ADHD-Friendly Daily Planner Template for Time Management
If you have ADHD, you know most planners are a joke. They’re all empty boxes and hourly slots, assuming your brain works in a straight line. And by February, they’re usually sitting in a drawer—a crisp monument to good intentions. You aren't the problem. The tool is. An ADHD brain needs a system that embraces the chaos, not one that fights it.
So forget the rigid, time-blocked spreadsheets your boss loves. We’re making a planner for an interest-driven brain. The goal isn’t to schedule every minute. It’s to build a dashboard that helps you figure out what matters right now.
The Daily Dashboard: Not a To-Do List
A to-do list is where good ideas go to die. A "dashboard" is an active control panel. The point is to see your day on a single page and not feel overwhelmed.
1. The Brain Dump Zone: Start here. Before you try to prioritize anything, get every single thought out of your head. "Call the dentist," "That weird podcast idea," "Buy olive oil," "Why did I say that thing to Brenda at 4:17 PM last Tuesday?"—dump it all here. This isn’t a list of things to do today. It's a holding pen to clear your mind.
2. The "Must-Do" Trio: Now, look at that glorious mess. Pick three things. Just three. These are your non-negotiables. If you get these three done, you've won the day. It forces you to be ruthless about what's important and gives you a clear target.
3. The "Could-Do" Sandbox: Everything else goes here. This is a low-pressure list of things you could do if you find the time and energy. Maybe you’ll do one. Maybe none. It doesn't matter. What matters is separating the essential from the optional, which is a huge challenge when everything feels urgent.
Anchor Habits and Time-Blocking Lite
Rigid schedules are brittle. The second you get a flat tire on your 2011 Honda Civic, the whole day feels like a failure. Instead of scheduling tasks, try building your day around a few "anchor habits"—things you do anyway, like making coffee or walking the dog.