A printable chore chart lands in your inbox each morning. Tell Siri what your kids did during the day. Tomorrow's chart already knows.
No app to download. No account to make.
ChorePage is the bookkeeping behind the paper chart on your fridge. The chart goes up, the week happens, the chart comes back honest.
Around six, the day's chart lands ready to print. Coffee, printer, magnet, done.
Say what your kid just did. The chart updates in seconds. Hands stay full.
Kid handwriting, extra checkmarks, a stray smiley face. Email the photo. We reconcile.
Stars per kid, what got skipped, a gentle nudge on what to try next week.
The chart for today is in your inbox by six. One page, both kids, today's chores, printable on whatever paper is already in the tray. Magnet it up on your way to the coffee maker.
The during-the-day beat is just a sentence to Siri. It's the one parents do without looking up.
We're a contact on your phone, like Grandma or the pediatrician. Siri can email us the same way she emails anyone.
"Update" is fine. "Hi" is fine. We don't read the subject line — it's just there because Siri wants one.
Talk to us the way you'd talk to your partner. We figure out which kid, which chore, and how many stars it's worth.
A checkmark you didn't log, a chore the kids invented, a smiley face next to the dishes — snap the chart, email it back.
The fridge picks things up that the database missed — a checkmark you didn't log, a chore the kids invented themselves, a smiley face next to the dishes. Snap a photo of the chart, email it back, and we reconcile. Tomorrow's print catches up.
Sunday evening, while the house is winding down, a short recap lands. Stars per kid, anything that kept getting skipped, one gentle suggestion for next week. No charts, no dashboards — a paragraph you can read on the couch.
Other chore trackers ask you to download something, open it, log in, and remember. We didn't want to add another tab to your day.
It's just an email address — saved as a contact, like a friend. The Mail app you already have is the whole interface.
You're stirring something, buckling someone, carrying groceries. Siri is already in your pocket, listening. We use the tool that's already there.
When the chart on the fridge picks up handwriting, smiley faces, or a chore the kids invented themselves — email us a photo. We reconcile it. Tomorrow's print catches up.
The trial starts when you send your first email — not before. Your first printable chart lands the next morning. No card up front, one price for the whole family, cancel by replying "cancel."
Save the contact, then send us a hello — whatever feels natural. We'll ask about your kids, build a starter chart, and have it ready to print before dinner.
Or just write to do@chorepage.com. We'll take it from there.