If your ADHD kid seems to need to climb on everything, crash into everything, and spin until they fall over, you are not imagining it. Their body is asking for something their brain needs.
I’m Mary. I used to spend a lot of energy trying to make my son sit still. Then I read the research. Now we have a Pikler triangle in the living room and a crash pad in the hallway, and he can actually hold it together at the dinner table. This is not a coincidence.
What the Research Says About ADHD and Movement
Physical activity is not just a nice-to-have for ADHD kids. It is one of the most evidence-backed interventions we have.
A meta-analysis published in Journal of Attention Disorders (Cerrillo-Urbina et al., 2015) reviewed multiple studies and found that moderate-to-vigorous physical activity significantly improved attention, executive function, and behavioral regulation in children with ADHD. The effect sizes were in the moderate-to-large range, which in medical research is meaningful.
CHADD notes that exercise increases dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin in the brain. These are the same neurotransmitters that ADHD medications target. In some cases, research has found that 30 to 40 minutes of aerobic activity can produce attention benefits for 1 to 3 hours afterward.
This is not “burn off energy.” This is “rebalance neurochemistry.”
Why Proprioceptive Input Is the Missing Piece
Not all movement is equal. The type of movement that tends to regulate ADHD kids most consistently is proprioceptive input, which means deep muscle and joint engagement.
Proprioception is the sense that tells your body where it is in space. It is activated by:
- Pushing and pulling heavy objects
- Climbing, hanging, swinging
- Jumping (especially on trampolines)
- Deep pressure (weighted blankets, bear hugs)
- Crashing into soft surfaces
According to occupational therapy research, proprioceptive input has a regulating effect on the nervous system. It can calm an over-aroused child and alert a sluggish one. The OT Toolbox has extensive evidence-based write-ups on “heavy work” activities for this reason.
In ADHD kids, who often have sensory integration challenges alongside attention issues, proprioceptive input is frequently the thing that shifts them from dysregulated to regulated.
What Counts as Big Body Play
Researcher Dr. Frances Carlson, who wrote a book specifically on big body play in early childhood education, defines it as vigorous physical play that involves running, jumping, climbing, wrestling, tumbling, and rough-and-tumble play.
For ADHD kids, specifically, these activities tend to be most regulating:
- Climbing structures: Pikler triangles, indoor climbing gyms, Swedish climbing ladders
- Swinging: Sensory swings, rope swings, therapy swings
- Jumping: Mini trampolines, couch cushions
- Crashing: Crash pads, pillow piles
- Pushing and pulling: Scooter boards, pushing a weighted wagon
- Balance work: Balance boards, beam walking
What This Looks Like in Our House
We live in a normal-sized house. We do not have a gym. Here is what we actually have, and what it has done.
A Pikler triangle in the living room. He climbs on it every day, usually before school. It takes about 10 minutes and the mornings that start with climbing go measurably better.
A rope swing mounted in the hallway doorway. When he comes home from school dysregulated, he swings for 5 to 10 minutes before we even talk about homework.
A mini trampoline in the basement. When everyone is melting down (me included), we trampoline for 5 minutes. It is stupid. It works.
A crash pad by the couch. This is where dinosaur-throwing gets rerouted. “If you need to throw, throw it at the crash pad.”
Total investment: roughly $300 over 18 months. Return: my kid can complete a morning routine without a meltdown most days.
How Much Movement Do ADHD Kids Need?
There is no single number that covers every child, but here is what the research suggests:
- The CDC’s Physical Activity Guidelines for Children recommend at least 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity per day for children ages 6 to 17.
- For ADHD kids, many occupational therapists recommend more: short bursts of intense movement throughout the day, especially as “movement breaks” every 30 to 60 minutes during sedentary tasks like homework.
- Timing matters: 20 to 30 minutes of vigorous movement before a focus-heavy task (school, homework) tends to improve performance for the next 1 to 3 hours.
Building a Movement Routine
If movement is this effective, why is it so hard to make it routine? Because ADHD parents are also tired.
Here is the minimum-viable movement routine that worked for us:
Morning: 10 minutes of climbing or jumping before breakfast.
After-school decompression: 10 to 20 minutes of outdoor or swinging activity before any conversation about the day.
Before homework: 5 minutes of proprioceptive work (wall push-ups, animal walks, carrying something heavy).
Before bed (30 minutes before): NOT vigorous movement. Heavy pressure and slow rocking instead.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a Pikler triangle actually worth the investment?
For our family, yes. It gets used daily, it supports climbing from toddler through early elementary age, and it takes up a manageable footprint. That said, you can get similar benefits from a cheap indoor climbing gym or even couch cushions stacked against a wall. The principle matters more than the specific equipment.
My child is already hyperactive. Won’t more movement make it worse?
Counterintuitively, no. Vigorous movement tends to reduce hyperactivity, not increase it. What amps kids up more is short bursts of excited stimulation without a physical outlet. A trampoline session typically calms them; a fast-paced cartoon typically does not.
What if my kid refuses to move?
Make it social. Do it with them. Put music on. Make it a game, not a chore. And pay attention: sometimes “I don’t want to” means “I’m already overstimulated.” In that case, swap vigorous movement for heavy pressure (weighted blanket, deep hug, firm massage).
Bottom Line
Movement is not a luxury for ADHD kids. It is not something we do when we have time. It is a neurological intervention with evidence behind it, and it is free or close to free.
Start small. Five minutes before school. Ten minutes after school. You will see it in the rest of their day.
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