How to build a cleaning system that survives ADHD
A practical guide to keeping a tidy home when your brain works on interest, not importance. Based on interviews with ADHD adults and the system that came out of them.
If you have ADHD, "just build a cleaning routine" is advice that has almost certainly failed you. You've tried it. You've built beautiful colour-coded spreadsheets and Notion dashboards and Trello boards and they all end the same way: three weeks of enthusiasm, then a bad day, then months of pretending the system doesn't exist.
This post is about what actually works. Not theory — a real system, refined over interviews with ADHD adults who now keep their homes tidy. Tidywell is built around it, but you can use the principles without the app.
The core problem
ADHD brains don't respond to importance the way neurotypical brains do. Willpower and discipline aren't the relevant levers. What does work: interest, urgency, novelty, and accountability. Any system that ignores those will fail.
Which means: traditional chore apps with rigid schedules, streak pressure, and guilt-based overdue indicators are actively counterproductive. They rely on the exact machinery that's broken.
The five principles
1. Interest-based, not importance-based
"Clean the kitchen" is important. Unfortunately, "important" isn't a button in the ADHD brain. What works instead: make the task interesting. Add novelty. Play a podcast. Start a Sprint. Turn it into a game. We built the virtual home reward system around this exact principle — the shop of furniture you can unlock turns chores into loot drops.
2. Break tasks small enough to start
The biggest ADHD blocker isn't finishing tasks — it's starting them. If a task feels overwhelming, you won't start. Ever. The solve: break tasks until the first step takes under 2 minutes. "Clean the kitchen" → "wipe counters" → "pick up three things from the counter." At some granularity, the task is trivially startable. Tidywell's AI breakdown does this automatically, but you can do it manually too.
3. Body doubling is real magic
Body doubling — the practice of working alongside another person — is one of the most research-backed ADHD strategies. It bypasses executive dysfunction by leveraging social accountability. A Sprint with your partner, a FaceTime with a friend, a cleaning YouTuber playing in the background — all of these work.
4. Make missed days free
The biggest reason chore apps fail ADHD users is streak punishment. Miss a day, lose the streak, feel ashamed, delete the app. Build a system where missed days pause rather than break. Tidywell literally freezes your streak in vacation mode. Build this mercy into your system or it will destroy you.
5. Instant, visible reward
Dopamine-deficient brains need immediate feedback. A checkbox isn't enough. A coin payout, a sparkle animation, a sound — all of these give your brain something to respond to. If your cleaning system doesn't feel rewarding in the moment, it won't last.
A minimum-viable routine
If you want to build this without any app:
- Pick 3 rooms you care about most. Ignore the rest for now.
- For each room, write 3 tasks, each under 2 minutes.
- Every day, do any 3 of the 9. Missed days are fine.
- Pair it with something rewarding — music, a podcast, a friend on speakerphone.
- After two weeks, add more.
That's it. Not a perfect system. A survivable one. And survivable beats perfect every single time.
Tidywell exists because we got tired of seeing brilliant friends and family members beat themselves up over apps that were never designed for them. If any of this resonated, give Tidywell a try. It's free forever for small homes, and it will never make you feel worse about your space than you already do.