Routines

Kids know what's next. Without you saying it.

Bundle the chores that already happen together - bedtime, morning prep, after school - into one named routine. Kids see the steps, work through them in order, and you stop being the human timer.

Sense chores screen showing per-member columns with routines grouped by time of day

How it works

Three buckets, one day.

Routines sort themselves by time of day, so the right list shows up at the right time.

Morning

Get out the door

Wake up, get dressed, brush teeth, pack the bag. The list kids check off before school every day.

Afternoon

After school

Snack, homework, instrument practice, tidy the room. The bridge between school and dinner without you running it.

Evening

Bedtime

Pajamas, brush teeth, read, lights out. The routine you used to chase, now they chase.

The shift

Bedtime stops being a negotiation.

You used to call out the steps one by one. Now the list does. They check off, you stay on the couch.

  • Pajamas on

    2 feathers

  • Brush teeth

    3 feathers

  • Pick a book

    2 feathers

  • Read for 15 minutes

    5 feathers

  • Lights out by 8:30

    5 feathers

Bedtime routine showing five chores grouped together

Built for this

What makes Routines actually work.

Time-of-day sectioning

Morning routines sit above afternoon, afternoon above evening. The day's order is the screen's order. No scrolling to find what's next.

Bundle existing chores

Drag any chore into a routine. Long-press to move it back out. Routines are containers, not a separate system to learn.

Per-kid routines

Bedtime for the 6-year-old can be different from bedtime for the 10-year-old. Each child gets their own column, their own list, their own pace.

Day-of-week schedule

Weekday mornings, weekend mornings, school-day evenings. Routines show up only on the days they apply, so kids don't see Monday's list on Sunday.

Completion celebration

Check off the last step and the whole routine celebrates. Not a sticker, an actual moment. Kids notice. They come back for it.

Drag to reorder

Bedtime in the wrong order? Long-press, drag, done. The list matches how your family actually does the thing.

The shift

The 30-minute bedtime becomes 12.

Without Sense

You say "pajamas." Five minutes later, no pajamas. You say "pajamas" again. Then "brush your teeth." Then "did you brush your teeth?" Each step is its own argument. You're not parenting, you're running the queue.

With Sense

They open the Bedtime routine. Five tasks, in order, with check-circles. They work through it because the list is the prompt. You read a book while they do. The routine ends with a confetti they earned, not a fight they survived.

Chores screen showing per-member columns

Chores

Routines are just bundled chores.

Every chore can stand alone or live inside a routine. Drag in, drag out. Same system, more order.

See how Chores works

Rewards

Finished routines earn rewards.

Feathers from each step add up. Kids spend them on screen time, weekend choices, or save toward a real-money goal. The loop closes itself.

See how Rewards works
Rewards catalog showing items kids can redeem with feathers

Stop being the human checklist.

Build the routine once. Let kids run it from then on.