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A smartphone screen displays text: Our Design Rule at Bill-e-Buddy! We’re trying to change how people handle their money worries. with their logo which is a smiling button featuring cartoon eyes.

Most money tools assume you’ll be consistent: daily tracking, tidy habits, and a clear head.

That’s not real life – especially for ADHD brains.

One of our core design rules for Bill-e-Buddy is simple: money admin should still work on low-energy days.

Here’s what that means in practice, and how it shapes what we’re building.

What “low-energy money admin” actually looks like

Low-energy money admin is the reality for a lot of people. It can look like:

  • you’re tired, burnt out, or overstimulated
  • you’re behind and feel ashamed
  • you’re avoiding looking because you’re not ready for bad news
  • you have five minutes and your brain wants to do anything else

A tool that only works when you’re focused and motivated is not really a support tool. It’s a “good day” tool.

When money is emotionally loaded, your brain can freeze. That can show up as:

  • unopened letters
  • ignored banking notifications
  • “I’ll sort it later” loops

This isn’t laziness. It’s a stress response plus executive function friction.

The problem with “perfect user” tools

Daily tracking creates a common pattern:

  • You start strong
  • You miss a day
  • Missing a day turns into missing a week
  • The app starts to feel like a judgement
  • You stop opening it

Then when you finally come back, it feels like you have to “catch up” for an hour – which makes avoidance worse.

A tool shouldn’t punish you for being human.

Our rule in practice (what we’re building)

“Low-energy still works” means the core actions should be possible quickly, with fewer steps, and with language that helps you restart.

On a low-energy day, the tool should still let you do a tiny check-in, like:

  • “What’s due this week?”
  • “Is the important stuff covered?”
  • “What’s the next money thing I need to know?”

That’s it. One glance that reduces surprise later.

Prompts should:

  • arrive early enough to be useful
  • be easy to snooze
  • avoid shame language

The goal is support, not pressure.

If you haven’t checked in for a while, the tool shouldn’t treat you like you’ve failed.

It should help you re-enter with:

  • a quick summary
  • one suggested next step
  • a “minimum viable” option

So you can restart without needing a full reset day.

How this supports routines

We’re designing around routines that are realistic:

  • a 10-minute weekly check-in
  • a payday reminder
  • a “subscriptions/renewals scan” once a month

Not because daily tracking is wrong, but because it’s not reliable for a lot of ADHD brains – and a tool should meet people where they are.

next steps

If this idea resonates, your first step is simple:

  • Pick one money task that regularly slips (a bill, renewal, or payment date).
  • Set one reminder 3-7 days before.

That single prompt can reduce stress fast – and it’s the kind of “low-energy support” we’re building into Bill-e-Buddy.

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.

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