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Panic Attack vs Anxiety Attack: What's the Difference?

LAR Coaching Editorial Team · 26 December 2025

Panic Attack vs Anxiety Attack: What's the Difference?

They feel similar. They are not the same. Here is the clinical and practical difference between a panic attack and an anxiety attack — and why it matters for recovery.

Online, the terms are used interchangeably. Clinically, they are not.

Panic attacks: the official definition

A panic attack is a sudden, discrete episode of intense fear or discomfort that peaks within ten minutes and is accompanied by at least four of the following: pounding heart, sweating, trembling, shortness of breath, chest pain, nausea, dizziness, derealisation, fear of dying, fear of losing control, numbness or tingling, hot or cold flushes.

Crucially, panic attacks often arrive without warning. You can be sitting in a cinema, driving on a motorway, lying in bed at 3am — and suddenly the full physiological storm hits with no obvious trigger.

Anxiety attacks: the practical definition

"Anxiety attack" is not a formal diagnosis. It is the term most people use for an episode of intense anxiety that builds gradually in response to an identifiable stressor. Symptoms overlap with panic — racing heart, tight chest, racing thoughts — but the onset is slower and the trigger is usually obvious.

The critical difference

  • Panic attack = sudden, peaks fast, often no trigger
  • Anxiety attack = builds gradually, identifiable trigger, can last hours
  • Both are produced by the same underlying mechanism: a sensitised fight-or-flight response. The difference is essentially how quickly and from what starting point that response fires.

    Why it matters for recovery

    If you experience repeated panic attacks, you may be heading toward — or already meet criteria for — Panic Disorder. If you experience repeated anxiety attacks tied to specific situations, you may be heading toward Generalised Anxiety Disorder, social anxiety, or a specific phobia.

    The labels matter for clinical pathways. They matter much less for recovery itself. The Linden Method — now delivered through LAR Coaching — addresses the underlying sensitisation that produces both. Whether you call your episodes panic or anxiety, the resolution is the same.

    What to do during an episode

  • Do not fight the symptoms. Resistance amplifies them.
  • Slow the exhale (longer than the inhale) to halt hyperventilation.
  • Anchor your attention in something neutral and external (five things you can see, four you can hear, three you can touch).
  • Remind yourself: "This is uncomfortable, not dangerous. It always passes."
  • These are first-aid measures. They are not a cure. The cure is to stop the response from firing inappropriately in the first place — which is what LAR Coaching is designed to do.

    The next step

    If any of this resonates, book a free 30-minute Recovery Call with one of our LAR Coaches. No pressure, no obligation — just a real conversation about what is happening to you and whether the LAR programme is the right fit. Sessions are delivered worldwide via Zoom, Phone or FaceTime.

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    Further recovery resources

    If this article has been useful, you may also want to look at Charles Linden's full guide to recovering from panic attacks or first-hand panic disorder recovery stories. Both sit inside the same Linden Group of evidence-based anxiety recovery brands and draw on 30 years of clinical and coaching experience.

    For wider context, readers regularly recommend the full Linden Method online recovery programme alongside the UK residential anxiety recovery retreats. You can also explore the Mental Stealth recovery podcast.

    See the full network of recovery brands at The Linden Group.

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