A no-stress ADHD packing system with checklists, pockets, backups, and last-minute tricks so you don’t forget your charger, meds, or ID.
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Get it on Play StoreIf you have ADHD, packing can turn into a weird little panic spiral fast. You start with socks, then suddenly you’re staring at three half-charged devices and wondering whether your passport is in the drawer, the backpack, or the void.
So here’s my hard rule: pack the irreplaceable stuff first. Not the cute outfits. Not the extra snack bars. The stuff that can wreck the trip if you forget it - charger, meds, ID, wallet, keys.
I once left for a weekend trip feeling smug because I had “mostly packed.” Then I got to the train station and realized my phone was at 8%, my charger was still on my desk, and my ADHD meds were sitting next to the coffee machine at home. That little disaster taught me a simple truth - if it’s essential, it gets a home and a checklist item. No exceptions.
I swear by this because it cuts the chaos down fast.
You need 3 places for travel-critical things:
That’s it. Those items don’t get “temporarily” set down on a table. They don’t go loose in the bag. They go in the same place every single trip.
But the real trick is making those pockets boring. Use the same pouch, the same color, the same placement. ADHD brains love patterns once they’re obvious enough. If you have to think about where something lives, it’s already too late.
This is the part people skip, and then they act surprised when they’re scrambling at 11:47 p.m.
Pack 24 hours early. Not “start thinking about it” early. Actually put things in the bag. If the trip is Friday, build the bag Thursday. If you wait until the morning of, your brain will start negotiating with you and you will lose.
And make a pile on the floor. Not in your head. A physical pile beats mental planning every time.
My packing pile usually has 5 groups:
That visible mess is useful. It shows you what’s missing. If the pile looks suspiciously neat, you probably forgot something important.
A giant checklist looks impressive and works terribly.
So keep it tiny. I’m talking 10 to 15 items max. If your list is 47 bullets long, your ADHD brain will stop trusting it and start winging it. That’s when you forget the charger and bring three shirts you don’t even like.
Mine has the basics:
And yes, I keep it in the same notes app every time. Better yet, I’ve used Trider (myhabits.in) for reminders and repeatable routines when I need the checklist to actually follow me around instead of living in my head.
You do not need more willpower. You need a system that interrupts your brain at the right time.
Set 3 alarms:
And name the alarms like a real person, not a polite robot. Not “Reminder.” Use something sharp like “Don’t forget your meds” or “Phone dies without charger.” Your brain is more likely to react to a sentence that feels slightly rude.
Also, put the alarm where you can’t ignore it. Sound on. Vibration on. If you always swipe alarms away in your sleep, move them earlier. Respect your own patterns instead of pretending you’re magically different this trip.
This is my strongest opinion - buy duplicates for the things that break your trip if they vanish.
Have a second charger. Keep a spare charging cable in your bag. Leave an extra pen, some backup meds if your doctor allows it, and a cheap power bank in your travel pouch.
Why? Because ADHD tax is real. If you’re always relying on “I’ll remember to move it from the bedroom to the suitcase,” you’re eventually going to fail that test.
If budget is tight, duplicate the highest-risk item first:
A spare charger in the bag has saved me more times than I can count. It’s not glamorous. It’s just good engineering for your life.
Meds and ID are special because forgetting either one can blow up the day.
So don’t just toss them into a random pocket. Put them in a single small pouch or hard case that always travels with you. If possible, keep a photo of your ID and prescription info on your phone too. Not as a replacement - as a backup.
And if you take meds on a schedule, set a separate reminder for the dose time, not just the packing time. Packing the meds is one thing. Actually taking them is another thing entirely.
I’ve found it helps to prep meds the night before in the exact order I’ll need them. If you’re gone for 3 days, line up 3 days’ worth. If you’re carrying extras, label them clearly. No mystery pill chaos.
This is the easiest habit to build and the one I miss the most when I’m traveling badly.
Create a launch pad by the door:
It doesn’t need to be pretty. It just needs to be real. If it lives by the door, your brain gets one final checkpoint before you leave the house.
And if you’re leaving early in the morning, put the launch pad where you literally trip over it. Mild inconvenience is useful. You want the objects to annoy you into remembering them.
This one’s simple and weirdly effective.
Before you zip up the bag, walk out of the room and come back once. Then ask: what would hurt if I forgot it? If the answer is charger, meds, or ID, check those again. If the answer is “everything,” you’re not done yet.
I call this the second-pass check. It catches the stuff your brain stopped seeing because it’s been sitting there too long. ADHD makes familiar things invisible. A fresh glance beats confidence.
Packing is easier when the rest of your evening is calmer.
So reduce decisions:
The fewer “What if I need this?” decisions you make at 10 p.m., the better. Decision fatigue is where ADHD packing goes to die.
And don’t aim for perfect. Aim for functional. If your bag has the essentials and one extra shirt, you’re winning. You are not preparing for a fashion competition. You are trying to get through a trip without borrowing a phone charger from a stranger.
If you want the shortest possible version, use this:
That’s the core. Everything else is optional.
And if you travel a lot, keep one master packing list saved somewhere easy to edit. The goal is not to remember everything from scratch every time. The goal is to build a system that remembers for you.
If you want a simple way to turn that into a habit instead of a one-time heroic effort, try Trider. It’s a nice fit for checklists and repeat reminders, which is basically half the battle when your brain is already juggling too much.