How to use habit stacking with a digital tracker for ADHD
April 21, 2026by Mindcrate Team
If your brain feels like a browser with 27 tabs open, all playing different music, you might have ADHD. We know what we’re supposed to do. Getting it done is the problem. Most productivity advice feels like it’s written for a completely different kind of brain. "Just be more disciplined" is a fantastic way to make someone with ADHD feel like a complete failure.
But you can link the habits you want to the ones you already have.
This is the whole idea behind habit stacking. Find a habit you already do without thinking, and then bolt a new one onto it. The existing habit becomes the trigger. You’re not building a new routine from scratch; you’re just adding one more car to a train that's already moving.
Why This Works for an ADHD Brain
The ADHD brain has a tough time with executive functions—the mental wiring for planning, starting things, and remembering what you were just doing. We get hit with "time blindness" and fall down rabbit holes. A new habit, floating alone on a to-do list, feels impossible.
Habit stacking gives it an anchor. It connects the new thing you want to do with something you already do automatically. This lowers the mental energy it takes to get started.
Already happening: Brushing your teeth in the morning.
The new part: Doing two minutes of stretching right after.
The trigger isn't some vague goal. It's the physical act of putting down your toothbrush. For a brain that runs on "now" and short-circuits on "later," this is a game-changer. You're not trying to remember to stretch sometime this morning; you're just doing the next thing in a sequence you already started.
I tried to build a meditation habit for years. I set alarms and put sticky notes on my monitor. Nothing worked for more than a couple of days. So I tried stacking it. I decided to meditate for one minute right after my first cup of coffee. I remember the moment I set it up in my app—I was in my 2011 Honda Civic at 4:17 PM, waiting for a friend. The next morning, I drank my coffee and, without really thinking, opened the app. It just happened. The coffee was the starting gun.
The idea of stacking is simple, but an app makes it stick.
1. A reminder that isn't annoying. Let's be honest, some days the anchor habit doesn't even happen on time. A tracker can send a reminder that's actually useful—not just "Do the thing!" but "After you [make coffee], remember to [meditate]."
2. You can see the chain. Seeing your habits stacked together in an app makes the connection feel more real. It's a visual structure that your brain might not be able to build on its own.
3. The streak is everything. Streaks are pure dopamine. For an ADHD brain that's often running low, seeing that number tick up is a real reward. It turns it into a game. You're not just meditating; you're keeping the streak alive. And breaking the chain starts to feel more painful than just doing the two-minute habit.
How to Build Your First Stack
Start stupidly small. The goal isn't to be a new person tomorrow. It's to make the chain. If you want to floss, the new habit isn't "floss all my teeth." It's "floss one tooth." Make it so easy you feel stupid not doing it.
Pick a solid anchor. Choose a habit that's already cemented in your routine. Making coffee, brushing your teeth, taking your shoes off when you get home. These are good triggers. "Checking email" is a bad trigger because it's unpredictable. The trigger needs to be specific.
Use the formula. Just say it out loud or write it down: "After I [current habit], I will [new habit]." Put this in the notes of your habit tracker so you don't forget the logic.
Stack a focus session. For bigger goals, like "work on my project," stack it after a reliable anchor like lunch. "After I finish lunch, I will start a 25-minute focus session." Using an app with a focus timer built-in means you don't have to switch contexts, which is one less friction point.
This isn't a magic bullet. It’s a system that works with your brain's wiring instead of fighting it. By linking your actions together and using a tool to keep yourself honest, you create a structure that can actually survive the beautiful chaos of an ADHD mind.
Free on Google Play
This article is a map. Trider is the vehicle.
Streak tracking. Pomodoro timer habits. AI Habit Coach. Mood journal. Freeze days. DMs. Squad challenges. Built by someone who needed it.