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How do I track progress in overcoming time blindness with ADHD? 

Author: Phoebe Carter, MSc | Reviewed by: Dr. Rebecca Fernandez, MBBS

Tracking progress with ADHD time blindness isn’t about achieving perfect punctuality; it’s about noticing growing consistency in how you start tasks, use time cues, and move through the day. Small, measurable improvements show that your systems are working, even if time perception itself remains unreliable. 

What progress looks like in ADHD 

ADHD coaches and clinicians often track improvements in function, not in the brain’s internal sense of time. Common indicators include: 

  • on-time arrivals within a 5–10-minute window 
  • reduced “initiation latency” (the gap between deciding to start and starting) 
  • better accuracy in estimating how long tasks take 
  • remembering more time-based cues 
  • smoother transitions between classes, meetings, or home tasks 
  • meeting daily anchors (morning routine, meals, wind-down) 

NICE notes that functional gains, not perfection, are the expected outcome of time-management interventions NICE guidance

Tools that make progress visible 

Evidence from CBT-ADHD, coaching, and occupational therapy shows that tracking systems work best when they are simple and external, such as: 

  • “estimate vs actual” logs 
  • punctuality trackers 
  • weekly review sheets 
  • cue-response checklists 
  • habit streak apps 

ADHD organisations such as ADHD UK recommend morning/evening anchors and time audits to track reliability. 

Helpful tools include: 

  • visual countdown apps 
  • Pomodoro timers (time-on-task) 
  • calendar analytics showing arrival patterns 
  • initiation logs in ADHD coaching 

How therapy and coaching measure change 

CBT-ADHD typically uses planning sheets and behaviour logs to track: 

  • how often deadlines are met 
  • whether routines are completed 
  • how long initiation takes 
  • where time slips occur 

ADHD coaching adds weekly accountability reviews, focusing on wins and patterns rather than self-criticism. 

Across 4–12 week programmes, studies show moderate improvements in consistency, even when time perception itself does not fully improve. 

Functional goals that signal progress 

Clinicians often look for: 

  • 85% on-time arrivals over a week 
  • 70%+ routine adherence 
  • smaller estimation gaps between predicted and actual task time 
  • 25% faster initiation on tracked tasks 
  • fewer crises, less panicked rushing, and smoother transitions 

These are realistic for ADHD because they reflect behavioural scaffolding working, not neurological normalisation. 

Takeaway 

You know you’re making progress with ADHD time blindness when your systems, not your internal clock, start carrying you. Better punctuality, more accurate estimates, smoother transitions, and stronger routines show that the skills you’re building and the support you’re using are doing their job. 

Phoebe Carter, MSc
Author

Phoebe Carter is a clinical psychologist with a Master’s in Clinical Psychology and a Bachelor’s in Applied Psychology. She has experience working with both children and adults, conducting psychological assessments, developing individualized treatment plans, and delivering evidence-based therapies. Phoebe specialises in neurodevelopmental conditions such as autism spectrum disorder (ASD), ADHD, and learning disabilities, as well as mood, anxiety, psychotic, and personality disorders. She is skilled in CBT, behaviour modification, ABA, and motivational interviewing, and is dedicated to providing compassionate, evidence-based mental health care to individuals of all ages.

All qualifications and professional experience stated above are authentic and verified by our editorial team. However, pseudonym and image likeness are used to protect the author's privacy. 

Dr. Rebecca Fernandez, MBBS
Reviewer

Dr. Rebecca Fernandez is a UK-trained physician with an MBBS and experience in general surgery, cardiology, internal medicine, gynecology, intensive care, and emergency medicine. She has managed critically ill patients, stabilised acute trauma cases, and provided comprehensive inpatient and outpatient care. In psychiatry, Dr. Fernandez has worked with psychotic, mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders, applying evidence-based approaches such as CBT, ACT, and mindfulness-based therapies. Her skills span patient assessment, treatment planning, and the integration of digital health solutions to support mental well-being.

All qualifications and professional experience stated above are authentic and verified by our editorial team. However, pseudonym and image likeness are used to protect the reviewer's privacy. 

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