What the RAADS-R cutoff actually does
A screening cutoff is a reference point, not a final verdict. In the case of RAADS-R, the number 65 is commonly used to separate lower-likelihood results from results that may justify closer attention.
That does not mean everyone above 65 is autistic, or that everyone below 65 is not autistic. It means the test is trying to identify when a pattern of answers starts looking more consistent with common autistic traits in adults.
Why the number 65 matters
The cutoff matters because it gives people a practical way to interpret the result. Without a threshold, a raw number can feel abstract. With a threshold, the score becomes easier to use as a screening signal.
In real life, a score above 65 usually means it may be reasonable to explore autism more seriously, especially if the result resonates with your lived experience.
Why the cutoff should not be treated as pass or fail
The biggest mistake people make is treating 65 like a strict line of certainty. Screening tools do not work like that. A score of 64 and a score of 66 are much closer to each other than the cutoff can make them appear.
This is why context matters so much. Borderline scores should be interpreted carefully rather than treated as an absolute yes or no.
What can affect a score around the cutoff
Masking, anxiety, ADHD, trauma, and how you interpret the wording of questions can all influence where you land, especially if your score is close to 65.
For some adults, the RAADS-R captures long-standing autistic traits clearly. For others, overlapping experiences can make the cutoff harder to interpret without a broader look at their history.
- Masking or compensating in social situations
- Anxiety or social fear
- ADHD or other overlapping neurodivergent traits
- Question interpretation and self-awareness
How to use the cutoff more usefully
Instead of asking whether your score crossed a magical line, ask a better question: how well does this result fit the patterns of your actual life. The cutoff is most useful when it helps guide your next step rather than replace deeper thinking.
If your score is above 65, it may be worth reading your subscale pattern, reflecting on childhood and adult experiences, and deciding whether a formal autism evaluation makes sense for you.