Guides & Resources

ADHD Finance App Basics: Bills, Due Dates, and the System That Stops Slips

If bills keep catching you out, it’s rarely because you don’t care. It’s usually because your system is relying on memory, energy, and perfect timing - and those are exactly the things ADHD makes unreliable.

Money App for ADHD: The Low-Energy Setup That Still Works

If you’ve tried money apps before and they’ve ended up in the same place as the rest - ignored, guilt-inducing, and eventually deleted - you’re not the problem. Most money tools are built for “perfect user” behaviour: daily tracking, tidy habits, and a calm brain.

Neurodivergent Budgeting: A Doable Plan for Bad Brain Days

Bad brain days happen. Low energy, overwhelm, stress, shutdown - whatever the reason, money admin is often the first thing to drop. That doesn’t make you “bad with money”. It means your system needs a low-energy version.

How to Build an Emergency Fund When Your Income Is Irregular

If your income changes month to month, saving can feel impossible. When you’re self-employed, freelance, on variable hours, or juggling unpredictable expenses, it’s hard to commit to a “save £X every month” plan without it backfiring. The goal isn’t to save perfectly. It’s to build a small buffer that makes life less scary.

ADHD Bills Reminder: 7 Prompts That Help Without Nagging

If reminders feel like nagging, your brain will start ignoring them. But if you have ADHD and bills keep catching you out, you still need prompts - just the kind that reduce stress rather than add to it.

Manage Bills Without Overwhelm: A 10-Minute Weekly Money Routine

If bills only get dealt with when they become a crisis, you’re not alone. When executive function is stretched, money admin is often one of the first things to get avoided - not because you don’t care, but because it feels heavy, emotional, and full of tiny steps.

Neurodivergent Money App: What It Is (and What It’s Not)

If you’ve ever downloaded a budgeting app, used it for three days, then ignored the notifications until they felt like accusations, you’re not “bad with money”. The tool probably just wasn’t built for your brain.