Online Planner: Your Days, Under Control

Plan tasks, set priorities, and actually get things done. Free, simple, and distraction-free.

Online Planner: Your Days, Under Control

Plan tasks, set priorities, and actually get things done. Free, simple, and distraction-free.

Ever get to the end of a busy day and realize you accomplished nothing you actually wanted to do? That's not a productivity problem—that's a planning problem. Our online planner gives you a simple place to put everything in order so your actions match your intentions.

Map out your day task by task. See your week at a glance. Keep track of what matters instead of just reacting to whatever screams loudest. No complicated systems, no learning curve—just a clean space to organize your thoughts and time.

Use it for work projects, personal goals, family schedules, or all of the above. The beauty is in the blank slate: you decide what goes where. We just provide the framework and get out of your way.

Bookmark this page and start each day with intention instead of chaos.

Tools for Getting Things Done

Common Questions

How is this different from a to-do list?
Great question. A to-do list just captures tasks. A planner helps you arrange them in time. You might have ten things to do, but a planner shows you that three of them need to happen this morning, two can wait until afternoon, and five are actually for next week. It's about timing, not just listing.
Can I save my plans and come back to them?
This version is designed for daily use—think of it like a beautiful paper planner you use fresh each day. For saving recurring tasks and long-term planning, pair it with our calendar tool. Sometimes starting fresh each morning is exactly what you need.
Does it work for weekly planning?
Absolutely. Map out your whole week in minutes. See where meetings cluster, where you have deep work time, and when you can actually take a break. Weekly planning is where most people find the biggest productivity gains—it connects daily actions to bigger goals.
Can I use this for work and personal life together?
That's exactly what it's for. One place to see everything—work deadlines, kids' activities, personal goals, date night. When you can see it all together, you stop double-booking yourself and start living a more balanced life.
Is there a right way to use a planner?
The right way is whatever works for you. Some people plan every hour. Others just list three priorities for the day. Experiment, find your rhythm, and adjust. The goal isn't perfect planning—it's getting the right things done.

Why Planning Beats Reacting Every Time

When you react all day, you're living by other people's priorities. Emails demand answers. Messages interrupt your flow. The loudest voice wins your attention. By 5 PM, you're exhausted and your own goals haven't moved forward. Planning flips the script. You decide what matters before the chaos starts. When interruptions come, you can ask: is this more important than what I already planned? Usually, it's not. Fifteen minutes of planning can save you three hours of reaction.

Daily Planning: The Habit That Changes Everything

Here's a simple practice that actually works: spend five minutes each morning with your planner. Write down the three most important things you need to accomplish today. Not the urgent stuff—the important stuff. The things that move your life forward. Schedule them into specific time blocks. Everything else is bonus. When you've done those three things, the day is a success. Everything after that is gravy. Try it for one week and see if your stress doesn't drop and your satisfaction doesn't rise.

Weekly Planning for Bigger Wins

Daily planning handles tactics. Weekly planning handles strategy. Set aside thirty minutes each Sunday or Monday to look at the week ahead. What projects need attention? What deadlines are coming? Where can you make real progress? Block out time for deep work on your most important projects. Schedule around meetings instead of letting meetings eat everything. See where you can batch similar tasks for efficiency. A well-planned week makes every day easier.

Common Planning Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)

First mistake: planning every minute. Life happens. Leave buffer time between tasks or you'll feel perpetually behind. Second mistake: ignoring energy levels. Schedule demanding work when you're sharp, easy tasks when you're not. Third mistake: planning without reviewing. Look back at what worked and what didn't. Adjust and improve. Fourth mistake: forgetting breaks. Humans aren't machines. Schedule rest or you'll burn out by Wednesday. Fifth mistake: planning someone else's work. Focus on what you control, not what others should do.

What Makes Our Planner Different

We built this planner for people who want results, not features. No accounts mean no data collection and no friction. Clean design means you focus on your plans, not on learning software. Free means everyone gets organized regardless of budget. Use it daily, weekly, or both. Pair it with our timer to stay focused on your planned tasks. Check our calendar for the big picture. The tools work together so your life can too.