What is Multiple Sclerosis?

Cognition and memory

Changes in the way you think, remember or concentrate are common in MS — and, for most people, milder and more manageable than they fear.

About half of people with MS notice some change in the way they think, remember or concentrate. For most, these changes are mild — but they are real, and they deserve to be taken seriously.

Cognitive changes in MS usually affect specific areas rather than general intelligence. The most common is processing speed — it can simply take a little longer to take in information or respond. Others include memory for new information, attention and concentration, planning and organising, and finding the right word.

Importantly, MS does not usually affect your long-term memories, your language, or your ability to understand — and severe cognitive difficulty is uncommon.

Noticing a change is not a sign you are losing yourself. It is the first step towards working with it.

What it can feel like

  • Losing your train of thought mid-sentence
  • The word that sits on the tip of your tongue
  • Needing information repeated, or written down to hold on to it
  • Finding it harder to follow a fast conversation or juggle several things
  • A ‘foggy’ feeling that comes and goes from day to day

Why it happens

MS lesions can slow the signals travelling between different parts of the brain, so tasks that rely on speed and coordination take a little more effort.

Cognitive symptoms often get worse when you are tired, hot, stressed or unwell — which is why they can vary so much from one day to the next.

Fatigue and low mood make thinking feel harder too, and both can be treated. That is why cognition is best looked at alongside the rest of your health, not in isolation.

You are not powerless

What can help

None of this is medical advice — but these are approaches that help many people, and good places to begin a conversation with your MS team.

01

One thing at a time

Single-tasking is not a weakness — it is a strategy. Reducing distractions and finishing one job before starting the next makes thinking feel clearer.

02

Write it down

A reliable system beats relying on memory. Calendars, checklists, phone reminders and a notes app take the load off, so you can focus on the task itself.

03

Pick your moment

Do thinking-heavy tasks when you are freshest — often earlier in the day, before fatigue builds. Match the task to your energy.

04

Treat the fog’s neighbours

Sleep, fatigue, stress and mood all shape how clearly you think. Improving them often improves cognition more than anything else.

05

Keep your brain active

Staying mentally and socially engaged helps, and regular physical exercise has been shown to support thinking as well as the body.

06

Ask for an assessment

A neuropsychological assessment can map your strengths and difficulties precisely, and cognitive rehabilitation can teach tailored strategies.

Cognitive changes rarely take away who you are. With the right strategies, most people find ways to keep doing what matters to them.

— Living with MS

This page offers general information about MS, not medical advice. Your experience is individual — always discuss your symptoms with your neurologist or MS team, who know your situation best.

Explore further

Other symptoms and effects

MS is highly individual, and no two people experience it in the same way. Explore the areas that matter most to you.

You are not alone

Mind and mood matter too

Thinking, energy and emotional wellbeing are deeply connected. Looking after one helps the others.