Every cleaning system you've ever tried was built for a brain that can remember to do things, sustain motivation without immediate reward, and tolerate the discomfort of starting a task. That is not your brain, and that's not a character flaw.
The actual principle that works
Reduce decisions, not add them. The problem isn't that you don't know how to clean — it's that by the time you've decided what to clean, in what order, with what supplies, you've already spent the executive function you needed to actually do it.
What consistently comes up
A robot vacuum on an automatic schedule is the single most recommended purchase for ADHD households. You set it once, it runs whether you remember or not. The Roomba j7 specifically avoids obstacles and pet waste without needing you to prep the floor first — that "prep the floor before vacuuming" step is where most ADHD cleaning systems break down.
- One laundry basket per room — no sorting required, just grab and go
- Paper plates on high-overwhelm days — removing dishes from the equation is not laziness
- Everything needs a "home" that's visible — ADHD brains don't put things away in places they can't see
- 5-minute resets over deep cleans — sustainable beats perfect every time
What doesn't work
Cleaning schedules. Chore charts. "Cleaning routines" that require you to remember the routine. Any system with more than three steps. Anything that requires motivation to initiate — the system has to work on your worst days, not just your good ones.
Bottom line
Automate whatever you can. The Roomba j7 handles floors. Everything else: reduce friction to zero. If putting something away takes more than two seconds, it won't happen consistently — design your space around that reality.
This page contains affiliate links. If you buy something, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.