Best Habit Tracker for Building Multiple Habits

    Building one habit is hard enough. Building five or ten at once, exercise, reading, water, journaling, an earlier bedtime, means the app holding it all has to stay out of your way. Plenty of trackers cap your free habits at three, then ask you to pay to add a fourth, or bury your day under so many dashboards that logging feels like a second job.

    Unlooped does the opposite. Unlimited habits are free, forever, in both build and quit modes, with no account and no email. Your data stays in your private iCloud, never on our servers. Progress is measured in milestones rather than fragile streaks, so when life knocks one habit off course, the others keep going and a setback is just data, not failure. The interface stays calm even when your list is long.

    5 Habit Trackers for Running Several Habits at Once

    Here are five apps for juggling multiple habits without the clutter, starting with the one that never caps your list.

    1. Unlooped: Unlimited Habits, Widgets Everywhere, Zero Clutter

    Unlooped is built for people with a full slate. Add as many build and quit habits as you want, all free, with no paywall at habit number four. Keep them in front of you with widgets on the Home Screen, Lock Screen, and StandBy, so your whole list, your progress, and quick-complete buttons live where you already glance. Reminders are free and customizable per habit, so each one nudges you at the right moment.

    Because progress is milestone-based, a long list never turns into a wall of broken streaks. Mood and journal notes, the Apple Watch app, and iCloud sync are all included free, with no ads and no analytics SDKs. Premium adds an on-device AI coach (Apple Intelligence with a rule-based fallback), Smart Insights across all your habits, Personalized Rewards, Private Habits behind Face ID, and flexible per-habit Weekly Goals, so one habit can ask for five days a week and another for two, each with a little slip allowance built in.

    Free forever; Premium $1.99/month or $9.99/year


    2. Habitica

    Habitica turns your habit list into a role-playing game, where completing tasks earns experience, gold, and gear for your avatar. For people managing many habits, the gamification can make a long list feel like a quest rather than a chore. It supports unlimited habits and parties for accountability. The trade-off is complexity: the game layer is a lot to manage, and it leans on community features rather than privacy.

    Free; optional subscription for extras


    3. Loop Habit Tracker

    Loop is a free, open-source tracker that handles unlimited habits with a clean, no-frills interface and a helpful strength score that weights recent consistency. There's no paywall and no account. It's Android-first, so it isn't an option on iPhone, and it focuses purely on tracking without coaching or cross-device sync. Best for people who want a lightweight, private, free tracker and don't need the extras.

    Free and open source


    4. HabitKit

    HabitKit leads with home and lock screen widgets, showing a grid of all your habits at a glance. For a long list, the visual grid is a satisfying way to see everything at once and log quickly. It keeps things simple, with less depth on coaching or per-habit goal flexibility. Best for people who want frictionless tracking of many habits and care most about seeing them on their home screen.

    Freemium; subscription unlock for advanced widgets


    5. Productive

    Productive pairs habit building with scheduling, letting you assign each habit to a time of day and group them into routines. For someone running many habits, the time-blocking structure can keep a packed list organized rather than overwhelming. It nudges you to act at the planned moment. Less suited to anyone who'd rather tap habits off freely than slot every one into a calendar.

    Freemium; Premium subscription

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