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The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning and Organizing: Take Your Home from Chaos to Control in 7 Days

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What if your home finally felt like a place to breathe?No more overwhelm the second you open the door.No more shame when someone drops by.No more starting and stopping a new routine, only to end up right back in the same mess.


Just a quiet kind of pride you haven't felt in a long time.


If you live with ADHD, you already know the usual organizing solutions don’t work.

You’ve tried the bins, the color-coded systems, the viral home organization tips, maybe even a few ADHD cleaning books, only to watch it all unravel.

What you haven’t had, until now, is an ADHD decluttering, cleaning and organizing toolkit that flexes with your energy, understands your brain, and finally lets you take control of your space.


This isn’t about becoming someone new.
It’s about feeling at home in the life you already have.




Picture You walk into your space and it actually feels manageable.You know where things go—and why they go there.You're not chasing perfection. You’re living in function.You don’t dread clutter, because now you have ADHD-friendly reset rituals that work.This is what happens when organizational solutions for ADHD meet real life.And it doesn’t take months.
With Amy Harper’s lived experience and guidance, you’ll start seeing real, tangible change in just 7 days—through a doable, momentum-building challenge designed to get you unstuck, fast.

For the first time in forever, you're not starting over.
You're moving forward.


You’ve tried changing the system to fit your home.

Now it’s time to change your home to fit you and create a space that reflects your life, not your limitations.
Scroll up, hit “Buy Now,” and take the first step toward a home that’s calm, functional, and finally yours.

182 pages, Kindle Edition

Published July 17, 2025

70 people are currently reading
15 people want to read

About the author

Amy Harper

19 books5 followers

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Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Hazel.
84 reviews19 followers
August 15, 2025
Profound and practical, Amy Harper's The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing is about achieving an ADHD-friendly home that embraces functionality over aesthetics.

With first-hand experiences that add credibility, Harper speaks with deeper understanding on the topic, expressing practical ways to manage an ADHD mind. The book is broken down into six parts, each discussing step-by-step how the ADHD mind works and how to live with it with self-compassion rather than self-criticism.

ADHDers work better on visibility and clarity rather than aesthetics. The more they'll see, the more they'll use it; it's the same as the out of sight, out of mind scenario. Hence, Harper provides a gentle yet effective approach to decluttering and organizing a home that is sustainable for ADHD individuals. Practices such as using containers, open baskets, and labeled zones that are more visible are encouraged. Cleaning a home with a timer, one corner at a time, is more achievable than a massive overhaul, as an ADHD mind runs on energy level, not by strict schedule rules.

Sprinkled with interesting facts about ADHD through quotes, readers gain awareness in understanding these people and treat them with kindness and compassion.

Harper delivered her book in straightforward prose and presents a reader-friendly layout that brings comfort to readers. She said that everyone deserves a space that supports the condition of the brain, not to constantly argue with it.

Insightful and informative, The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing is beneficial not just for ADHD individuals, but also for parents and guardians who engage daily with loved ones having this condition. This book educates me on the ebbs and flows of ADHD minds and how unique they are. This work of Harper is admirable and inspires me to support more of her books!
Profile Image for Priscilla Lawal.
27 reviews1 follower
February 11, 2026
The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing offers a complete guide on dealing with everyday chores for adults with ADHD, written not from a clinical perspective but from lived experience. The author has ADHD herself and shares the sustainable systems she's developed.

The book starts off with the author's narration of how she had dealt with ADHD over the years, feeling less as an adult, feeling severe guilt about the present status of her life, and came to a conclusion that she needs to make specific steps to deal with her present predicament and guilt. The book moves through several visually interacting chapters which move systematically from the author's personal experience to practical, step-by-step solutions. The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing consists of 12 interactive chapters that take the reader through a journey of the author's reality of living with ADHD. The book is written with practical guides which the author gives the reader the freedom to customize according to them.

Amy Harper states that no two ADHDers are the same, so you customize based on your present experience. Part one, which includes Chapter One, introduces the reader to how ADHD and clutter are a natural pair. It takes the reader through the natural predicament of executive dysfunction paired with decision fatigue and time blindness, which are close pals that send the neurodivergent ADHD individual into a mental shutdown. These recurrent processes eventually lead to shame and guilt, and according to the author, this should not be the case since there can be systematic solutions to these.

Chapter two talks about the emotional toll of letting go, how ADHDers are emotionally attuned to items, which eventually leads to clutter, i.e., feelings are associated with objects. Amy Harper highlights several forms of emotionally charged clutter/items and a definitive 30-day box challenge, and other tools to create a space for a period of reflection for these items.
In part two, Amy Harper highlights how perfection is an unwelcomed guest that needs to be shut down, how ADHDers should adopt a process that works for the ADHD mind, not the neurotypical mind, and should keep in mind that the home is not a place to impress an outsider, but should be a space to breathe and to feel good in your space.

Amy Harper highlights a three-phase system that takes into cognizance the several energy phases of an ADHDer and being productive even during those phases. Part three talks about being systematic with the decluttering system of an ADHDer and taking things room by room and space by space, taking in cognizance high-use zones. Amy Harper also discusses the clothing dilemma of the neurodivergent ADHDer, and processes like keeping clothing in sight through some specific means can improve this, making use of systems like the three-pile system to identify items that work and let go of clothing which will lead to clutter. Amy Harper also highlighted drop zones, friendly spaces for daily essentials that reduce daily decision fatigue incidences. Amy Harper also talks about a very important aspect of ADHDers' lives when spaces are shared either with partners, children, spouses, or even roommates.

She takes the reader through a friendly route to navigate this in a manner that will not induce resentment but instead foster a sense of "we're in this together." After the interactive parts of identifying the reason for clutter and highlighting systematic interactive solutions to it, Amy Harper takes the reader to a very, or one of the most important aspects in part four: sticking to it. Highlighting the issue of forming permanent habits by ADHDers but not leaving the reader stranded, Amy Harper introduces the process of attaching new habits to old ones and other systematic processes to help in forming lasting habits to deal with decluttering, and a very important part: allocating a fun reward system for completing each task.

Amy Harper also highlights the importance of taking into account the energy levels of ADHDers, mapping out the energy level, also using systems like the 3D method, but also keeping in mind to let go of what doesn't feel essential and make do of what you can during each energy level, make sure to keep kindness in check to oneself even on days of extreme low energy levels to reset and then reset. Part five introduces the reader to a distinct seven-day challenge to see your space differently. Part five is a complete interactive 7-day guide to cleaning and decluttering during periods of low energy, a dopamine boost, and a final exhortation to reflect and acknowledge what worked so as to stick to it.

An important part: what if I start this routine and then can't continue, and I then relapse? This takes the reader to an important stage, Part Six: Relapse-Proof Your Progress. Amy Harper encourages the reader to understand that relapse is a part of being human, and moreover, a human with a specially attuned brain. The author highlights a weekly checklist as an accountability buddy and not a nag to beat oneself up to, highlighting that small rituals stick together to make a rhythm.
Amy Harper takes into account the short attention span of an ADHDer and congratulates the reader on the successful completion of the book in the conclusion part, also highlighting a summary of each chapter with a beautiful success story of a single mom who made use of the three-phase system and 7-day challenge, and after several months, starts to find peace in her space.

Amy Harper's extensive knowledge in psychology and over 15 years of experience as a behavioral health licensed counselor synergize to produce an interactive book about the challenges of ADHD neurodivergent with clutter and distinctive and visually interactive solutions to deal with these challenges.
I recommend The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing to readers who seek a lasting solution to the challenge of executive dysfunction with Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing in a compassionate, non-judgmental way that honors the ADHD experience. I received an ARC from the author, and I'm leaving this review voluntarily.
Profile Image for Paul (RinkuHero) Eres.
19 reviews
November 4, 2025
I listened to this mainly because it was an Audible Plus thing. Overall a good guide to cleaning and organizing if you have ADHD, however, a few caveats:

First is that there's a plethora of material on this subject, more than makes sense to exist. Just on Audible there's like 20 to 30 different books on ADHD and cleaning/organizing. Is this book better than all the others? Who knows, I'd have to read all of them to find out I guess. It just happened to be the first one on this subject I tried.

Second is that the author is a woman, so, naturally, there's a lot of talk about organizing vanity tables, make-up, and hair and skin care products, and not much talk about organizing your home gym or comics, because the examples reflect the things the author is familiar with. This isn't a huge problem if you try to adapt the book to a man, but, just keep in mind that it largely feels like it's written for cleaning and organizing things that women tend to own. Which is good because women with ADHD are often neglected, but still, if you're a man with ADHD, the types of things you need to clean may not be among the examples in the book. Like she talks about organizing your children's videogames, but couldn't imagine that the reader themselves might own a bunch of videogames. So you'll find nothing about organizing your power tools or whatever, but a lot about organizing your cookware.

Third is that it's very short, it felt like it was over too fast before I had fully absorbed all the lessons. There is a pdf for review included, which I've been using, but just keep in mind you can read the book in 3 or 4 hours, and a subject as complex as organizing takes time to sink in, it just felt too abbreviated and like it moved through all the topics too fast, not giving the reader time to fully absorb them. More repetition and more examples would have been appreciated. Rarely is a book too short, but this felt too short.

Lastly, the "7 day" guide started off nice -- clean a surface, clean a drop-off point, clean a cluster of clutter (such as a chair with a bunch of clothes on it), but then it shifted into more abstract, less actionable ideas, like 'establish a routine' and 'celebrate'. Like... the book promises 7 days of cleaning. And one full day of those 7 is dedicated to celebrating the last 6 days. It felt kind of disappointing. I wanted 7 days of cleaning "projects" and just got 5 days of it. I simply can't imagine that anyone going through that 7 day guide would even clean or organize 5% of their chaos. It'd be a good start, but it really should have been 30 days, each with a specific tip or project, like 'clean the closet' or 'clean the windows' or whatever, it just felt poorly conceived. I'm still giving this 4 stars for all the useful tips, but it also has a bunch of disappointments, unless the idea of spending a full day of cleaning celebrating your last 6 days of cleaning appeals to you.
60 reviews4 followers
November 22, 2025
The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning and Organizing: Take Your Home from Chaos to Control in 7 Days” by Amy Harper is one of those books that is both anchored in practical advice and genuinely relatable. You don't have to have ADHD to feel like Harper cares about your actual experiences and isn't judging you.

What I appreciated most about Harper's guide is her focus on functionality over Pinterest pretty. She absolutely understands that ADHD minds function better in visibility and clarity; "out of sight, out of mind" is a real thing. Her strategies are practical: big open baskets, clear (so you can see), labelled zones, cleaning one quadrant of the room at a time, setting a timer, and grazing until the timer goes off. The structure of one week enables you to tackle a task that might feel overwhelming, starting with one room, and breaking it down into small, doable parts. And the phrase "functional freedom sprint" makes decluttering feel possible at a time when it feels impossible.

Harper's writing is further emphasized by her own lived experience, which gives the book extra credibility. The book is organized into six parts, providing background and insight into what it means for your ADHD mind and how we can navigate real life with ADHD minds, not overly self-judging, blaming, or critiquing ourselves. Harper's tone is genuinely empathetic, positive, and encouraging. I think one of the best aspects of this book was that it emphasised that everyone deserves a supportive brain space that does not constantly argue with their life and lifestyle.

It's essential to keep in mind that this is not a one-size-fits-all guide; different homes, different countries, and different ways of living can place different restrictions on your ability to stockpile storage bins or dedicate seven days to a cleaning "ritual." Not everyone has the room for multiple bins or has the ability to take a week off from their busy lives to do something like this. Some may live in apartments, some live with others, and some belong to cultural practices that are not going to be able to accomplish the systems this way. Things that might work well in one home may not be able to transfer nicely into another, and everyone has different motivations and circumstances.

All that said, Harper's framework is flexible enough that you can make it your own. The real value, of course, is not in following her system exactly, it's in the compassionate shift in mindset that she is offering. This book is about practising understanding yourself and creating a healthier relationship with your home and your habits. That is why I am giving this book 5 out of 5 stars.

This is a wonderful resource whether you have ADHD or struggle to keep your life and belongings organised - it is full of helpful advice in a judgment-free manner. I recommend this book to everyone.

Profile Image for Lia Anshar.
116 reviews10 followers
October 22, 2025
Amy Harper’s The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing: Take Your Home from Chaos to Control in 7 Days is an empowering and insightful guide that redefines what it means to create an organized home when living with ADHD. Rather than chasing perfection or aesthetics, Harper focuses on building a space that functions in harmony with the ADHD mind; one that supports, rather than fights, its natural rhythms.

What makes this book stand out is Harper’s ability to combine professional insight with genuine empathy. She writes not as an outsider offering instructions, but as someone who understands the daily struggles and triumphs of managing ADHD. The book is divided into clear, structured sections that explain how the ADHD brain works and how to adapt everyday habits accordingly. Harper’s suggestions like using open containers, visible storage, and labeling zones are practical, sustainable, and thoughtfully designed for those who struggle with “out of sight, out of mind.”

Her tone is calm and reassuring throughout, transforming what could be an overwhelming subject into something deeply approachable. The inclusion of relatable anecdotes, inspiring quotes, and realistic cleaning methods (such as tackling small corners with a timer) helps readers feel understood and capable of change. The book’s layout is clean and easy to follow, making it an inviting read for anyone, especially those easily overstimulated by clutter or dense text.

Ultimately, Harper’s blueprint is more than a guide to decluttering; it’s a gentle philosophy of self-compassion. She reminds readers that everyone deserves a home that supports how their brain works. Practical, uplifting, and full of heart, this book is a must-read for adults with ADHD and anyone seeking to create a calmer, more functional living space.
Profile Image for Mae-Anne Bryant.
37 reviews1 follower
November 8, 2025
A book about organizing ADHD can feel like a map of real places. It was great that it gave me new ideas and valuable tips for helping my kids. This book aims to achieve this by being understanding, offering advice, and celebrating the small wins that last.

The ADHD treatment book by Amy Harper is helpful and kind. It emphasizes the importance of clear communication in maintaining time, focus, and motivation. The utilitarian, conversational language gives you step-by-step answers that empower you without shame. Breaking down cleaning tasks into manageable steps and celebrating progress can make the process easier and more manageable for individuals with ADHD. She recommends nightly resets and brief cleaning sprints to keep focused. The book advises adults with ADHD to use simple routines and visual aids to keep organized, emphasizing that being flexible is more important than being perfect. I also adapted this for my children.

The book suggests creating "micro-routines" that are connected to daily tasks, using specific areas to organize instead of general goals, and making chores enjoyable. Setting up "good enough" systems reduces decision fatigue and keeps the organization small and stable. With kid-friendly checklists and weekly routines, the book helps celebrate small wins and offers suggestions tailored to their family's needs. Because the book is ADHD-friendly, I can demonstrate how to use strategies instead of requiring them to do so. That little change makes a big difference. My kids performed better with clear projects that had a time limit and were broken down into steps. The result is less fighting, more working together, and a home life that works for my family's brains.
Profile Image for Gladys Nakote.
82 reviews8 followers
August 25, 2025
The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing, written by Amy Harper, is a positive and practical book that assists adults with ADHD in establishing order and serenity in their homes. The author does not just give simple steps but also personal stories and insights based on research to give a way towards less clutter, less stress, and more balance in everyday life.

The descriptions are also detailed enough to be understood without being overbearing. Examples and analogies help simplify the ideas even for a person who reads about the challenges related to ADHD for the first time. The story is very realistic and in touch with the reality.

The point of view is chosen very successfully, because it makes the readers feel that they are not alone and that there is somebody to understand their problems and to walk along with them.

The font, font size, and layout are neat and easy to read. The spacing is comfortable to view, and the layout of the book is easy to follow without getting lost. The book is well-flowing, and chapters logically lead to each other. There is no slow-paced moment in it as well. The tone of the author is calm, reassuring, and easy to read.

I highly recommend this book because it is a very gratifying book, and I actually learned a lot from it. It is written with compassion, simplicity, and practicality. It will be interesting to adults of all ages, and it is both comforting and helpful. The readers will end up feeling motivated and empowered to make their lives calmer and more organized.
Profile Image for Chris .
42 reviews7 followers
January 13, 2026
The reality of living with ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) might not be a subject much talked about, however, it remains a reoccurring disorder that continues to interfere with daily functioning of millions of lives across the globe.

THE ADULT ADHD: Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning and Organizing by Amy Harper is all about looking out for people living with ADHD; people who cleaning and organizing is a nightmare. The good thing is that the author herself lives with ADHD and she has successfully designed practical solutions to keep her home and personal space well organized. Thus, the blueprint offered in this book comes from years of personal experience.

Amy writes from the place of empathy; clearly identifying the meaning of ADHD, causation of cluttering and possible practical solutions. The author doesn't write from the standpoint of a perfectionist but rather from the point of a fellow ADHDer who understands the pain and challenges of other ADHDers.

Furthermore, the indepth exposition on ADHD by the book shows cluttering from a new perspective not often talked about. It presents cluttering for ADHDers not as a result of laziness or lack of discipline, but rather, as a neurological and natural consequence of how the ADHD brain processes information, emotions, time, and decisions. This further reenforces the empathy and considerate nature of the book.

Profile Image for Caroline Hurry.
Author 17 books69 followers
August 7, 2025
If you’ve ever wandered into the kitchen only to forget why you’re there, Amy Harper's The Adult ADHD Blueprint for Decluttering, Cleaning, and Organizing is for you! And by you, I mean me!
Written with humor, empathy, and experience, this book is about reclaiming peace when executive dysfunction has you in a chokehold.
“Design isn’t about performance; it’s about support. And support should feel like a deep breath, not a deep clean,” writes Harper, who tackles common ADHD hurdles like task paralysis, decision fatigue, and shame-driven avoidance with compassion.
She provides research-based explanations of relatable scenarios, and I loved her ADHD-friendly approach to organizing. Forget Pinterest-perfect spaces and Marie Kondo minimalism; Harper opts for function over aesthetics. Open baskets? Yes. Clear bins? Absolutely. Color-coded folders and visual zones? Essential tools.
Harper’s voice is reassuring, and her doable strategies are designed to work with your neurodivergent brain, whether she’s describing how to create a “Family Command Center” or use “visual zoning” to calm chaos.
If you’re feeling overwhelmed, this book might change your life, or at least your living room. And that’s a start.
Profile Image for Thinker Mindset.
Author 4 books3 followers
January 17, 2026
This book made cleaning and decluttering feel possible for me. The author understands things like time blindness, feeling frozen by big tasks, and the shame of a messy home very well.
I liked how practical the ideas are e.g. the three phase system stops everything from turning into an all day project. The room by room chapters are clear and simple. The tips about clear bins, open baskets, labels, drop zones were easy to copy at home.
What I liked most is how gentle the book is about guilt and emotional clutter. It helped me let go of things without feeling like a bad or lazy person. The seven day plan at the end is short and flexible, not strict or overwhelming. My home is not perfect after reading this, but it feels lighter, and I finally have a way to get back on track when things are not on right track. For anyone who feels worried about chaos, this book is genuinely helpful.
This is the kind of book I would gladly hand to any overwhelmed adult and say, “Start here, it actually makes life at home feel lighter.”
Profile Image for Michael Lartey.
65 reviews9 followers
September 15, 2025
Many people with ADHD suffer from shame and feel left out, due to repeated failures from not living up to the expectations of their loved ones, so I'm so glad this book was made in consideration of that. An educative book with a user-friendly writing style, it is filled with checklists, tidbits, mantras, and guidelines to tackle the hustle and bustle of dopamine-hungry neurodivergence and create the perfect ADHD-friendly workspace where one can feel very comfortable at home. I love every single page of this book, and I definitely give it a perfect 5 stars. Recommended to all ADHDers, you'll love this book!
Profile Image for K..
103 reviews
October 5, 2025
There's a ween for ataraxia, aside from the safety concerns from having or living with loved ones with ADHD, that Amy Harper's The Adult ADHD Blueprint For Decluttering, Cleaning and Organizing brings to readers for a better home to live in.

Twelve chapters divided into six parts namely, Understanding Your Clutter, Rewriting The Rules, Room-by-Room Application, Sticking To It, The 7 Day Challenge and Relapse-Proofing, to give a glimpse of this resourceful toolkit. Definitely, it tackles sorting out like identifying grief items, identity items, guilt items and aspirational items. Readers will also come across the ideas of deep, donate or toss, and the keep/honor/achieve and let go method. It ends with an important instruction to just normalize the cycle.

The Adult ADHD Blueprint For Decluttering, Cleaning and Organizing is a very informative self-help book. It expresses acceptance on ADHD and recognizing its strong points. Positively, it adds to the motivation and encouragement for doing the necessary actions on matters affected by ADHD like mental health and securing a safe sanctuary. The instructions and steps are simple and efficient. Hence, I give a four-star rate for the remarks above.

I highly recommend this book to all readers for general knowledge but especially for people with ADHD in their lives. It educates and helps to understand and live a normal life with them.
Profile Image for Cristina.
48 reviews
January 10, 2026
Decent. Written mainly for people in a really stricken state when they can’t wrap their mind about where to begin. Listening can still give you ideas on things to change and it motivates me to clean. Would listen to again.
Profile Image for Shebbles.
271 reviews
November 13, 2025
Listened to this on an audiobook while I cleaned and decluttered. It was very motivating!! I think I'll need to buy the paper copy so I can reference it whenever I get stuck!! Highly recommend!!
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