Most advice on daily routines is useless if you have ADHD.
You already know routines are supposed to be good for you. You don't need another article explaining that structure reduces stress. The problem is, that advice doesn't explain how to build a routine when your brain feels like a browser with 100 tabs open, all playing different music.
Standard advice assumes a brain that can just decide to do something and then follow through. For anyone with severe ADHD, that’s like telling someone to just "be taller." It’s not a choice. The very skills needed to build a routine—planning, focusing, and controlling impulses—are the ones we have trouble with.
This isn't about buying a fancy planner. It's about building a system that works with your brain instead of fighting it.
Aim for "Good Enough," Not "Perfect"
Perfectionism is the enemy of a good routine. You map out the "perfect" schedule, optimizing every second. It works for a day or two, but then you oversleep or a meeting runs long, and the entire structure falls apart. Guilt sets in, and you scrap the whole thing.
The fix is to stop trying to build a skyscraper and just lay a single brick. Pick one thing to do. Not a 12-step morning routine. Just one, ridiculously small thing.
- Put your shoes by the door before bed.
- Drink a glass of water when you wake up.
- Do two push-ups.
This is your anchor. It’s the one non-negotiable task you build everything else around. Once it's automatic, you can add another small habit. After you drink your water, for example, you take your medication. You're just linking a new task to one that's already there.
Get It Out of Your Head
Your brain is for having ideas, not for storing them. If you have ADHD, relying on memory is a losing game. You have to externalize everything.
- Visual Cues: Use sticky notes or a whiteboard. Write on your bathroom mirror with a dry-erase marker. Put the reminder in the physical spot where the task happens.
- Timers and Alarms: Set alarms for everything—when to start a task, when to stop, and when to switch to something else. A visual timer can help with time blindness, where you can't feel whether five minutes or an hour has passed.
- Apps That Help: A good habit tracker can give you the little reward your brain wants. Seeing your progress visually in an app like Trider can be surprisingly motivating. Some apps even turn your to-do list into a game.