Teenage Bedwetting — Causes, Treatment and What to Do
Quick answer: bedwetting in teenagers is far more common than people realise. About 1–2% of 15-year-olds in the UK still wet the bed regularly — that’s roughly 1 in 50–100 teenagers. It is treatable at any age, often in around five months, and treatment in teenagers is just as effective as in younger children. There is nothing wrong with your teenager — and they are not too old to be helped.
The hidden epidemic
Teenage bedwetting is the most under-discussed continence problem in the UK. Most teenagers who wet the bed will tell almost no one. They quietly opt out of sleepovers, school trips, residential weeks. Their parents often don’t know how to raise it, and many GPs don’t routinely ask. The result: years of silent struggle, when proper treatment could resolve it within months.
If you are a parent reading this — your teenager is not the only one. If you are a teenager reading this — you are not the only one, and this is not your fault.
Why does teenage bedwetting happen?
The same three biological systems that drive bedwetting in younger children are at play, often combined:
- Brain–bladder arousal: the deep-sleep brain doesn’t register the bladder’s “I’m full” signal. The alarm directly retrains this — works in teenagers as well as children.
- Antidiuretic hormone: the nighttime ADH rise is reduced or delayed, so urine production stays at daytime levels overnight.
- Functional bladder capacity: often smaller-than-average, sometimes from years of “trying not to drink in the evening” which has shrunk what the bladder can hold.
Genetics matter — about 75% of bedwetting teenagers have a parent who wet the bed. This is biology running on its own track, not a behavioural or psychological issue. Read more on causes.
Things to rule out (more relevant in teenagers)
- Sleep apnoea — particularly in teenagers who snore loudly or are overweight. Sleep-disordered breathing disrupts overnight hormonal regulation and can drive bedwetting. May need a paediatric sleep referral.
- Constipation — even in teenagers. A loaded rectum reduces functional bladder capacity.
- Diabetes — sudden onset of bedwetting in a teenager who was previously dry, especially with thirst, weight loss or fatigue, requires immediate GP review (urine test) to rule out type 1 diabetes.
- Anxiety, mood disturbance — secondary to long-term bedwetting, but sometimes also driving secondary bedwetting (a previously dry teenager wetting again after a stressful event).
- Substance use — alcohol especially affects ADH and bladder control. Worth a frank conversation.
Why teenagers respond well to alarm treatment
Counter to common assumption, teenagers often do better than younger children at alarm treatment because:
- They are highly motivated — the social cost of bedwetting is at its peak in adolescence
- They take ownership of the alarm without needing parents in the room
- They can articulate progress and adjust independently with clinical guidance
- Many can run treatment with minimal parental involvement, which they prefer
What treatment looks like for a teenager
- Free preliminary questionnaire (anonymous, ~5 min) — the teenager themselves can fill this in if they prefer privacy from parents.
- Online assessment with the teenager and parents, or with the teenager alone where appropriate.
- A discreet body-worn alarm — modern wireless alarms are small, can clip inside underwear, and are completely invisible. We recommend the right model based on sleep depth and lifestyle.
- Continuous online support — daily progress chart, weekly check-ins, direct messaging access. Most teenagers prefer this to face-to-face appointments.
- 21 consecutive dry nights with the alarm + a further dry month without — treatment-success criterion.
Average duration: ~5 months. Full step-by-step guide here.
For teenagers reading this directly
You are not the only one. Bedwetting in your teens is a real, recognised, treatable medical condition — not a flaw in you. With proper treatment, you can be reliably dry within months. Most teenagers we see come through treatment quietly, on their own terms, and resume sleepovers and school trips without anyone outside the family knowing.
If you’d rather take the questionnaire yourself before involving your parents, that’s fine — it’s anonymous, takes 5 minutes, and Dr. Kushnir replies within 48 hours. Take it here.
Frequently asked
Will my teenager grow out of it?
Statistically, about 15% per year — slow odds. Active treatment shortens the path dramatically.
Is bedwetting at 14 / 15 / 16 normal?
Common, yes. Untreatable, no. Worth ignoring, definitely not.
Can adults still wet the bed?
About 0.5–1% of adults. Untreated childhood bedwetting can persist into adulthood. Treatment still works.
How can my teenager cope with school residential weeks?
Desmopressin (your GP) gives reliable cover for one-off events. For ongoing treatment, the alarm is the answer.