Best ADHD planner apps in 2026 (an honest review)

10 min read · April 28, 2026

TimeNinja Today screen with the daily plan

"Best ADHD planner app" listicles are usually written by people who haven't used the apps. We did the opposite: we used the top six ADHD planner apps for 30 days each, kept notes, and ranked them by what actually helps an ADHD brain — not by what looks good in a screenshot.

Yes, we make one of these apps (TimeNinja). We'll be honest about where it falls short too.

What we evaluated

1. TimeNinja 🥷

Best for: ADHD adults and families who need deadline-driven planning + visual time.

Strengths: Backward planning is genuinely unique. Visual shrinking ring. AI Break It Down. Learns your real timing with 25–75% bands. Family Mode is great for parents.

Weak spots: iOS only today. No web app. Lifetime pricing is generous but yearly is the sweet spot.

2. Tiimo

Best for: Visual schedule users who think in blocks.

Strengths: Beautiful visual schedule. Strong neurodivergent community.

Weak spots: No backward planning from a deadline — you still have to estimate. No real-timing learning loop. Premium is pricier than alternatives.

3. Routinery

Best for: Building rigid morning/evening routines.

Strengths: Solid routine-step UX. Quick to set up.

Weak spots: Routines only — no flexible task or deadline support. No AI breakdown.

4. Todoist / TickTick

Best for: Neurotypical project management adapted for ADHD.

Strengths: Mature ecosystem, every platform.

Weak spots: No native sense of time. No backward planning. Tasks pile up invisibly. Most ADHD users abandon within weeks.

5. Sunsama

Best for: ADHD knowledge workers who time-block their day.

Strengths: Forces daily planning ritual. Pulls from calendar + tasks.

Weak spots: $20/month. No visual time. Daily ritual is heavy if you're already overwhelmed.

6. Forest / Focus apps

Best for: Stopping phone-scroll spirals during work.

Strengths: Gamification works for some.

Weak spots: Doesn't help you plan or estimate. Solves one symptom, not the cause.

The gap none of them fully closes

After 30 days each, one pattern emerged: every app assumes you can estimate how long tasks take. ADHD brains famously can't. So plans always slip — and the app gets blamed.

The fix isn't a better todo list. It's a system that:

  1. Plans backwards from a real deadline (not "today's todo list").
  2. Tracks how long tasks actually take.
  3. Uses your data to make the next plan realistic.

That's the thesis TimeNinja was built around. Whichever app you pick, look for those three things.

Quick decision guide


Try TimeNinja free for 7 days