Harold Robert Meyer | The ADD Resource Center
Reviewed 01/31/2026 – Published 02/16/2026
Listen to understand, not just to respond
Parenting a child with ADHD while ensuring siblings feel equally valued represents one of the most challenging balancing acts families face. While children with ADHD often require additional support, supervision, and intervention, their neurotypical siblings need attention, validation, and reassurance that they matter just as much. This comprehensive guide offers evidence-based strategies to meet everyone’s needs, prevent resentment, and foster healthy sibling relationships. Research shows that when parents implement intentional attention-balancing strategies, all children benefit—children with ADHD receive necessary support, and siblings develop empathy, resilience, and strong family bonds.
Children with ADHD truly need more parental support. Their executive function challenges mean they need help with:
This isn’t favoritism—it’s responding to legitimate needs. However, siblings may not understand this distinction, particularly when they’re young.
Children without ADHD often feel:
These feelings are valid and deserve acknowledgment, not dismissal.
Studies on ADHD family dynamics reveal:
Research identifies key factors that help siblings thrive:
Implementation:
Example Schedules:
What to Say: “This is our special time together. Nothing will interrupt us unless it’s an emergency. What would you like to do?”
Your ADHD child may consume more total minutes, but your neurotypical child deserves equal quality of attention.
Quality Attention Indicators:
The “Banking” Approach:
Think of attention like a bank account. Your ADHD child may need more frequent “withdrawals,” but ensure your other child’s account stays healthy with regular “deposits” of meaningful connection.
Age-Appropriate Conversations:
For younger children (ages 4-7): “Sometimes your brother needs extra help with things that are harder for him, like sitting still or remembering instructions. That doesn’t mean we love him more. Everyone in our family gets what they need. What do you need from me?”
For school-age children (ages 8-12): “I know it might seem like we spend more time helping your sister. Her brain works differently, and some things are harder for her. But I want you to know—you’re just as important. When you need me, I’m here. And I’m scheduling special time just for us because you deserve my full attention too.”
For teens (ages 13+): “Let’s talk honestly. Managing your brother’s ADHD takes a lot of energy, and I worry that might make you feel overlooked. That’s not okay with me. I need to know—are you getting enough of my time and attention? What would make you feel more seen and valued?”
The Key Message:
Fair doesn’t mean identical. Fair means everyone gets what they need to thrive.
Create systems that guarantee attention for your non-ADHD child:
The “Special Signal”: Establish a code word or gesture that your child without ADHD can use when they need you, indicating “I really need to talk” versus routine requests.
The “Scheduled Check-In”: Even if they seem fine, initiate conversations: “I haven’t had much chance to hear about your day. Tell me what’s going on with you.”
The “Rain Check Rule”: When you must postpone their needs due to an ADHD crisis, immediately schedule the makeup time: “I can’t help with your project right now because your brother needs me, but I’m putting 4:30 on the calendar—that’s your time, guaranteed.”
Help all your children understand the difference:
ADHD Child’s Needs:
ADHD Child’s Wants:
Teaching the Framework: “Your sister needs help remembering to brush her teeth because her brain doesn’t send her reminders like yours does. But she doesn’t get to skip doing it—she still has the responsibility. We’re helping her meet it.”
ADHD children often receive disproportionate feedback—both criticism during struggles and praise for basic accomplishments. Balance this:
Create “Celebration Equity”:
Example: If you make a big deal about your ADHD child completing homework, also celebrate your other child’s consistent responsibility: “I really appreciate how independently you manage your assignments. That shows real maturity.”
The Right Balance:
Do encourage:
Don’t create:
What to Say: “You can be a loving brother without being your sister’s helper or her parent. That’s my job. Your job is to be a kid.”
Warning Signs:
Intervention Strategy:
Empower your child without ADHD to speak up:
Model Request Phrases:
Respond Positively: Never punish them for expressing these needs. Reward the advocacy: “Thank you for telling me. You’re absolutely right—let’s make that happen.”
Resources for Siblings:
Resources for Parents:
Traditional approach (imbalanced): Parent spends 30 minutes helping ADHD child get ready while sibling manages independently, then rushes everyone out the door.
Balanced approach:
Traditional approach (imbalanced): Parent sits with ADHD child for entire homework session while sibling works independently, perhaps feeling ignored even when they need help.
Balanced approach:
Traditional approach (imbalanced): Extended, exhausting bedtime routine for the child with ADHD while the sibling gets a quick “goodnight.”
Balanced approach:
Despite your best planning, ADHD emergencies happen—meltdowns, school calls, behavioral incidents. These inevitably disrupt attention balance.
In the Moment:
After the Crisis:
These disruptions, while frustrating, can teach valuable lessons when handled well:
The key is ensuring these lessons come alongside adequate attention, not as a substitute for it.
Seek family therapy or individual support if:
Remember: Asking for help is not failure—it’s responsible parenting.
When parents successfully balance attention, research shows remarkable outcomes:
For neurotypical siblings:
For ADHD children:
For the entire family:
Here’s a truth every parent of multiple children needs to hear: You will never perfectly balance every moment, every day, every need. That’s not the goal.
The goal is ensuring that over time, each child feels:
Your ADHD child’s extra needs don’t diminish your other child’s importance. Your neurotypical child’s smooth functioning doesn’t make them less deserving of attention.
You have enough love. You have enough value. You have enough presence for all your children.
The strategies in this article help you show that truth—not perfectly, but consistently, intentionally, and with heart.
The ADD Resource Center (ADDRC) has been providing comprehensive ADHD education, advocacy, and support services since 1993. Under the direction of Harold Meyer, we offer evidence-based resources for individuals with ADHD and their families. Our mission is to help families understand ADHD while providing practical strategies that make daily life more manageable.
Connect with us:
The ADD Resource Center. (2025). How to Give Your Child with ADHD the Extra Attention Needed Without Neglecting Their Siblings. Available at: https://www.addrc.org/when-your-other-child-asks-why-does-my-sibling-get-all-the-attention/
Further Reading:
About the Author
Harold Meyer established the A.D.D. Resource Center in 1993 to offer education, advocacy, and support for individuals, families, and professionals dealing with attention disorders. With over thirty years of dedicated service, he has become a respected voice in the ADHD community through evidence-based strategies and compassionate guidance.
Harold co-founded CHADD of New York, served as CHADD’s national treasurer, and was president of the Institute for the Advancement of ADHD Coaching. As an internationally recognized writer and speaker, he has conducted workshops for educators, led NYC school boards and task forces, and helped develop early online ADHD forums.
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