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Best Free ADHD Planner Apps (No Paywall) in 2026

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Most ADHD apps lock their best features behind subscriptions. These five have functional free tiers that address real ADHD planning needs — visual scheduling, task breakdown, gamified habits, focus timers, and basic task management. The trade-off: free apps rarely address task initiation directly.

Free ADHD Planner App Comparison
AppPriceTypeVisual PlanningADHD-Specific
ThrudayFreeVisual plannerYesYes
Goblin ToolsFreeTask breakdownNoPartial
HabiticaFree/$9/moGamified plannerPartialPartial
Forest$1.99 onceFocus timerNoNo
TickTickFree/$3.99/moTask managerCalendar viewNo
01

Thruday

Free visual daily planner built for ADHD and autism — icons, drag-and-drop, no subscription.

Pros

  • ✓ Completely free
  • ✓ Visual planning with icons
  • ✓ Neurodivergent-focused design

Cons

  • × Early-stage product
  • × Fewer features than paid alternatives
  • × Small user base

Pricing: Free

Verdict: Best fully free visual planner. Less polished than Tiimo but covers the core need — making your day visible — at zero cost.

02

Goblin Tools

AI task breakdown — paste a vague task, get concrete sub-steps instantly.

Pros

  • ✓ Free and instant
  • ✓ No account needed
  • ✓ Directly addresses overwhelm paralysis

Cons

  • × Single feature only
  • × No scheduling or tracking
  • × Not a planner

Pricing: Free

Verdict: Not a planner, but solves a planner's biggest failure point: when the task on your list is too vague to start. Use alongside any planner.

03

Habitica

RPG gamification layered on habits, dailies, and to-dos. Free tier covers all core features.

Pros

  • ✓ Full gamification on free tier
  • ✓ Active community and party quests
  • ✓ Covers habits, dailies, and tasks

Cons

  • × Character takes damage on missed tasks
  • × RPG aesthetic alienates many adult women
  • × High setup friction

Pricing: Free / $9/month for cosmetic extras

Verdict: Most feature-complete free option. The punishment mechanics are divisive — some ADHD users thrive with stakes, others spiral into shame.

04

Forest

Plant virtual trees by staying off your phone. One-time purchase, no subscription.

Pros

  • ✓ $1.99 one-time, no recurring cost
  • ✓ Simple and effective for phone distraction
  • ✓ Real tree planting partnership

Cons

  • × Focus timer only, not a planner
  • × Tree dies if you leave the app
  • × Single-purpose

Pricing: $1.99 one-time

Verdict: Cheapest paid option with no subscription. Effective for one specific problem: phone distraction during focused work.

05

TickTick

Task manager with built-in Pomodoro timer and calendar view. Free tier covers core planning.

Pros

  • ✓ Free tier includes task management and Pomodoro
  • ✓ Calendar view makes schedule visible
  • ✓ Cross-platform sync

Cons

  • × Not ADHD-specific
  • × Overdue tasks create shame
  • × Premium features locked at $3.99/month

Pricing: Free / $3.99/month

Verdict: Best free general-purpose planner with ADHD-useful features. The built-in Pomodoro timer specifically helps with time blindness.

None of these fully work? We know.

Mutra is built for the tasks no app can make you do. Peer task exchange — sign up.

The Free App Trade-Off for ADHD

Free ADHD apps solve specific problems well. Thruday makes your day visual. Goblin Tools breaks overwhelming tasks into steps. Habitica adds dopamine rewards to task completion.

What free apps consistently miss: task initiation support. When you know what to do, you can see it on your planner, and you still can’t start — that’s a different executive function failure that most free tools don’t address.

The practical approach: start with free tools to cover planning and tracking, then add paid tools only for the specific gap that free ones leave open.

When Free Isn’t Enough

Free planners assume you can execute what you’ve planned. If your primary struggle is:

Planning and organizing: Free tools work. Thruday and TickTick cover this well.

Task overwhelm: Free tools work. Goblin Tools breaks vague tasks into concrete steps.

Staying focused: Partially free. Forest and Habitica help. Focusmate’s free tier gives 3 body doubling sessions per week.

Starting tasks you’ve already planned: Free tools fall short. This is where task initiation support — body doubling (Focusmate) or peer task exchange (Mutra) — fills the gap that planners leave open.

Q&A

Are free ADHD apps as good as paid ones?

Free apps cover specific aspects well — Thruday for visual planning, Goblin Tools for task breakdown, Habitica for gamified tracking. What free apps typically lack: ADHD-specific coaching (Inflow), visual timers (Tiimo), and task initiation support. If your primary struggle is planning and tracking, free works. If it's initiation or sustained focus, paid tools fill gaps free ones don't.

Q&A

What's the best free ADHD planner for women?

Thruday is the most purpose-built free option — visual scheduling designed for neurodivergent users. If you need gamification, Habitica's free tier is fully functional. If planning isn't your bottleneck but task overwhelm is, Goblin Tools breaks tasks into steps at no cost. The best choice depends on which executive function gap causes the most friction.

An estimated 6.0% of adults had a current ADHD diagnosis, equivalent to approximately 15.5 million U.S. adults

Source: CDC MMWR, Staley et al., 2024

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Is Thruday actually free or does it have a paid tier?
Thruday is currently free with no premium tier. It's an early-stage product, so the feature set is more limited than Tiimo. For basic visual day planning without a subscription, it's the best current option.
Does Habitica's free tier expire or lock features over time?
No. Habitica's free tier is permanent and fully functional for habits, dailies, to-dos, and party quests. The $9/month subscription only adds cosmetic items (equipment, gear, pets). Productivity features are not paywalled.
Are there free ADHD apps specifically for iPhone?
Goblin Tools works in any browser including Safari on iPhone. Habitica has a free iOS app. Thruday is available on iOS. TickTick has a free iOS app with Pomodoro timer included. Most free ADHD planning tools are cross-platform rather than iOS-exclusive.

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