ADHD travel packing made simple: a no-stress system for charger, meds, ID, and all the stuff you always forget before a trip.
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Get it on Play StoreI have packed for trips like a raccoon under pressure. Half-dressed, one shoe on, convinced I’m “basically done,” and then—boom—I’m in the Uber with no charger and zero idea where my ID went.
And if you have ADHD, you already know the worst part isn’t forgetting stuff. It’s forgetting the same stuff over and over again, no matter how many times you swear this trip will be different.
So here’s the truth: you do not need a perfect packing personality. You need a system that catches the important stuff when your brain decides to yeet itself into five different directions.
Memory is the enemy here. Not because you’re bad at this, but because ADHD brains love novelty, urgency, and chaos. Packing from memory is basically handing your brain a microphone and asking it to perform under a strobe light.
So don’t.
Use a written packing list every single time. Not “I’ll remember.” Not “I’ve got the basics.” A real list. On paper or in your notes app. Same list, every trip, with the non-negotiables at the top.
Mine always has these three first:
Because if those three are missing, the whole trip gets annoying fast.
This is one of those tricks that sounds too simple, which is usually how you know it works.
Make a dedicated travel essentials pouch and never unpack the crucial stuff from it unless you have to. Mine has a charger, charging cable, a spare cable, earbuds, a small pill case, and a pen. That’s it. Boring is beautiful.
And here’s the ADHD magic: if the bag lives in one spot, you’re not starting from zero every time. You’re just checking and topping it up.
Put these in it:
Also, if you’re the kind of person who constantly loses chargers, buy a second one now. I’m serious. The cost of one backup charger is way cheaper than the meltdown tax.
Your meds are not an afterthought. They’re the headliner.
Pack them before clothes, before shoes, before random “just in case” items you will definitely not use. Put them in your carry-on or day bag, not buried in checked luggage. If your trip is longer than a few days, bring a few extra doses if your prescription allows it.
A few rules I live by:
And if you take meds at a specific time, build that into your travel day. Airports, delays, time zones—none of it should decide whether you remember your prescription.
I’ve had exactly one trip where I packed my meds in a “safe place” and then couldn’t remember the safe place. That was enough for me. Never again.
If you’re prone to last-minute chaos, create a launch zone by the door. One place where everything you need to leave goes the night before.
That means:
This is huge because ADHD brains are much better at handling physical cues than abstract intentions. If it’s by the door, it exists. If it’s not, it may as well have evaporated into another dimension.
And yes, this is exactly the kind of habit Trider (myhabits.in) is good for—those tiny repeatable routines that stop important things from slipping through the cracks.
I used to pack by category like a very optimistic adult. Shirts in one pile, pants in another, toiletries in a third. It looked organized, but I still forgot stuff because everything felt equally important.
Now I pack by zone:
This helps because you’re thinking in terms of use, not just stuff. It’s easier to notice what’s missing when you imagine the moment you’ll need it.
This is the part that saves me from my own brain.
Before I leave, I do three checks:
Physically touch the big three:
Say them out loud if you need to. I do. It feels ridiculous. It also works.
Check every pocket, every bag compartment, every random side zipper. ADHD loves hiding important stuff in “temporary” spots that become permanent.
Stand at the door and ask: If I leave right now, can I survive the first 24 hours?
That means:
If the answer is no, go back inside and fix it before you become a frazzled airport legend.
This is the big one.
Create one master list for all trips and stop rewriting it from scratch. Every new list is a trap. You think you’ll tailor it perfectly, but then you forget the basics because your brain is busy reinventing the suitcase wheel.
Your master list should include the essentials first:
Then add trip-specific items underneath.
Beach trip? Add sunscreen and swimwear.
Work trip? Add laptop and notebook.
Cold place? Add jacket and gloves.
And keep the list somewhere stupidly easy to access. If it takes six taps to find, your ADHD brain will abandon it and go look at something shinier.
Alarms are not just for waking up. They’re for saving future-you from disaster.
Set reminders for:
I like setting the first reminder the night before, not the morning of. Morning-of is too late for anything that requires a calm brain.
And if you’re extra forgetful, use multiple alarms with labels. Not “Reminder.” That’s useless. Use:
Specific beats vague every time.
This one isn’t just a comfort thing. It’s an ADHD thing.
When you’re hungry, overstimulated, or delayed, everything gets harder. Your patience, focus, and memory all drop off a cliff. So pack snacks you actually like and can eat fast.
Good options:
I’m not saying snacks fix ADHD. I’m saying snacks prevent a stupid little hunger spiral from becoming a full travel breakdown.
If you always forget the same item, do a 2-minute mental rehearsal the day before.
Picture yourself:
It sounds silly, but ADHD brains sometimes need a tiny movie trailer of the plan. It makes the steps feel real instead of floating around as “I should probably remember that.”
You do not need the perfect travel setup. You need a setup that works when you’re tired, distracted, and mildly panicking because your phone battery is at 11%.
So make it easier for yourself:
That’s the whole game. Not perfection. Repeatability.
And honestly, that’s why habit tools matter. Stuff like Trider (myhabits.in) is useful because it helps turn “I should do this” into “I actually did this.” Which, for ADHD, is kind of everything.
Here’s the short version you can literally screenshot:
And if you forget something sometimes? Join the club. The goal isn’t never making mistakes. The goal is missing fewer important ones.
So try one small thing before your next trip—make the list, set the alarm, build the pouch, whatever you can manage. And if you want a habit system that actually helps you remember the boring-but-important stuff, give Trider a try at myhabits.in.