ADHD Coaching: What It Is and Whether It Helps
TLDR
ADHD coaching is a structured support relationship focused on developing practical strategies for executive dysfunction. The ADDA notes that 'ADHD coaching can make a significant difference for adult ADHDers with executive dysfunction.' Coaching differs from therapy: therapy addresses emotional and psychological patterns, coaching addresses daily functioning and strategy implementation.
- ADHD coaching
- A structured support relationship where a trained coach helps adults with ADHD develop strategies for executive function challenges: organization, time management, task initiation, and goal follow-through.
DEFINITION
Coaching vs Therapy vs Apps
Therapy addresses the emotional and psychological impact of ADHD: shame, self-blame, relationship patterns, trauma from years of undiagnosed struggle. It goes deep.
Coaching addresses daily functioning: developing strategies, building habits, troubleshooting systems, and maintaining accountability. It goes wide.
Apps provide specific tools for specific gaps: visual planning, task breakdown, body doubling, gamification. They go narrow.
Most adults with ADHD benefit from some combination. The question is which components you need most right now.
What to Expect from Coaching
Sessions typically run 30-60 minutes, weekly or biweekly. A typical session includes: reviewing what worked and didn’t since the last session, identifying the week’s biggest executive function challenge, developing a specific strategy, and setting accountability checkpoints.
Good ADHD coaches understand that strategies fail, systems collapse, and motivation fluctuates. They don’t judge — they troubleshoot. The relationship itself provides the external accountability that ADHD brains need to maintain effort over time.
Finding an ADHD Coach
Look for coaches with ADHD-specific training (not general life coaches). The ADDA and CHADD maintain coach directories. Ask about their approach to ADHD specifically — how they handle missed sessions, failed strategies, and the emotional aspects of executive dysfunction.
Some ADHD apps (like Inflow) include coaching elements at a fraction of individual coaching costs. These don’t replace personalized coaching but can provide structured guidance for women who can’t access individual coaching financially.
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Q&A
What does an ADHD coach do?
An ADHD coach helps you: identify which executive function gaps cause the most daily friction, develop practical strategies for those specific gaps, build accountability structures that keep strategies active, troubleshoot when strategies fail, and adjust approaches based on what's working. It's practical, goal-oriented, and focused on daily functioning rather than emotional processing.
Q&A
Is ADHD coaching worth the cost?
ADHD coaching typically costs $100-300/session. Whether it's worth the cost depends on: your ADHD severity, whether self-directed strategies have failed, and your financial capacity. The ADDA endorses coaching as effective. For women who've tried apps, books, and self-directed strategies without success, coaching provides the human accountability and personalization that tools can't. For those who respond well to app-based support, coaching may be unnecessary.
Want to learn more?
Do I need a diagnosis to work with an ADHD coach?
How is ADHD coaching different from life coaching?
Is ADHD coaching covered by insurance?
Ready to stop doing it alone?
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