This post attempts to answer the most commonly asked questions in one place. Bookmark and share with new community members.
Q: What does modafinil feel like?
A: Subtle wakefulness and reduced friction getting to work. Not a high. Not jitteriness. More like the feeling of being well-rested and ready to work.
Q: Will I feel it the first time?
A: Most people yes, though some have a mild first experience. If nothing happens at 100 mg, try 200 mg before concluding it does not work.
Q: Is it addictive?
A: Physical dependence risk is very low. Psychological dependence (feeling you need it to function) is possible with overuse. Maintain regular breaks.
Q: Will it help me if I am tired?
A: Yes — this is its primary mechanism. But if you are chronically tired, fix the cause (sleep, health, stress) rather than medicating it indefinitely.
Q: Can I take it every day?
A: Pharmacologically yes. Practically, regular breaks improve outcomes and reduce cumulative sleep quality degradation.
Q: What about the hormonal contraceptive interaction?
A: Real and significant. Use barrier contraception in addition to hormonal methods while on modafinil.
Q: Is the rash dangerous?
A: Rarely. But any unexplained rash in the first 5 weeks of use = stop and see a doctor same day.
Q: Modafinil vs armodafinil?
A: Both excellent. Modafinil = faster onset, stronger peak. Armodafinil = longer duration, smoother, fewer headaches.
Agreed — a maintained FAQ wiki page would be more valuable than scattered individual posts. This is a great starting point for that.
The psychological dependence note under addiction is one I would highlight even more strongly. I have seen people genuinely distressed when their delivery was delayed. That is psychological dependence.
The “fix the cause if chronically tired” answer to the sleep question is the right answer that most FAQ-type posts refuse to give because it might discourage use.
Pinning this. Exactly what a newcomer-friendly FAQ should look like — concise, honest, covers the key points without overwhelming.
Sharing this. First post I will point new community members to from now on.
The one thing I would add: modafinil works best when you already know what you are supposed to be doing. Task clarity is a prerequisite, not something the drug provides.
The modafinil vs armodafinil summary is the most concise I have seen. Perfect for directing people who ask the question for the 500th time.
The SJS rash FAQ answer is the most medically important one here and is appropriately unambiguous. Stop and see a doctor. Not “monitor it.” Not “see if it goes away.” Stop and see a doctor.
Would you be willing to maintain this as a living document and add questions as they come up in the community?