I am a mum of two daughters. One of them is ADHD and autistic, and for years I found myself searching for tools that would actually help her. Not just tools that looked good in a review, but things that would genuinely work in the chaos of everyday family life.
The honest truth is that we spent a lot of money along the way. Specialist apps, dedicated tablets, subscription services, carefully chosen resources. Some worked brilliantly for a week and then lost their appeal. Some never clicked at all. With a neurodiverse child, you never quite know what will land until you try it, and the trying gets expensive.
What I kept coming back to was the simple, visual stuff. Now, next, later boards. Feelings charts. Step by step routines. The kind of tools that therapists and SENCOs had been recommending for years, but that were scattered across different apps, different websites, and different price points.
I also noticed something else. The tools we were using for my daughter as a young child were still useful as she got older. And when I started thinking about my own ADHD diagnosis in adulthood, I realised that many of these same tools were genuinely helpful for me too. A visual daily planner. A worry box. A calm-down toolkit. These are not just for children.
So Daytiles was born. One place, with all the tools in one place, free to use, on any device you already own. No specialist tablet required. No subscription. No commitment. Just open it and see if it helps.
I hope it does.