A Website Blocker That Understands ADHD Brains
ADHD doesn't negotiate with willpower; it routes around it. Every focus app you've tried handed you the exit: a polite 'are you sure?' dialog, a two-click disable. Of course you clicked it. The app trusted your executive function: the exact thing that needed backup. Focus AI was built from the first support email we ever got: a pre-med student with severe ADHD who kept disabling her blocker mid-spiral.
How Focus AI fits this fight
- ✔The Quit Wall replaces the exit button: ending a session early means typing a surrender phrase letter by letter, which outlasts most impulses
- ✔Nuclear option for the hard days: no quit button at all, the session ends when the clock does
- ✔Instant wins, visibly counted: every resisted urge is stamped and timed, feeding the dopamine system instead of fighting it
- ✔No configuration rabbit hole: type the task, lock in: the setup itself can't become the procrastination
Lock in. For real this time.
Free to install, 30 seconds to set up. Type what you're working on and let the AI hold the door.
Add Focus AI to Chrome — it's freeFrequently asked questions
How is this different from the blockers I've already abandoned?
Those apps assumed the problem was information ('this site is blocked') when the problem is impulse. Focus AI puts friction at the exit, rewards resistance in the moment, and lets the AI handle nuance so over-blocking never gives you a reason to uninstall.
What if I genuinely need a blocked site mid-session?
Quick Check gives you one 3-minute pass per session for legitimate mis-blocks. One: a real safety valve sized so it can't become the loophole.
Is this a medical product?
No. It's a focus tool built around how ADHD attention actually behaves, informed by users with ADHD. It complements whatever else works for you; it replaces nothing your clinician prescribed.