TaskPlannera is a cozy home for your whole life: tasks, habits, mood, meals, money, people. It never guilts you. Miss a day? Nothing breaks. You just begin again.
Free forever core · 14-day Plus trial included · No account required
Built by one person who needed it, tested daily by the early-access crew.
This is your actual Sat. The dial is live, and the walk starts two hours from now. Drag it somewhere kinder; it snaps to 15 minutes.
One app for your whole life
Twenty-plus gentle sections to plan, track, and remember, without twenty apps shouting at you.
One small thing
A single tiny intention each day. Done? That's a good day.
Mood, gently
Optional check-ins draw a soft wave across your day.
Focus timer
Pomodoro-style sessions, logged without fuss.
Wallet
Spending, budgets, subscriptions. Tracked, never judged.
Meals & groceries
A 7-day meal plan that writes your shopping list.
Life reminders
Birthdays, bills, meds, renewals. Soonest first.
Streaks that sleep, never die
Log goals with one tap: a check, a counter, a tiny timer. Your rhythm grid shows the days you showed up. And when life happens, a streak freeze keeps your picture whole. No red marks. Ever.
Try it: log all three, then ask the hard question below the grid.
A little friend, never a nag
Meet your companion. It cheers when you log a win (go on, tap a goal above), asks whimsical check-in questions that quietly fill your day, and never, ever guilts you.
Give it a tap. It likes that.
Your day, your layout
The Today dashboard is built from widgets you can drag, resize, and hide. Pin your Wallet or Mood right at the top if that's what your days are about. The app fits you, not the other way around.
Drag to reorder. Hide what you don't need and it waits as a chip, no judgment.
Quests, chests, and zero pressure
The app turns showing up into a quiet game: XP, levels, gems, and a daily reward chest. Here, have a taste.
Today's quests, website edition
This is how quests feel in the app: small, optional, and kind. Try all three.
Your data never leaves your device unless you say so
Local-first means exactly that: everything lives on your device, works offline, and needs no account. Sign-in and sync are optional. Export everything, anytime, in one tap.
Private by default
No account, no tracking, no data harvesting. Full stop.
Yours to take
One-tap export of everything you've ever logged. Import it back anywhere.
Encrypted diary
Your private diary is end-to-end encrypted. Even sync can't read it.
Made for real, messy, human days
Different lives, same calm.
“My plants are alive. All of them.”
The reminders section knows my fern's watering day better than I know my own birthday. Eight months in, zero casualties. My previous record was three weeks.
a reformed plant killer“Day 247. A slip on day 90 didn't erase me.”
Every other sobriety counter reset me to zero, and every reset ended with me deleting the app and drinking anyway. Here, a slip is one gray square in a sea of green. I could finally see the truth: one bad day, not a bad life. I'm fairly sure that design choice is why I'm still counting.
sober and counting“The only planner that survived my ADHD.”
Every system I ever built collapsed by Wednesday. One small thing, plus carry-over that doesn't shame me, is the first loop my brain has ever accepted. I got through finals week without a single 3am panic spiral, which the people who live with me describe as historic.
a student with ADHD“The family brain lives outside my head now.”
Meals, groceries, the dog's meds, my mother-in-law's birthday. My husband asked how I suddenly remember everything. I showed him the pet. He said hi to it. We're all fine.
a busy parent“Finally, a planner that respects a rotating schedule.”
Half the week my 'morning' starts at 6pm, and normal planners treat me like a data error. Routine anchors move with my shifts, and the energy check keeps me honest about what a post-shift brain can actually do. Nothing else came close.
a night-shift nurse“I came for the time-blocking. I stayed because nothing yells.”
Every productivity app eventually turns into a disappointed parent. This one quietly slides the task to tomorrow like a good friend covering your shift.
a software developer“At 71, I did not want an app. My granddaughter insisted.”
It reminds me of my pills, when to ring my brother, and what's for dinner. The little creature blinks at me while I do it. I have named him Gerald. We get along.
a grandfather, 71“It taught me to plan half as much and finish twice as often.”
Coming out of burnout, my ambition was the enemy. An app that suggests the lightest task on a low-energy day feels like being seen by software, which I was not prepared for. I no longer dread my own list.
a designer, post-burnout“I read the architecture before I trusted it.”
No account. Data on my device. An export button that produces an actual file I can open. I sat there watching the network tab: silence. This is how software should treat people.
a privacy nerd“RIP, my 14-tab spreadsheet.”
Steps, workouts, weight, water, one calm place. The rhythm grid scratches the streak itch without ever threatening me. My spreadsheet era is over and honestly nobody misses it.
a data-loving runnerBegin gently
The core is free forever, and every new account starts with 14 days of Plus on the house. No card, no pressure.