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.
This post is educational only (not financial advice). It’s a practical, neurodivergent-friendly “minimum viable” approach to budgeting that still protects you when you’re running on fumes.
The goal: reduce harm, not be perfect
On bad brain days, the aim isn’t:
- tracking every penny
- making big decisions
- doing a full budget reset
The aim is:
- fewer surprises
- fewer late fees
- less panic next week
Your minimum viable plan (10 minutes)
Set a timer for 10 minutes.
1) Look at what’s due next
Check the next 7 days:
- bills
- renewals
- anything time-sensitive
Write down what’s due if it helps. Keep it rough.
2) Protect the “most important” bill
Pick the one bill that causes the most damage if missed.
Your job is to make that one safer:
- check it’s covered, or
- set a reminder to move money, or
- confirm the payment method
3) Do one tiny action
Choose one:
- move money for a bill
- pay one bill
- set one reminder (3-7 days before a due date)
- mark a bill as paid
- cancel one subscription you don’t want
Stop after one action.
The 2-minute version (for really bad days)
- Open your banking app
- Check what’s due next
- Set one reminder
- Close the app
That counts.
What to do if you’ve avoided for weeks
If you haven’t looked in a while, don’t try to “catch up” perfectly.
Re-enter by doing facts only:
- what’s due soon?
- what’s urgent?
- what’s the smallest next step?
next steps
Pick one repeating moment in your week (payday is best for many people) and set a reminder: “10-minute money check-in”.
Your system only needs to work most of the time to reduce stress.
If bills are already piling up, or you’re getting letters you’re scared to open, support can make a huge difference.
In the UK, you can get free, non-judgemental help from organisations like StepChange, National Debtline, or Citizens Advice.
If the stress is affecting sleep, mental health, or day-to-day functioning, it’s also worth speaking to your GP or a trusted professional.
You deserve support – not more self-blame.
Take a look at these organisations that just want to help.

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