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Todoist vs TickTick for ADHD: Which Task Manager Works for Women?

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Todoist (free/$5/mo) is a clean, fast task manager with natural language input. TickTick (free/$3.99/mo) adds a built-in Pomodoro timer, habit tracker, and calendar view. Both are general-purpose productivity tools that ADHD users try to adapt. Neither was designed for ADHD, and both create overdue task shame when executive dysfunction causes missed deadlines.

Feature Todoist TickTick Mutra
Monthly price Free / $5/mo Free / $3.99/mo $7/month
ADHD-focused design Partial Partial Yes — built for women with ADHD
Todoist vs TickTick Feature Comparison
FeatureTodoistTickTick
PriceFree / $5/moFree / $3.99/mo
Natural Language InputExcellentGood
Built-in TimerNoYes — Pomodoro timer
Habit TrackingNoYes
Calendar ViewLimitedYes — full calendar
Kanban BoardYes (Pro)Yes
Overdue Task HandlingRed badges, visible pileRed badges, visible pile
ADHD-Specific FeaturesNoneNone
Peer Task ExchangeNoNo

Two General-Purpose Task Managers, One ADHD Brain

Todoist and TickTick are among the most popular task managers available. Both appear regularly in “best ADHD app” roundups — not because they’re designed for ADHD, but because ADHD users are searching for any tool that might help, and these are the best general-purpose options.

The core difference: Todoist does one thing (task management) with extreme polish. TickTick does several things (tasks, timer, habits, calendar) in one app.

Todoist: Speed and Simplicity

Todoist’s strength is frictionless task capture. Type “call dentist tomorrow at 2pm #personal p1” and it creates a task with a due date, project, and priority — parsed from natural language. No menus, no dropdowns, no extra taps.

This speed matters for ADHD users because task capture is time-sensitive. The moment you think “I need to call the dentist,” you need to record it before working memory drops it. Todoist’s natural language input is the fastest path from thought to recorded task.

The ADHD problem with Todoist: once the task is recorded, Todoist has nothing to help you actually do it. “Call dentist” sits in your inbox. The due date passes. It turns red. You reschedule it. The new date passes. It turns red again. Each red task is a small shame deposit.

TickTick: More Tools in One Place

TickTick adds features that Todoist doesn’t have: a built-in Pomodoro timer, a habit tracker, a full calendar view, and a kanban board. For ADHD users, the Pomodoro timer is particularly relevant — it provides time-bound work intervals that combat time blindness and create artificial deadlines.

The habit tracker is also useful for ADHD routine building. Instead of tracking habits in a separate app, TickTick keeps everything in one place.

The ADHD problem with TickTick: more features means more complexity. TickTick’s interface has more buttons, views, and options than Todoist. For ADHD users prone to decision paralysis, this extra complexity can be counterproductive. And like Todoist, TickTick still creates visible overdue shame when tasks pile up.

The Shared Failure Point

Both Todoist and TickTick are recording tools. They capture and organize what needs to be done. They provide reminders, dates, and views. What they can’t do is help you start a task that executive dysfunction is blocking.

No task manager can. The manager’s job ends where executive function’s job begins. And for ADHD users, that’s exactly where the problem is.

For women with ADHD managing the administrative debt that accumulated during years of undiagnosed executive dysfunction — overdue medical forms, insurance claims, tax paperwork, unanswered emails — a task manager makes the debt visible without providing tools to pay it down.

The Missing Layer

What both Todoist and TickTick lack for ADHD users: external accountability, peer support, task exchange, gamification that rewards completion, and automatic rollover that doesn’t create shame. These aren’t features either company is likely to build, because they’re building general productivity tools, not ADHD-specific ones.

Mutra fills this gap with peer task exchange — routing your blocked task to someone whose brain isn’t blocked on it. No overdue badges. No shame pile. Just tasks getting done.

Neither option solving your impossible tasks?

Mutra is built for the admin paralysis no timer or tracker can fix. Sign up free.

Verdict

TickTick offers more features at a lower price (Pomodoro timer, habit tracker, calendar view). Todoist offers a cleaner, faster experience with better natural language input. For ADHD women, TickTick's built-in timer and habit tracker add useful functionality. But both share the same fundamental limitation: they track tasks without helping you start them.

PROS & CONS

Todoist

Pros

  • Fastest task entry of any manager
  • Clean interface reduces cognitive load
  • Best natural language parsing

Cons

  • Bare-bones — no timer, no habits
  • Overdue items create shame pile
  • No external accountability

PROS & CONS

TickTick

Pros

  • All-in-one with timer and habits
  • More affordable at $3.99/mo
  • Calendar view helps with time blindness

Cons

  • More features can overwhelm ADHD users
  • Same overdue shame problem as Todoist
  • No peer support or task exchange

Q&A

Is Todoist or TickTick better for ADHD?

For ADHD specifically, TickTick has a slight edge because of the built-in Pomodoro timer (useful for time blindness) and habit tracker (useful for routine building). Todoist's advantage is speed and simplicity, which reduces cognitive load. Neither is designed for ADHD — both create overdue shame and lack task initiation support.

Q&A

Why do task managers fail for ADHD users?

Task managers track what you need to do. They don't help you start doing it. For ADHD users whose main barrier is task initiation — not task tracking — a task manager records the problem without solving it. The growing list of overdue items becomes a shame generator rather than a productivity tool.

Over the last 2 decades, adult ADHD diagnoses rose from 6.1% to 10.2%, accounting for over 8.7 million adults

Source: Pharmacy Times, October 2024

Does Todoist have a Pomodoro timer?
No. Todoist doesn't include a built-in focus timer. You'd need a separate app like Forest or the Pomofocus website. TickTick includes a Pomodoro timer in its free tier, which is one reason ADHD users often prefer it over Todoist.
How do you handle Todoist's overdue tasks without triggering shame?
A common ADHD workaround is to use no due dates for tasks that don't have real deadlines. This keeps your list clean and avoids the red badge problem. The trade-off is losing the time-based prompts that help some users remember tasks.
Is TickTick's Pomodoro timer available on the free plan?
Yes. The Pomodoro timer is included in TickTick's free tier. The paid plan ($3.99/month) adds extended session customization and statistics, but the basic timer works without paying.

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