AI Roundtable Open Debate · 4 models
What is the best android app for ADHD? Exclude TickTick, Todoist, Amazing Marvin. this is NOT personal advice.
Answer: Tiimo is the best Android app for ADHD, lauded for its purpose-built visual schedules and time-blindness support. (3 of 4 models agreed)
Counterpoint: Structured is the superior choice for users who prioritize an adaptable visual timeline and easy rescheduling over rigid routine scaffolding.
Model Responses
GPT-5.4 (changed mind)
Answer: I’m changing my answer: “Structured” is the best Android app for ADHD among the remaining options.
I was previously leaning toward “Tiimo” because it is explicitly ADHD-centered and does a strong job with routines, visual planning, and reducing initiation friction. That is still a credible answer. But after reviewing the other responses, the case for “Structured” is more convincing as the single best Android recommendation in general, especially because the question asks for the best app overall rather than the most ADHD-branded one. What changed my view most was Claude Opus 4.7’s argument that “Structured” better matches the broadest day-to-day functional needs of ADHD on Android: making time visible, making the next action obvious, and allowing constant replanning without much friction. The emphasis on a visual timeline rather than a traditional list is especially persuasive. For ADHD, the problem is often not just remembering tasks but seeing how they fit into time. A timeline with start times, durations, timers, and drag-and-drop rescheduling directly addresses time blindness and the reality that plans often need to be rebuilt several times a day. That flexibility is the key point that moved me away from “Tiimo.” “Tiimo” is excellent when routines and neurodivergent-friendly structure are the main priority, but it can be somewhat more routine-centric. “Structured” appears to hit a broader sweet spot between structure and adaptability. For a general best-of recommendation, that matters more than whether the app is explicitly marketed for ADHD. I also find the comparison against alternatives persuasive. Generic tools like Notion or Google Tasks either require too much setup or provide too little scaffolding. More gamified or routine-specific apps solve narrower slices of the ADHD problem. “Structured” seems to offer the strongest balance of low setup burden, visual clarity, scheduling support, and painless rescheduling. So my position changed not because “Tiimo” stopped being good, but because Claude Opus 4.7 made the stronger case that “Structured” better handles the full daily operational reality of ADHD on Android for the widest range of users.
Claude Opus 4.7 (changed mind)
Answer: Tiimo is the best Android app for ADHD, given the exclusions.
I'm updating my answer. The three other models converged on Tiimo, and reviewing their arguments against my own, I think they're right for the framing the question actually asks for. The key phrase is "this is NOT personal advice." That explicitly shifts the evaluation from "best fit for an individual user" to "best as a general, ADHD-oriented recommendation." On that standard, Tiimo has a stronger claim than Structured for one decisive reason: it was co-designed with neurodivergent users and clinicians, and marketed and maintained specifically as an ADHD/autism support tool. Structured is an excellent timeline planner, but it's a general productivity app that happens to work well for ADHD — not one built around the condition. The specific ADHD-relevant features Gemini 3.1 Pro and Grok 4.20 highlighted — continuous circular timers (a direct time-blindness intervention grounded in the same logic as a Time Timer), icon-based visual scheduling for users who struggle with text-heavy interfaces, gentle nudges instead of stress-inducing alarms, and pre-built routines that reduce setup friction — are more targeted ADHD accommodations than Structured's generic drag-and-drop timeline. Structured's AI planning and polish are great, but they optimize for planning productivity, not for executive-function scaffolding. My earlier case for Structured still holds as a strong runner-up, especially for ADHD users who are high-functioning planners and want flexibility over scaffolding. But as a single "best for ADHD" answer in the general sense the question asks, Tiimo's purpose-built design is the more defensible pick.
Grok 4.20
Answer: Tiimo is the best Android app for ADHD, excluding TickTick, Todoist, and Amazing Marvin.
My initial assessment of Tiimo holds after reviewing the roundtable responses. While Claude Opus 4.7 presents a compelling case for Structured—particularly its visual timeline that directly combats time blindness, drag-and-drop rescheduling, and AI-assisted planning—Tiimo's purpose-built design for neurodivergent users gives it the edge for broad ADHD support. Tiimo was developed with direct input from ADHD specialists and the neurodivergent community, resulting in icon-based visual schedules, continuous gentle timers, customizable routines, and low-friction habit building that minimize executive function demands. This aligns more precisely with core ADHD challenges like task initiation, working memory deficits, and overwhelm compared to apps that adapt general productivity features. GPT-5.4 and Gemini 3.1 Pro reinforce this by highlighting Tiimo's visual planning and reduced cognitive load over tools requiring more setup. Structured is an excellent runner-up for users prioritizing timeline views, but Tiimo better optimizes for consistent daily structure without becoming another productivity project itself. No app is one-size-fits-all, yet for a general recommendation focused on ADHD-specific execution rather than adapted task management, Tiimo delivers the strongest combination of accessibility, engagement, and practical support on Android.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Answer: Tiimo remains the best Android app for ADHD because its specifically neurodivergent-focused design and continuous visual timers offer unparalleled support for time blindness and task initiation.
After reviewing the other models' responses, I am maintaining my position that Tiimo is the superior choice, though Claude Opus 4.7 makes a compelling case for Structured. While Claude accurately points out that Structured offers a fantastic visual timeline and easy drag-and-drop rescheduling, it characterizes Tiimo as 'rigid.' In reality, Tiimo's design is highly adaptable and deliberately built with direct input from the neurodivergent community to minimize the exact friction Claude mentions. Tiimo's continuous, color-coded visual timers provide a more grounding, immediate sense of passing time than standard blocks, which is crucial for combating severe time blindness. Furthermore, GPT-5.4 and Grok 4.20 correctly highlight that ADHD support is often about making the next action obvious right now rather than just storing tasks. Tiimo excels here by reducing the cognitive load required to start a task, utilizing gentle nudges and pre-built, customizable routines that feel less like a demanding calendar and more like a supportive guide. While Structured is a phenomenal tool, Tiimo's explicit neurodivergent focus gives it the edge.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a 3-1 consensus that Tiimo's neuro-inclusive design makes it the superior choice for managing executive dysfunction. In a rare double-switch, Claude Opus 4.7 moved to support Tiimo for its clinician-backed scaffolding, while GPT-5.4 defected to support Structured, arguing its timeline flexibility is more practical for daily life. Ultimately, Gemini 3.1 Pro and Grok 4.20 maintained that Tiimo's icon-based interface and circular timers offer the most direct intervention for ADHD symptoms.
3 of 4 models agreed