You had a horrible day. Something went sideways at work, the kids were loud, and by 8pm your brain felt like static. And that was the moment you decided to restructure your entire investment portfolio.
Or maybe it was a bad argument with your partner that ended with you opening a new credit application. Or a panic spiral about the future that led to buying things you didn't need because it temporarily made the noise stop.
Here is the thing: when your ADHD brain is dysregulated, your financial decision-making ability drops significantly. Most of us have never been told this, let alone given tools to deal with it.
In this post, I am going to share:
Dysregulation is when your nervous system is overwhelmed. It can come from stress, frustration, rejection, overstimulation, or exhaustion. For neurotypical people, this can cloud judgment. For ADHD brains, the impact is significantly more intense.
Emotional regulation is one of the core challenges of ADHD. When dysregulated, our ability to think about the future, weigh consequences, and resist impulses becomes severely compromised.
We are far more likely to make decisions based on how we feel right now, not how we will feel tomorrow.
And "right now" feelings and "tomorrow's bank balance" are rarely aligned.
Here is what I see with my clients, and what I have experienced myself. These are not signs of being bad with money. They are signs of a nervous system doing exactly what it was designed to do under stress.
Your body gives reliable signals when you are not in a state to make sound financial calls. Learning to recognise these signals is one of the most valuable financial skills you can build.
Watch for these signs before making any money move:
If any of these are present, that is not the time to make a financial decision. Not a small one. Not a "quick check" on your investments. Full stop.
The strategy here is not to white-knuckle your way through it. It is to create friction between you and the decision until you are in a better state. Put time between the emotion and the action.
Here are some tools that work:
The goal is to put just enough space between the emotion and the action to let your prefrontal cortex catch up. That space is where better financial decisions live.
I want you to know something: the ADHD brain is not broken.
It is a brain that responds intensely to the world. That intensity is a feature as much as it is a challenge.
But money decisions made in chaos almost always cost us. Building a system that protects you when you are in that state is one of the most caring things you can do for yourself and your finances.
If you want a clearer picture of where your biggest money challenges lie, I have created a free quiz to help you find your personal starting point with ADHD and money.
You deserve a financial life that supports you, even on your hardest days.