How can I stop losing my keys and wallet daily with ADHD?
If you live with ADHD, you might feel like your keys and wallet have a life of their own. You put them down for a second and then they vanish. This isn’t careless; it’s how ADHD affects attention, memory, and routine.
Why it happens
According to Frontiers in Psychiatry (2024) and NICE guidance, ADHD can disrupt working memory, the brain’s “mental sticky note” for short-term information. When you place your keys somewhere, attention often shifts before your brain fully stores that detail.
Executive dysfunction makes it difficult to build habits like always putting things in the same spot, while dopamine dysregulation reduces focus for boring, repetitive tasks, such as tidying or organising. Once your attention moves on, the memory trace fades almost instantly.
What helps
UK clinical guidance from NICE, NHS, and the Royal College of Psychiatrists recommends simple, external systems that reduce reliance on memory and build habits that stick:
- Create a fixed “drop zone.” Choose a small, visible spot; a tray, hook, or bowl near your front door and make it your only place for keys and wallet.
- Use visual and tactile cues. Colour-code containers or use open trays to make items stand out and harder to miss.
- Simplify your environment. Fewer distractions make it easier to notice and remember where things belong.
- Stack habits. Link placement to another action: “keys on hook before shoes off.”
- Try external supports. Bluetooth trackers or phone reminders can help but they work best alongside physical routines, not instead of them.
- Get structured support. Occupational therapy, ADHD coaching, or CBT can help you design systems that fit your daily life and reduce forgetfulness.
The takeaway
Losing things every day isn’t a reflection of effort or organisation, it’s part of how ADHD affects working memory and attention. The key is to let your environment do the remembering.
As NICE guidance explains, building predictable, visible systems “transfers the burden from memory to structure.” Once your habits are anchored in place, those daily panics start to fade.

