Best Simple Habit Tracker

    Simple should mean simple. You open the app, tap to log a habit, and close it. No sign-up form, no onboarding survey, no dashboard demanding attention. Most "simple" trackers quietly add friction: an account here, an upsell there, a feature you'll never use cluttering the screen. Unlooped keeps it lean. There's no account and no email, your data stays in your private iCloud, never on our servers, and unlimited habits are free forever. It tracks both habits you're building and ones you're quitting, all from a calm, uncluttered interface. Here are five genuinely simple trackers worth considering.

    5 Simple Habit Trackers That Get Out of Your Way

    1. Unlooped: Open, Tap, Done

    Unlooped is about as low-friction as it gets. No account, no email, no setup wizard, just unlimited habits in the free tier, forever. Logging a build habit is a single tap, and quit habits auto-credit clean days so there's nothing to remember. Your data stays in your private iCloud, never on our servers, with no ads and no analytics SDKs anywhere. Progress is shown as milestones instead of fragile streaks, so a missed day stays a missed day, not a fresh start from zero. Reminders, widgets, and the Apple Watch app are all free. Premium is optional and adds an on-device AI Coach, Smart Insights, Personalized Rewards, Private Habits, and Weekly Goals, but you never hit a wall on the basics.

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


    2. Streaks: Tap a Grid, Move On

    Streaks is a tidy grid of daily tasks you tap to complete. There's little to configure and nothing to learn, which is the whole appeal. It centers on keeping your chain unbroken, so it rewards consistency but can feel harsh on an off day. A clean, fast pick if a visible chain is what motivates you.

    Paid one-time purchase


    3. Done: Counts and Calendars

    Done keeps things minimal with simple counters and a calendar view of what you've completed. You can track once-a-day or several-times-a-day habits without much fuss. The interface stays uncluttered and easy to scan. A reasonable option if you like a plain visual record of your days without extra features.

    Freemium model; Premium for unlimited habits


    4. Way of Life: Yes, No, Skip

    Way of Life reduces each day to a green, red, or skipped mark, giving you a quick color-coded read of your trends. The yes/no/skip model is refreshingly uncomplicated and avoids over-engineering. It's more about noticing patterns than coaching you through them. Good for people who want a clear, honest journal of how a habit is really going.

    Free tier available; Premium unlocks unlimited habits


    5. HabitKit: Let the Widget Do It

    HabitKit leans on home and lock screen widgets so logging happens where you already look. The app stays minimal, with a grid that shows progress at a glance and not much else. It's tracking-first rather than analytics-heavy, which keeps the experience light. A nice fit if you'd rather glance at a widget than open another app.

    Freemium model; Premium unlocks advanced features

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