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Understanding ADHD Tax, Financial Costs & Tips to Avoid

August 09, 202511 min read

Unpaid Bills scattered on a bed for blog post Understanding ADHD Tax, Financial Costs & Tips to Avoid

Understanding ADHD Tax, Financial Costs & Tips to Avoid

If you’ve ever paid a late fee, signed up for a free trial and forgotten to cancel, or discovered a year later that your car’s MOT ran out, you’ve probably paid the ADHD Tax.

I’m not talking about your actual tax return (although I’ve got stories there too). I’m talking about the hidden, ongoing financial costs that come with living in an ADHD brain. Missed bill payments, impulsive purchases, higher interest rates, and financial penalties that stack up… all because of executive function challenges, time blindness, and the dozens of other ways attention deficit hyperactivity disorder can turn life into an expensive game of catch-up.

The concept of the ADHD Tax isn’t just about money. It’s the emotional costs, the hit to your credit score, the stress, the feelings of shame, and the way it chips away at your quality of life. I’ve lived it. I’ve paid it. I’ve paid it so many times I could have bought a small house by now… or at least a lifetime supply of contact lenses.


Stressed man with glasses over unpaid bills to support blog post Understanding ADHD Tax, Financial Costs & Tips to Avoid

My personal ADHD tax bill

The ADHD struggle is real. You can be intelligent, capable, even successful at work, and still have a hard time with important dates, task initiation, and impulse control. That’s me.

Here’s a small sample of my ADHD tax “receipts”:

  • The Contact Lens Catastrophe
    I’ve lost so many contact lenses over the years that, when I added up the replacement costs, I realised I could have gone on a weekend city break. The worst part? I didn’t lose them all at once. I lost them
    one by one, over weeks. At one point, I found one stuck to a shopping receipt in my unopened post pile.

  • The Credit Card I Forgot I Had
    I once forgot I even had a credit card. Months later, there was a knock at the door and… hello, bailiffs. That one hit my
    credit score and my pride in equal measure.

  • The MOT Fine
    I drove around for weeks after my MOT had expired, telling myself “I’ll book it next week” — a
    common scenario for anyone with poor memory and time management struggles. I only realised when the fine arrived.

  • Unpaid Bills & The Fear of Mail
    For years, I put bills “on the side” to pay later. I avoided opening mail because I was afraid of what I’d find. That’s how you rack up
    late payments, higher interest rates, and a background hum of dread every time the post drops through the door.

  • The Blackout Morning
    One winter, my kids woke up in a pitch-black, freezing house because the electric meter had run out overnight. No lights, no heating, no breakfast… just me, in pyjamas, running round to the 24 hour shop with no shoes, small change while trying not to cry at what a terrible parent I must be.


Why ADHD brains are more vulnerable to financial strain

If you’ve been through financial struggles like this, you’re not alone, and you’re not bad with money because you’re lazy or irresponsible.

A common symptom of ADHD is struggling with executive function challenges… the skills that help you plan, remember important dates, follow through, and manage time. Add time blindness, emotional dysregulation, and the occasional impulsive spending when you discover a new hobby or new interest, and you’ve got a recipe for extra costs and financial burden.

Some of the big reasons we pay more ADHD tax than others:

  1. Time management is harder
    Missing payment deadlines is easy when the
    end of the month feels like it sneaks up out of nowhere.

  2. Impulse control struggles
    You see something online, add it to your
    shopping cart, and before your future self can talk you out of it… it’s on the way.

  3. Emotional spending
    Bad day? Takeaway. Feeling flat? New gadget. Excited about a
    new hobby? Buy everything before you’ve even tried it.

  4. Avoidance patterns
    Afraid to check your
    credit card bill or open that bank letter? Avoid it long enough and you get financial penalties and additional costs.

  5. Forgetting important items
    Insurance renewals, cancelling a
    free trial, returning library books… all the little things that quietly cost a lot over time.


The “last minute” rush that costs us more

A common challenge with ADHD is that we don’t start things until the urgency is painfully high. That’s when the adrenaline finally kicks in… but by then, the cost is already higher.

Booking travel? If you buy the ticket last minute, it’s double the price.
Sending something in the post? Express delivery costs far more than standard.
Paying the gas bill? Leave it too long and you’ve got a
financial penalty on top.

I once booked an MOT the night before it expired because I’d forgotten until that moment. Of course, all the local garages were fully booked, so I had to drive across town and pay extra for a same-day slot. My brain rewarded me with the satisfaction of “just getting it done”… but my bank account wasn’t as happy.

This last-minute living also affects tax time. If you’ve ever left your tax return until the night before the deadline, you’ll know the frantic search for receipts, the desperate login attempts to HMRC, and the sinking feeling when you realise you’re missing something important.


The hidden ADHD tax trigger: Indecision

Here’s one people don’t talk about enough… indecision.

ADHD brains crave novelty, urgency, or fun. So when faced with a choice between:

  • Buying something exciting now (like the latest gadget, a weekend away, or starting a new hobby)

  • Investing in something sensible that would actually save us money long-term (like 1-to-1 coaching, paying for a financial advisor, or joining my very affordable £200 course for the first cohort)

…we tend to go for the exciting option. Not because we don’t care about our future, but because the sensible thing doesn’t give us that instant dopamine hit.

We tell ourselves:

  • “I’ll be better next month”

  • “I just need to try harder”

  • “Once I get through this busy patch, I’ll get organised”

And in the meantime, we keep paying late fees, missing important dates, forgetting credit card payments, and dealing with the financial strain that comes from not fixing the root cause.

I’ve been there. I once put off paying for something that would have solved my financial challenges because I convinced myself I could “manage it on my own”. Six months later, I’d spent triple that amount on impulse purchases, late payments, and replacing important items I’d misplaced.

This indecision is part of the ADHD tax. It’s not about intelligence or knowing what to do… it’s about the mental barrier between knowing and doing.


Lady crying into friends lap sat on sofa to support blog post Understanding ADHD Tax, Financial Costs & Tips to Avoid

The emotional side of the ADHD tax

The money is one thing. But the emotional costs can be heavier:

  • Feelings of shame when you make yet another costly mistake

  • Relationship strains when financial challenges affect the people you care about

  • The ripple effect on your mental health when you feel like you’re stuck in the same cycle

This is why “just be more organised” doesn’t work. We have to create systems that work with our ADHD traits, not against them.


Breaking the cycle… small steps that save money

If you’re in the middle of an ADHD tax spiral, it can feel like you need a complete personality transplant to escape it. You don’t. You just need small, repeatable actions that your future self will thank you for.

Here are various ways I’ve used (and helped others use) to chip away at the ADHD tax:

  • Make it visible… Bills hidden in a drawer disappear. Bills on the fridge or by the kettle get paid.

  • Pair it with something pleasant… Open your post with a coffee, or while listening to an ADHD podcast you enjoy.

  • Use the “other person” trick… If I have to ring the bank, I’ll do it while sitting next to my partner so I feel accountable to someone else.

  • Fix one thing immediately… If you sort even one overdue credit card payment, it creates momentum.

  • Automate what you can… I don’t trust my memory alone, so wherever possible, I set up direct debits for essentials like rent, utilities, and insurance.


The ADHD tax in early adulthood and education

I wish I’d known about the ADHD tax when I was younger. Young adults with ADHD often leave educational settings and head into the real world without anyone teaching them about financial planning. The result? The first job might end in job loss over missed deadlines or misunderstandings, bills go unpaid because the habit was never built, and debt piles up quickly.

If you add mental health challenges into the mix… like anxiety or depression… it gets even harder to keep up with important dates or avoid costly mistakes. Many people don’t realise that unmanaged ADHD in those first few years can have a ripple effect on their finances for the next decade.

This is why teaching practical money habits early is essential… not just in schools, but through family, mentors, or ADHD-specific coaching.


Fraser the ADHD Coach sitting in the car window with the dog to support the blog post Understanding ADHD Tax, Financial Costs & Tips to Avoid

How I reduced my ADHD tax (and how you can too)

It didn’t happen overnight, but I’ve now got more financial stability than I ever thought possible. Here’s what’s made the biggest difference:

  1. The first step was getting my ADHD diagnosis and understanding that these weren’t character flaws… they were symptoms of ADHD.

  2. Mutual accountability without judgement
    I don’t use a
    budgeting app. Instead, my partner and I have an agreement… we can go through each other’s financial “stuff” without judgement. It’s amazing how much easier it is to solve someone else’s problem than your own. We’ll sit together, talk it through, and take action on the other person’s behalf. Sometimes we even swap tasks… “You call my insurance, I’ll cancel your subscription”... because tackling our own admin can feel like climbing Everest, but helping each other feels light.

  3. Important dates everywhere
    I put MOT renewals,
    tax time, and every renewal or payment in my phone, on a wall calendar, and in shared reminders with my partner.

  4. Impulse purchase pause
    If I find something I
    really want, I leave it in the shopping cart for at least 24 hours. Extra time helps me decide if it’s a genuine need or just an impulse purchase.

  5. Small steps over perfection
    I didn’t fix everything in a week. Just setting up one new direct debit or dealing with one overdue bill builds momentum.


Winning against ADHD tax… your “future self” strategy

The best way I’ve found to beat the ADHD tax is to make life easier for my future self.

When I open my post as soon as it arrives, it’s not because I suddenly love admin… it’s because I know that “Friday Fraser” will be calmer if “Monday Fraser” dealt with it already.

When I choose to spend money on something that solves a recurring problem… like ADHD education, 1-to-1 coaching, or my very affordable £200 course for the first cohort… I remind myself that it’s not just a cost, it’s an investment that will reduce additional costs for years to come.

The trouble is, those choices aren’t exciting in the moment. They don’t give the rush of buying a new gadget or booking a spontaneous trip. But the impact of the ADHD tax on your life is far bigger than the dopamine hit from something new.

So here’s the challenge I set for my clients… once a month, make a decision that your future self will thank you for, even if it feels boring now. That’s how you start tipping the balance away from high-interest debt, late fees, and missed opportunities, toward genuine better financial stability.


How I help others now

After I learned more about ADHD education, worked on my time management, and built systems to reduce my ADHD tax, I realised no one should have to figure this out alone.

That’s why I created my 6-week ADHD coaching programme… to help people like us understand the impact of the ADHD tax, stop blaming themselves, and start putting practical systems in place.

The first live run of the programme starts on 10th November 2025. It’s £200 for this pilot programme… designed to be accessible, warm, and genuinely helpful. My goal is to make sure a lot of people can get the support they need, even if they can’t afford expensive 1-to-1 coaching.

If the cost is a barrier, reach out to me. I’ll do my best to make it work for you… but this is the first cohort, and the cost won’t be the same next time.


Because the ADHD tax is expensive enough. You don’t need to keep paying it.

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