Early Signs Dementia | Know What to Look For

Knowing the early signs dementia produces is rarely straightforward, because many of them can look like ordinary ageing or stress. You are probably here because something your parent said or did has stuck with you, and you are trying to work out whether it matters. This article explains what the warning signs of dementia actually look like in everyday life, how they differ from normal forgetfulness, and what the process of getting a GP referral dementia assessment involves in the UK. If you are trying to decide whether to take this further, you are in the right place.
How do I know if these are early signs dementia or just normal ageing
The difference between normal forgetfulness and early dementia is not about how often it happens, it is about what kind of thing is being forgotten
Misplacing keys occasionally is normal. Forgetting what keys are for is not. Early dementia tends to affect the ability to retain new information, follow a familiar process, or find the right word mid-sentence, not just recall a name that was always difficult to remember.
If the forgetting is starting to interfere with daily tasks your parent managed without difficulty before, that pattern is worth taking seriously.
You do not need certainty before you act, you just need enough reason to ask the question.
What early signs dementia produces beyond memory loss
Memory loss gets most of the attention, but the early signs of dementia are often more varied than that
Changes in mood, personality, or social behaviour can appear before memory problems become obvious. A parent who was always organised may struggle with planning, managing money, or following a recipe they have used for years. Withdrawal from activities they used to enjoy, increased irritability, or difficulty following a conversation can all be early indicators worth noting.
Because these changes come on gradually, the people closest to someone with early dementia are often the last to recognise the pattern, precisely because they adapt to it without realising.
If something has shifted and you cannot quite name it, that observation still counts.
What this means for you
Write down what you have noticed, with rough dates if you can. Concrete examples carry more weight with a GP than a general sense that something is wrong. Request a GP appointment specifically to discuss memory and cognitive concerns. You do not need your parent to agree this is a problem before you speak to a doctor. A GP referral for dementia assessment does not commit anyone to a diagnosis. It starts a process that gives you information.
See our Stage 1 guide to recognising the signs
Noticing that something has changed in a parent and not knowing what to do with that observation is a hard place to be. The most useful thing you can take from this article is that you do not need to be certain before you act: a GP appointment is a way of finding out, not a declaration. The early signs of dementia are often subtle and inconsistent, which is exactly why writing down what you have seen and when is worth doing before that appointment. If you are ready to understand what happens after a GP referral, the next stage of the DCC pathway covers the dementia diagnosis process and what to expect from a memory clinic.
Frequently asked questions
- What are the early signs of dementia to watch for in a parent
- The most common early signs include repeatedly asking the same question, getting confused in familiar places, struggling to follow a conversation, and losing track of recent events while older memories stay intact. Changes in mood, personality, or ability to manage everyday tasks like cooking or paying bills can also appear early. One instance is rarely a sign of dementia. A consistent pattern over weeks or months is what warrants attention.
- Is memory loss always the first sign of dementia
- Not always. While memory loss is the most widely recognised early sign, some forms of dementia first present as changes in personality, language difficulties, or problems with spatial awareness and coordination. In frontotemporal dementia, for example, behaviour and personality changes are often the first noticeable signs. This is why it is worth speaking to a GP even if your main concern is not memory.
- How do I get a dementia diagnosis for my parent in the UK
- The first step is a GP appointment. The GP will carry out an initial assessment, which usually includes a short cognitive test, and can refer your parent to a specialist memory clinic if warranted. You can attend the appointment with your parent, and if your parent will not go, you can speak to the GP separately to share your concerns. The GP cannot share confidential information without consent, but they can listen to what you have observed.
- My parent says there is nothing wrong. Can I still get them assessed
- This is one of the most common difficulties at this stage, because a lack of insight into one's own symptoms can itself be part of the condition. You can speak to a GP on your own to describe what you have noticed. Some families find it easier to frame the first appointment as a general health check rather than a memory assessment. A GP referral for dementia assessment does not require your parent to accept the reason for going.
- What is the difference between dementia and normal age-related memory loss
- Normal age-related memory change tends to be slow, mild, and does not significantly interfere with daily life. Dementia causes a decline in cognitive function that affects the ability to manage familiar tasks, maintain relationships, and retain new information. The key question is whether what you are seeing is disruptive to daily functioning. If it is, that goes beyond typical ageing and is worth investigating with a GP.






