A family chore chart that stays current

Move the family chore chart off the fridge—and into the routine.

Give each child a clear view of today's chores while two parents stay aligned on schedules, approvals, points, and rewards.

Available now on Android. No ads. iPhone is coming soon.

ChorePoints family chore chart app with parent and kid profiles
Two parent loginsUp to 10 kid profilesRepeating chore schedules
01

A chart should reduce confusion, not become another chore

Paper charts are excellent when a routine is small and stable. They become harder to manage when jobs repeat on different days, children switch homes or devices, or two parents need to know what has already been approved.

A family chore chart app keeps the current assignment, completion status, and point value together. ChorePoints gives every child a focused list while parents retain the broader family view.

02

Repeat the schedule, not the setup work

Create daily or weekly expectations once, then adjust them as the family changes. Keep instructions specific—“put books on the shelf and clothes in the hamper” is easier to act on than “clean your room.”

ChorePoints is designed for the operational details: who owns the job, when it is due, what it is worth, and whether it needs approval.

03

Keep both parents on the same page

One family plan supports two parent logins. That means either parent can see the same chore history and reward requests instead of relying on a text thread or a child carrying information between adults.

A shared system works best when adults agree on the standard first. Decide what “done” means, how retries work, and which rewards require an extra conversation.

A four-step start

Set up the smallest version that can work.

  1. Start with the chores that already happen every week.
  2. Write one observable definition of done for each task.
  3. Give each child a small, readable list.
  4. Hold a five-minute weekly reset to rebalance work.