBT, DBT, and Motivational Interviewing that build healthy behaviors over time.

Treat

Medically supervised detox

A safe, monitored withdrawal for substances where stopping suddenly can be dangerous.

Sustain

Support groups

Peer communities such as AA, NA, and SMART Recovery that sustain connection and accountability.

Sustain

Aftercare and outpatient therapy

Ongoing therapy, check-ins, and professional guidance that protect long-term recovery.

Find recovery on your own terms

There is no single right way to find recovery. For one person, that means residential inpatient care followed by structured aftercare. For another, it is outpatient programs paired with support groups. For someone else, a strong therapist, a stable home, and consistent professional guidance are enough to begin therapy and build momentum. All three are valid paths.

What the research consistently shows is this: people who get the proper treatment early and stay connected to support, even those who were severely addicted, go on to overcome addiction and build healthy lives that often felt impossible during active addiction. These are real, durable healthy lives, not white-knuckle abstinence. The strongest driver of successful recovery is not willpower; it is the right support meeting healthy behaviors that grow over time.

Inpatient Outpatient Community Recovery

What to do if your results suggest you may need help

A result pointing toward concern is a starting point, not a verdict. Here are three reasonable next steps. None of them commits you to anything.

Talk to a licensed clinician

A short, confidential call can help you make sense of your results, with no pressure.

Schedule a clinical assessment

A clinician can complete a structured drug abuse assessment to clarify what is going on.

Verify your insurance

Find out what your plan covers, with no obligation and no pressure.

imgi 54 Kayla Borja Frosst

Kayla Borja Frost

Chief Clinical Officer, Radix Recovery
This page was clinically reviewed for accuracy and alignment with current addiction medicine standards.

Last Reviewed

June 2026

Reviewed By

Radix Recovery clinical leadership

Trusted in-network insurance partnerships

We accept most major commercial insurance plans and Iowa Medicaid. If you do not see your provider, call us and we will verify your benefits for you.

Frequently asked questions

The clearest signs include using more than you intended, being unable to cut back despite trying, needing larger amounts for the same effect, experiencing withdrawal when you stop, and continuing to use despite negative consequences to your health, relationships, or responsibilities. If several of these patterns sound familiar, the quiz on this page can give you a clearer, structured read in about five minutes.
Substance abuse describes a harmful pattern of use, while addiction, clinically called substance use disorder, involves brain-level changes that make stopping difficult even when you want to. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, DSM-5, places these on a single spectrum from mild to severe rather than treating them as separate conditions.
No. This quiz is an educational self-assessment, not a clinical diagnosis. Only a licensed clinician can diagnose a substance use disorder through a formal evaluation. The quiz is designed to help you understand your patterns and decide whether to speak with a professional.
Yes. The quiz is completely confidential. Your answers are used only to generate your personalized result, and you are never required to share identifying information to see where you stand.
About five minutes. The questions are short, and the questionnaire scores automatically to give you an immediate result with clear next steps.
A result suggesting concern is a starting point, not a verdict. The most useful next step is a conversation with a licensed clinician who can talk through your situation. You can call our admissions team at (319) 270-2890, schedule a formal clinical assessment, or verify your insurance. Each step is free, confidential, and carries no obligation.
There is no fixed timeline. For some people addiction develops over months, for others over years. Speed depends on the substance, the frequency and amount of use, genetics, environmental factors, and co-occurring mental health conditions. Because the timeline varies so much, the presence of warning signs matters more than how long you have been using.
It depends on the substance, and in some cases quitting cold turkey can be dangerous. Withdrawal from alcohol and benzodiazepines in particular can cause serious medical complications, which is why medically supervised detox exists. People who try to quit cold turkey multiple times without support relapse more often than those who get proper treatment up front. If you are unsure, talk to a clinician before stopping.
Treatment options range from medically supervised detox and residential inpatient care to partial hospitalization (PHP), intensive outpatient (IOP), behavioral therapies like CBT and DBT, support groups, and aftercare. The right addiction treatment depends on the severity of use, your physical and mental health, and your circumstances. Our team can help you understand which level of care fits during a free, confidential call.

If your quiz suggests you may need help, you are not alone

Our admissions team is available 24/7. The call is free, confidential, and never assumes you are committing to anything. It is a conversation, not a sales pitch.