Harold Robert Meyer | The ADD Resource Center Reviewed 10/30/2025 Published 12/02/2025
Listen to understand, not just to respond.
Compliments are more than kind words—they’re powerful tools for shaping confidence, resilience, and self-esteem. For children with ADHD, praise can be especially impactful, helping them feel seen and valued in a world that often highlights their challenges. But knowing how and when to compliment your child with ADHD makes all the difference.
Children with ADHD typically hear far more corrections than praise throughout their day. By some estimates, they receive significantly more negative feedback than their neurotypical peers before they even reach adolescence. Thoughtful compliments help balance this equation.
Meaningful praise boosts self-esteem by affirming your child’s strengths rather than dwelling on difficulties. It encourages effort and motivates persistence, especially when tasks feel overwhelming. Compliments also strengthen your connection, build trust, and reinforce the parent-child bond. Perhaps most importantly, positive reinforcement helps children repeat the actions that lead to success—making praise a practical parenting strategy rather than just a feel-good gesture.
Timing matters enormously. Compliments land most powerfully when they’re immediate and connected to something specific.
Right after the effort or success. Praise the moment your child tries, even if the outcome isn’t perfect. The ADHD brain responds best to feedback that arrives while the experience is still fresh.
During small wins. Recognize everyday achievements like starting homework without a reminder, remembering to pack their bag, or transitioning between activities smoothly. These “small” moments often require significant effort for children with ADHD.
In challenging moments. Compliment perseverance when they stick with a difficult task instead of giving up. This reinforces the exact behavior you want to see more of.
At unexpected times. Surprise them with praise for kindness, creativity, humor, or helpfulness. This shows you notice who they are as a person—not just their performance on schoolwork or chores.
Children can sense when praise is exaggerated or insincere, and hollow compliments can actually backfire, making them distrust future praise. Stick to what you genuinely observe.
Specificity makes compliments meaningful and memorable. It’s fine to make comparisons if they highlight your child’s effort or strengths without putting others down.
Too much praise—or praise that goes on too long—can feel overwhelming or lose its impact over time. Keep compliments short. A single clear sentence often lands better than an elaborate explanation. Balance compliments with simple encouragement, and let some moments pass without commentary.
Some children with ADHD don’t handle praise comfortably. They may look away, shrug, change the subject, or show no visible response at all. Others may not even feel positive about what you’ve said—particularly if they struggle with low self-esteem or have learned to distrust praise.
This doesn’t mean your words aren’t getting through. Many children absorb compliments even when they can’t show it in the moment. Keep offering genuine praise without requiring acknowledgment in return. Over time, consistent recognition builds a foundation they can draw on, even if they never say “thank you.”
Children with ADHD often work tremendously hard, even when results don’t match their effort. Recognizing the process—not just the product—teaches them that trying matters.
Generic praise (“Good job!”) often falls flat or is unbelievable. The ADHD brain thrives on specific, meaningful feedback that connects words to actions.
Be concrete. Instead of “You’re smart,” try “I love how you figured out that puzzle step by step.”
Focus on effort, not just results. “I’m proud of how hard you worked on your math homework” means more than “You got a good grade.”
Highlight overlooked strengths. Compliment creativity, curiosity, empathy, or humor—qualities that often go unrecognized in traditional settings.
Keep it authentic. Children can sense empty praise. Make sure your words reflect what you genuinely feel.
Pair words with action. A smile, high-five, fist bump, or hug reinforces the compliment and makes it memorable.
Complimenting a child with ADHD isn’t about sugar-coating reality—it’s about spotlighting their strengths, effort, and growth. When parents give timely, specific, and heartfelt praise, children learn to see themselves as capable and resilient.
Over time, these moments of recognition become building blocks for confidence and lasting success. Your words have power. Use them to help your child see what you already know: they have so much to offer.
Harold Meyer founded The A.D.D. Resource Center in 1993 to provide ADHD education, advocacy, and support. He co-founded CHADD of New York and served as national treasurer, later becoming president of the Institute for the Advancement of ADHD Coaching. An internationally respected ADHD writer and speaker, Meyer has led school boards and task forces, conducted educator workshops, worked in advertising and tech consulting, and pioneered early online ADHD forums.
The ADD Resource Center – addrc.org
For more than 30 years, the ADD Resource Center has helped children, families, and adults navigate ADHD with practical strategies and compassionate support.
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