ADHD support that turns insight into action

ADHD Coaching UK

The hardest part of ADHD at work or study is often not knowing what to do next. Coaching can help turn scattered demands into clearer priorities, practical routines and support that fits the person’s real context.

The aim is not to fix the person. It is to make work and study easier to navigate.

Task initiation

Breaking work into clear first steps so starting feels less impossible.

Prioritisation

Working out what matters most, what can wait and what needs support.

Time and deadlines

Making time visible through planning, reminders, milestones and review.

Start here

What ADHD coaching can help with

Task initiation

Breaking work into clear first steps so starting feels less impossible.

Prioritisation

Working out what matters most, what can wait and what needs support.

Time and deadlines

Making time visible through planning, reminders, milestones and review.

Working memory

Creating external systems so important information does not have to live only in the person’s head.

Emotional load

Reducing shame, overwhelm and cycles of avoidance after difficult moments.

Sustainable routines

Building systems that can survive real work, study, family and energy demands.

Signature guide

ADHD coaching is not generic productivity advice

Generic productivity advice often assumes the person can simply choose to plan, focus or start earlier. ADHD coaching should begin with the pattern: where things break down, what helps momentum, what creates avoidance and what support is realistic.

Practical checks

  • The overwhelmed professional
  • The student or graduate
  • The employee using Access to Work
  • The self-employed person trying to build structure

Funding connection

Access to Work connection

Access to Work may fund coaching where it is recommended as workplace support and the person is eligible. Coaching is most useful when it connects to real workplace barriers, not a generic productivity plan.

Calling All Minds support

How Calling All Minds can help

Calling All Minds provides neurodiversity-informed, practical and barrier-led coaching grounded in real workplace context.

Coaching can sit alongside Access to Work, assistive technology, workplace assessments and reasonable adjustments.

Practical checks

  • Neurodiversity-informed
  • Practical
  • Barrier-led
  • Connected

Coaching support

Coaching that fits real life

Calling All Minds provides neurodiversity-informed coaching for people navigating work, study, Access to Work and executive function demands.

These pages give more context and connect this guide to practical support.

Questions people often ask

Short answers, written in plain language.

What is ADHD coaching?

ADHD coaching is practical support for planning, prioritising, starting tasks, managing time, building routines and navigating work or study demands.

Is ADHD coaching therapy?

No. Coaching is not therapy or clinical treatment. It is practical support focused on goals, barriers, systems and day-to-day strategies.

Can Access to Work fund ADHD coaching?

Access to Work may fund ADHD coaching where it is recommended as workplace support and the person is eligible.

Who is ADHD coaching for?

It may help adults, employees, students, self-employed people and people returning to work who need practical support with executive function and workplace demands.

How is Calling All Minds coaching different?

Calling All Minds coaching is neurodiversity-informed, practical and connected to workplace barriers, Access to Work, assistive technology and reasonable adjustments.

Can employers arrange ADHD coaching?

Yes. Employers may arrange coaching as part of workplace support, reasonable adjustments or wider neuroinclusion practice.