anxiety vs panic attack
Compare anxiety and panic-attack search interest over the past year with a simple trend chart.
Summary
anxiety is searched more than panic-attack in this period, with an average gap of about 94 percent.
- anxiety changed by about 23 percent from early to late period.
- panic-attack changed by about 0 percent from early to late period.
At a glance
- Average interest: anxiety 80, panic-attack 5
- Peaks: anxiety September 2025, panic-attack September 2025
- Recent trend: anxiety rising, panic-attack steady
- Stability: anxiety steady, panic-attack steady
- Head to head: anxiety led 100 percent of the time, panic-attack led 0 percent
- Crossovers: 0
Side by side
| Metric | anxiety | panic attack |
|---|---|---|
| Average interest | 80 | 5 |
| Recent trend | rising | steady |
| Stability | steady | steady |
| Peak month | September 2025 | September 2025 |
| Best month by average | September 2025 | September 2025 |
| Share of leading periods | 100% | 0% |
| Crossovers | 0 | not recent |
Deep dive
This view summarises how people searched for anxiety and panic-attack over the last 12m. The chart shows monthly values from zero to one hundred where one hundred marks the local high for a term.
Breaking the period into thirds, averages were: early anxiety 71 and panic-attack 5, middle anxiety 82 and panic-attack 5, recent anxiety 86 and panic-attack 5.
There was no clear crossover. One term held the lead across most of the timeline.
anxiety peaked in September 2025, while panic-attack peaked in September 2025.
anxiety looks steady with a rising trend. panic-attack looks steady with a steady trend.
What this means
Scores come from Google Trends. Each series is scaled to its own peak within the chosen period. Use the chart to compare direction and timing rather than total search counts.