Leaving the house should be simple. All you need is your keys, phone, wallet, and you can go, right?
And yet somehow, with ADHD, it turns into a full-blown ordeal. You’re halfway out the door when you realize you forgot your water. Then you realize you don’t have your car keys. Then you forget your entire sense of purpose and why you’re leaving the house in the first place.
You go back inside once (or twice or five times), and by the time you actually leave, you’re already irritated and mentally tired.
This didn’t change for me until I created a literal ADHD leaving the house checklist.
I once went back inside my house four times for things I forgot. First, it was my water bottle, then my phone charger, then my sunglasses, and then my actual purpose for leaving because I’d completely lost the thread.
By the time I actually left, I’d burned 20 minutes and all my mental energy. Now, I never step out the door with that nagging feeling that I’m forgetting something.
It isn’t that you need to be more organized. With ADHD, organization can feel about as attainable as winning an Olympic gold medal.
What helps is giving your brain a quick, no-thinking-required checklist so you can leave without the chaos.
It never fails. Every time I think I’m ready to leave the house, something gets in the way.
Whether it’s me suddenly remembering to do a *really* important task or needing to charge my phone, which I just realized is at 12%, it seems that it’s always oddly hard to leave the house.
Why does this happen every single time?
As a woman with ADHD trying to decipher how my brain works, I’ve realized that much like trying to do errands, leaving the house is not one task. It’s actually 15 tiny ones.
Why does leaving the house turn into a whole production? A few reasons:
Leaving the house isn’t a single action. You aren’t just walking out of your house with no prep. It’s a chain reaction, and ADHD brains often struggle under pressure.
Let’s cut to the chase. No more standing at the door, doing the “do I have everything?” panic pat-down.
Here’s the ADHD leaving the house checklist you need to keep your brain in check and make sure that you don’t forget *anything*.
The goal here isn’t to remember absolutely everything. This checklist just helps you to forget less.
This checklist has helped me immensely. But I’ve yet to achieve perfection. You won’t either, and it’s not meant for that.
In fact, this checklist works best when you use it imperfectly.
If glancing at the checklist on your phone while putting on shoes with one sock on is what works for you, do it.
Here’s how to actually use this without it becoming another thing you feel guilty about:
I’ll be the first to admit that, in the past, even though I knew my short-term memory was virtually non-existent, I still told myself that I’d remember things.
It never worked, and I always wished I had used another method, like a checklist, rather than relying on my fallible brain.
If you’ve ever said to yourself, “Why can’t I just remember this?”
There are a few answers to that question, like:
Leaving the house doesn’t need to feel like a mini crisis every time you walk toward the door.
You don’t need a better memory because your memory isn’t the actual issue. Having fewer things to hold in your head at once is key to a smoother, less stressful plan for leaving home.
That’s what the ADHD leaving the house checklist is for. It’s a reminder that your brain isn’t inherently bad at remembering and a tool for relieving the overload.

Leave the house without the mental scavenger hunt.
Roxy is the creator of The Everyday Flourish, a relatable personal growth blog for women who are tired of burnout, chaos, and hustle culture.
A recovering overthinker and unofficial life guinea pig, she shares honest self-care strategies, ADHD-friendly productivity tips, and mindset shifts that actually feel doable.
Around here, personal growth comes with grace, not pressure - and a lot fewer to-do lists.