Murray's defence lawyers presented Waldman to the court in a bid to counter evidence implicating the doctor over Jackson's death from an overdose of the powerful sedative propofol.
The addiction specialist stressed the difference between drug addiction and dependency - addiction is a repetitive behaviour, while dependency is a physical need for a substance.
Cross-examined by prosecutor David Walgren, Waldman said that, based purely on the records from Klein's office, he would "probably not" diagnose Jackson with addiction, only dependency.
But he said the records combined with other evidence that has emerged during the trial, and public knowledge about Jackson, would lead him to believe that Jackson was probably an addict.
Murray's lawyers have tried during the trial - which could end within days - to suggest that Jackson was a desperate drug addict who could have killed himself by self-administering an overdose on the day of his death.
Prosecutors say he is guilty of involuntary manslaughter by giving Jackson a cocktail of sedatives, including propofol, to try to get him to sleep, and then abandoning the singer at the crucial moment, returning to find him lifeless.
Murray faces up to four years in jail if found guilty by the seven-man, five-woman jury.
-AAP