Linking new habits to existing routines for ADHD without getting overwhelmed.
April 21, 2026by Mindcrate Team
A better way to build habits when you have ADHD
The usual advice for building habits is "just be consistent." For anyone with ADHD, thatโs like being told to grow wings and fly. It's not that you don't want to; it's that your brain is wired for novelty and fights the boring repetition that habits seem to require.
So the typical approach backfires. We go all-in, get bored or overwhelmed, and then the shame spiral hits when we inevitably quit.
There's a better way. It's called habit stacking.
The idea is simple: instead of forcing a new habit out of thin air, you attach it to something you already do automatically. You're not inventing a routine, just adding one small step to an existing one. It takes the thinking out of it, which is half the battle for an ADHD brain.
Why this actually works for ADHD
Your brain isn't broken. It just craves dopamine and clear signals, and habit stacking provides both. The existing habit becomes an automatic trigger for the new one.
After I brush my teeth...
I will put my dirty clothes in the hamper.
After I pour my morning coffee...
I will take my vitamins.
You're piggybacking on neural pathways that are already there instead of trying to carve new ones by sheer force of will. It bypasses the need for constant reminders and drains less of your executive function.
This only works if you fight the urge to do too much at once. The ADHD brain loves to go from zero to a hundred, planning to build ten new habits by Friday. This is a trap.
Start microscopically small. So small it feels ridiculous.
Want to start meditating? Don't aim for 20 minutes. Stack it: "After I sit down with my coffee, I will meditate for 60 seconds." One minute. That's it. You build momentum with tiny wins.
I once tried to build a habit of tidying my apartment. My goal was "clean for 15 minutes every day." I lasted two days. My next attempt was different. My anchor habit was taking my shoes off when I got home. My new, stacked habit was: "After I take my shoes off, I will pick up one thing that is out of place." Sometimes it was a jacket, sometimes it was a stray coffee mug I'd left on the table at 7:14 AM. Just one thing. It was so easy I couldn't say no. And slowly, it grew from there.
Using tools without getting distracted
Habit tracker apps can give you a nice dopamine hit. Seeing a streak grow feels good, and that's the kind of feedback the ADHD brain thrives on. But they can also turn into another thing to feel overwhelmed by.
Find an app that's dead simple. Too many buttons and notifications are just traps. You want to track the habit, not make the app a new hobby. The point is to use the technology as a simple reminder, not a whole new project to manage.
When it falls apart
You will miss a day. Or a week. All-or-nothing thinking is the enemy.
A missed day isn't a failure, it's just data. Instead of quitting, the goal is simply to restart. The habit stack is still there. Your coffee machine is still your trigger. Your front door is still your trigger. You just have to do it once to get back on track.
This isn't about being perfect. It's just about coming back to it. That's the whole game.
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