ADHD Community Interest Company
A compass rather than a track
We help people with ADHD navigate life on their own terms. Rather than forcing neurotypical paths, we provide the tools and direction for individuals to carve their own positive pathways — while working to remove the barriers that make those paths unnecessarily hard.
How can we help you?
Choose the option that best describes you to find the right support.
I'm a parent
Strategies and support for raising children with ADHD, from discipline to emotional management.
I'm a teacher
Understand the ADHD mind in the classroom and reduce exclusions with practical strategies.
I'm an employer
Unlock the innovation potential of neurodivergent staff and build an ADHD-aware workplace.
I work in justice
Mentoring, expert witness testimony, and prison staff support to break the cycle.
I have ADHD
From life admin to workplace challenges — practical help and guidance for your own path.
I work in HR
Expert consultancy on reasonable adjustments, grievance support, and conflict resolution.
What we do
Our services span five key areas, each designed to meet people where they are.
Mentoring & Justice
Hope from lived experience
6 servicesEducation & Academic Support
Keeping young people in education
4 servicesWorkplace, Business & HR
Unlocking neurodivergent potential at work
6 servicesFamily & Practical Life Support
Practical help for everyday life
3 servicesSystemic Lobbying
Changing the systems, not the people
2 servicesThe compass philosophy
Standardised societal "tracks" — in education, the justice system, and the workplace — are designed for neurotypical cognitive profiles. For those with ADHD, these rigid tracks often lead to friction, failure, and exclusion.
We don't try to fix people or force them onto those tracks. Instead, we provide a compass — the tools, mentoring, and advocacy to help them navigate their own route to a positive outcome.
Read our full storyHelp us carve more pathways
Your support helps us provide mentoring, advocacy, and practical support to people with ADHD who need it most — from young people at risk of exclusion to prisoners seeking a new direction.
Make a Donation