You decide you are going to get serious about money. You set up a budget, you track every dollar, and you feel genuinely in control for the first time in a while.
Then you have one bad week, blow the budget, and suddenly it feels like none of it matters anymore. So you stop. Completely. Until the next time you decide to start over.
Sound familiar? This is the all-or-nothing money trap, and it is one of the most common patterns I see in ADHD brains. It is also one of the most financially damaging, even though it looks nothing like what people think of as "being bad with money."
In this post, I am going to share:
All-or-nothing thinking is a cognitive pattern where things feel either perfect or totally ruined, with no in-between.
For ADHD brains, this pattern is particularly common because emotional dysregulation and impulsivity make moderate responses harder to access in the moment.
With money, it shows up like this: either you are tracking every cent and feeling in control, or you have given up and are spending without thinking. Either you are saving aggressively or you are not saving at all. Either the budget is working perfectly or it has "failed" and you need to start fresh next month.
The problem is that real financial progress happens in the messy middle, not at either extreme. And if you can only function at the extremes, you spend a lot of time and energy resetting instead of moving forward.
Here is the thing: all-or-nothing thinking is not a character flaw. It is connected to how the ADHD brain processes reward, regulation, and effort.
When something is new and exciting, a fresh budget or a new savings goal, dopamine kicks in and momentum feels easy. But once the novelty fades, the motivation drops sharply. And for an ADHD brain without a reliable internal motivation system, that drop can feel total.
Add to that the ADHD tendency toward emotional sensitivity, and one "failure" can feel like evidence that the whole thing was pointless.
That is not the truth, but it feels very real in the moment.
The goal is not to eliminate all-or-nothing thinking entirely. It is to build a money system that keeps working even when you are not at your best.
Here are some shifts that help:
Let me be real with you: a mediocre month of consistent effort will always beat a perfect month followed by complete shutdown. Always.
The goal is not financial perfection. The goal is a money life that keeps moving forward even on your hardest weeks.
That requires a different kind of system than most financial advice recommends, and that is completely okay.
If you are not sure what your version of "good enough" looks like with money, or where to focus your energy first, the Shameless Money quiz can help. It is free, takes a few minutes, and gives you a clear starting point built around how your brain actually works.
Progress over perfection is not a consolation prize. It is the strategy.