Quick Summary
- Best overall for UK families: Sense - reads ParentMail, Arbor, MCAS, and Class Dojo notifications and auto-fills your family calendar
- Best for meal planning: Cozi - American-built and the free tier is restricted now
- Best for location sharing: FamilyWall - popular with UK parents of older kids
- Best free option: Google Calendar - free, but everything is manual
The average British parent receives between 40 and 70 school communications a week during term. Parents evening reminders. ParentMail alerts about the year 4 residential. Arbor messages about absence. Class Dojo notifications. The PTA WhatsApp group. The headteacher's Friday round-up. Plus mufti days, INSET days, sports day, Christmas concerts, world book day costumes, harvest festival, and the swimming kit you forgot.
Most "best family organiser" lists you'll read are written for American families - long summer breaks instead of half-term and the long summer holidays, semesters instead of autumn/spring/summer terms. We tested seven apps the way British families actually use them: across all three terms, including the punishing back-to-back half-term and bank holiday weeks.
Here's what we found, with GBP pricing throughout.
Quick Comparison
| App | Price (GBP) | Best For | Reads School Emails? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sense | Free / £6.99/mo or £59.99/yr | AI email-to-calendar | Yes - any school |
| Cozi | Free (limited) / ~£29/yr | Meal planning + lists | No |
| FamilyWall | Free / ~£32/yr Premium | Location sharing | No |
| Skylight Calendar | ~£230-£330 hardware + sub | Kitchen wall display | Subscription required |
| TimeTree | Free / ~£35/yr | Event comments | No |
| Google Calendar | Free | Already on your phone | Only Gmail receipts |
| Apple Calendar | Free | All-iPhone families | No |
Prices shown in GBP are approximate. Exact pricing is set by the App Store and Google Play at checkout based on your region.
Forward One ParentMail, See What Happens
Sense reads UK school communications and adds every event to your family calendar. 5 days full access free, no credit card.
Scan to get started
The 7 Best Family Organiser Apps for UK Families
1. Sense - Best for British Parents Drowning in ParentMail
Full disclosure - this is our app. Here's why we think it's the right pick for UK families: it's the only family organiser that reads ParentMail, Arbor, MyChildAtSchool, and direct school emails and fills your calendar automatically.
Forward a ParentMail about the year 5 residential. Forward the Arbor message about parents evening slots. Forward Class Dojo notifications, the head's weekly newsletter, the PE department's swimming kit reminder, or even a one-line email from the form tutor saying "school trip on the 23rd." Sense reads each one and pulls out every event date, INSET day, mufti day, sports day, deadline, and parents evening slot. They land on your shared family calendar within a minute or two.
For families with kids in primary and secondary, with different school comms systems and overlapping term dates, this matters. The volume of comms during a single term is genuinely overwhelming. Sense converts that volume into a calendar without you typing anything.
Beyond the calendar, Sense includes an AI chat you can ask "what's on this half-term?", help with meal planning, suggest packed-lunch ideas, build shopping lists for Tesco or Sainsbury's, and run chores with a points-based pocket money system for the kids.
In our testing, forwarding a term's worth of ParentMail messages took around ten minutes and produced 20-30 calendar events - parents evenings, swimming, the school disco, trips, INSET days. The same work done manually typically takes 1-2 hours across the term.
Strengths
- Reads any UK school comms format
- Handles autumn-spring-summer terms
- AI chat for schedule questions
- Chores, meal planning, lists, pocket money
- Works on iOS and Android
- Display mode for a kitchen tablet
Limitations
- Newer app (launched 2025)
- Requires forwarding emails
- Some features are premium-only
- No web app yet
5 Days Full Access, No Credit Card
Forward your first ParentMail tonight. Watch events appear on your calendar.
Scan to get started
2. Cozi - Best for Meal Planning
Cozi has been around since 2008 and is the longest-running family calendar app most UK parents have heard of. It does the basics well: a shared colour-coded calendar, shopping lists, to-do lists, and a recipe box.
The meal planning is where Cozi genuinely shines. Plan a week of meals, save recipes, generate a shopping list. If "what's for tea?" is your 4pm crisis, Cozi handles it well.
The catch: Cozi tightened its free tier in 2024. Free users only get 30 days of calendar history, which is impractical for any UK family managing an academic year. Cozi Gold runs around GBP £29 per year for the full app.
Cozi is also built for American families - no real understanding of autumn/spring/summer terms, half-term, INSET, or the long summer holidays. It works, but every event still goes in by hand.
Strengths
- Proven and reliable
- Strong meal planning
- Recipe storage
- Cross-platform
Limitations
- Free tier heavily limited
- No school email reading
- US-built, dated interface
- Manual entry for everything
3. FamilyWall - Best for Location Sharing
FamilyWall combines a shared calendar, lists, notes, family location sharing, a family chat thread, and birthday tracking. It has a solid following among UK parents of teens and tweens.
For families with secondary school kids who are getting more independent - making their own way home from school, getting trains into town, meeting friends in town centres - the location sharing is the main draw. It's smoother than juggling Find My or Google Maps location sharing in a side chat.
The calendar itself is fine but unremarkable. There's no school email automation, so every event still goes in by hand. Some Premium features (advanced calendar views, full chat history, fuller location history) sit behind the paywall.
Strengths
- Built-in location sharing
- Family chat in one place
- Shared lists and notes
- Reasonable free tier
Limitations
- No school email automation
- Best features are paid
- Interface can feel busy
- Younger kids without phones get left out
4. Skylight Calendar - Best Wall-Mounted Display (If You Can Stomach the Cost)
Skylight Calendar is the touchscreen wall display you've seen on Instagram. It's a dedicated 10" or 15" screen for your kitchen showing the family calendar, lists, chores and photos. It looks fantastic.
For UK families, the maths is harder. Hardware runs around GBP £230 for the 10-inch up to GBP £330 for the 15-inch, plus the headline email-to-calendar feature sits behind Skylight Plus, an ongoing subscription. Without the subscription, you're essentially paying for an expensive Google Calendar mirror.
The newer Skylight 2 has improved AI but the total cost over three years adds up. Many UK families find that running Sense in display mode on a tablet they already own does the same job for the cost of the app subscription alone.
Strengths
- Beautiful kitchen wall display
- Always-on family calendar
- Photo frame functionality
- Designed for visibility
Limitations
- High GBP hardware cost
- Email-to-calendar locked behind subscription
- One device only
- US-built, UK support slower
5. TimeTree - Best for Coordinating Around Events
TimeTree's standout feature is event-level chat. Leave comments on a specific event, attach photos or documents, and have threaded conversations on the event itself. When plans for the parents evening shift from Tuesday to Thursday, the back-and-forth lives on the event, not buried in WhatsApp.
You can also create multiple shared calendars - one for the whole household, one for just the parents, one per child's activities. The free tier is generous and the app has a loyal user base.
The downside: lots of calendars get cluttered fast. And every event still gets typed in by hand.
Strengths
- Event chat and discussion
- Multiple shared calendars
- File attachments on events
- Generous free tier
Limitations
- No meal planning or lists
- All events are manual entry
- Can get cluttered fast
- No school email automation
6. Google Calendar - Best Free Option
You probably already have it. Google Calendar's family sharing works for basic scheduling - create a shared "Family" calendar, invite your partner, both add and see events.
Google extracts some events automatically from Gmail (flight confirmations, hotel bookings, restaurant bookings), but it's limited to highly structured emails. It won't pull events out of a ParentMail or an Arbor message - the formats are too unstructured.
The big strength is integration. Google Calendar connects with everything, and if your school uses Google Workspace for Education, there's tighter integration too. For UK families already in Google, it's the path of least resistance.
Strengths
- Completely free
- Already on most phones
- Huge integration ecosystem
- Some Gmail event detection
Limitations
- Not built for family use
- No lists, chores, meal planning
- Most events still require manual entry
- Won't read ParentMail or Arbor
7. Apple Calendar - Best for All-iPhone Households
If everyone in the family has an iPhone, Apple Calendar's shared calendar works with zero setup. Create a shared iCloud calendar, invite your family, and events sync across all Apple devices.
Siri can add events by voice, and the recent Apple Intelligence features in iOS 18 add some smart scheduling suggestions. Integrates tightly with Reminders, Maps, Contacts and Focus modes.
The limitation: it's a general-purpose calendar, not a family organiser. No chore tracking, meal planning, or shared lists. And it only feels seamless if everyone is on Apple, which gets complicated when secondary school kids start showing up with Android phones.
Strengths
- Already on every iPhone
- Seamless iCloud sharing
- Siri voice event creation
- Deep Apple ecosystem integration
Limitations
- Only works for all-Apple households
- No family-specific features
- No chores, lists, meal planning
- No school email automation
Still deciding? Try Sense free for 5 days - forward your first ParentMail tonight.
How to Choose for a UK Family
How heavy is your school comms load?
If your kids are in school and you get ParentMail, Arbor messages, MyChildAtSchool notifications, Class Dojo pings, and the head's weekly newsletter, an automation-first app like Sense will save the most time. If your kids are still in nursery or early years, a simple shared calendar might do.
Are you on iOS, Android, or both?
Most family organisers now work on both. The main exception is Apple Calendar, which only feels seamless if everyone is on iPhone. Sense, Cozi, FamilyWall and TimeTree all work cross-platform, which matters once kids hit secondary and Android phones start appearing.
Will your partner actually open it?
The best family organiser is the one both parents use. If you've already had two failed attempts at getting your partner to use Cozi or TimeTree, the issue isn't the app - it's the friction of manual entry. Sense reduces that because once it reads a ParentMail, both parents see the events without anyone typing.
What else do you need besides a calendar?
If you just need shared scheduling, Google Calendar is free and capable. If you also want pocket money tracking, chores, meal planning, recipes, and an AI you can ask "have we got anything on this half-term?", you need a purpose-built app like Sense.
The Bottom Line for UK Families
The biggest time sink for British parents during term isn't deciding what's for tea - it's reading the constant stream of school communications and turning each one into a calendar entry. ParentMail at 7am. Arbor at 3pm. Class Dojo pings throughout. The PTA reminder Sunday evening.
If that's your reality, start with Sense. Forward one ParentMail tonight and watch the term's events land on your calendar by morning. If your situation is genuinely simple and a free calendar is enough, use Google Calendar or Apple Calendar and don't pay for something you won't use.
2 Minutes to Set Up, 5 Days Free
Forward one ParentMail. Watch a term's worth of events appear on your shared family calendar.
Scan to get started
5 days full access free. No credit card required.
Related reading: Global comparison: 7 family calendar apps tested · Skylight Calendar 2 review · Use a tablet you already own as a family display · How the AI calendar works