There are now more than a dozen apps fighting for the same patch of your phone: the one that keeps the household running. Some are calendar-only, some are chore-only, some want to sell you a $600 wall tablet. None of them are identical, and the reviews you find on app stores rarely compare them like-for-like.
This guide does. We looked at the twelve most-used family organization apps in 2026 and graded each one against the same 15 features — from gamified chores and reward stores to Google Calendar sync and subscription tracking. No sponsored placements. No “top 3” lists that conveniently leave out the competition.
TL;DR: the winner at a glance
- Best all-in-one: Kyrio — the only phone-first app that actually bundles gamified chores, a shared calendar, lists, meal planning, subscription tracking, and a family message board without paywalling half of them.
- Best free calendar + lists: Cozi — still the incumbent if you only need calendar and grocery lists and you can live with ads.
- Best chore-and-reward specialist: OurHome — if you want a tiny, free, focused tool and you don’t care that development has slowed to a crawl.
- Best for ADHD kids: Joon — a full chore RPG with avatars and pets; kid-only, but extremely effective.
- Best kids debit card: Greenlight / GoHenry — a real bank account, not a household app. Pair it with Kyrio.
How we evaluated
We picked 15 features that map to the real work families do in a week: chores, rewards, calendars, groceries, meals, movie nights, subscription tracking, shared passwords, AI help, and privacy. Every app was scored as fully supported, partial, paid-only, or not supported. Where we marked “paid-only,” the feature exists but is locked behind that app’s paid tier. We also looked at platform reach (iOS, Android, web, hardware), pricing, and whether the team is still actively shipping.
Full 12-app feature matrix
Kyrio is the first column for reference. Scroll the matrix sideways on mobile — every row is a feature, every column is an app.
| Feature | Kyrio | Cozi | FamilyWall | OurHome | Picniic | Hearth | Skylight | Any.do Family | Homey | S'moresUp | Joon | Greenlight | TimeTree |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chore templatesPre-built age-appropriate chore lists you can assign with one tap. | Yes | Partial Chores live as recurring to-do items; no age-based templates. | Partial | Partial | Partial | Yes | Paid | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | No |
| Points & leaderboardsPoints, streaks, badges, or a family leaderboard that motivate kids. | Yes | No | No | Yes Points for completed chores, redeemable against rewards. | No | Partial | Paid | No | Yes | Partial | Yes | No | No |
| Parent-set reward storeParents define custom rewards; kids redeem with earned points. | Yes | No | Paid A basic reward list exists, but meaningful chore tracking is Premium. | Yes | Paid | No | Paid | No | Yes | Yes | Partial | No | No |
| Allowance / money rewardsConverts chores or points into tracked allowance money. | Partial Points convert into parent-defined rewards; custom reward types can represent allowance money. | No | Paid | Partial | No | No | No | No | Yes | Partial | No | Yes | No |
| Shared family calendarIn-app calendar with per-member color coding and events. | Yes | Yes Color-coded per-member events, the flagship Cozi feature. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Partial | No | No | Yes |
| Google / iCloud syncTwo-way sync with Google, iCloud, or Outlook calendars. | Partial One-way import today; native Google/iCloud two-way sync on the roadmap. | Yes | Yes | No No external calendar sync. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes |
| Shared listsGrocery, to-do, or custom lists synced across the family in real time. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes | No | No | No |
| Meal plannerWeekly meal planning with recipes and auto-generated shopping lists. | Yes | Paid Recipe box and meal planner are Cozi Gold only. | Paid | No | Paid | Partial | Paid | No | No | No | No | No | No |
| Movie night pickerSwipe-to-match movie picker so the family actually agrees on something. | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
| Subscription trackerTracks household subscriptions (Netflix, Spotify, etc.), renewals, and costs. | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
| Shared credentials vaultEncrypted vault for shared logins (streaming, Wi-Fi, utilities). | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
| Family message boardShared board for notes, announcements, and quick communication. | Yes | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | Yes |
| AI assistanceBuilt-in AI that drafts chore rotations, meal plans, or shopping lists. | Yes Bring-your-own API key — no hidden AI surcharge on your subscription. | No | No | No | No | No | No | Partial | No | No | No | No | No |
| Usable free tierA free tier that is usable long-term, not just a 7-day trial. | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | Yes |
| EU-hosted / GDPR-firstData stored in the EU with GDPR-first privacy controls. | Yes | No | Partial FamilyWall is French and claims GDPR compliance; hosting specifics vary. | No | No | No | No | Partial | No | No | No | No | No |
Fully supported Partial Paid tier only Not supported
Best all-in-one family organizer
The three apps that seriously try to replace every other household app are Kyrio, FamilyWall, and Hearth Display. FamilyWall is feature-rich but paywalls its best work (meal planner, advanced chores) behind Premium. Hearth requires $600 of hardware plus a $99/year subscription and is US-only. Kyrio covers the same surface area, runs on the phones you already own, and keeps most of the core features available on the free tier.
If you’ve ever installed three different apps — one for chores, one for the calendar, one for groceries — and watched the family abandon all three within a month, an all-in-one is what you actually need.
Best chore-and-reward app for kids
Three contenders: Kyrio, OurHome, and Homey. All three treat chores as motivation, not just to-dos. OurHome is free but stagnant. Homey has the best allowance features but requires a subscription after a 14-day trial and covers only chores. Kyrio matches Homey on chores and rewards, then adds everything OurHome never shipped — a calendar, meal planner, subscription tracker, and message board.
For parents of younger kids (ages 4–9), Joon deserves a special mention — its RPG mechanics are in a different league — but it has no value for the adults in the house.
Best shared family calendar
If a shared calendar is the only thing you need, Cozi and TimeTree both have huge user bases and excellent sync. Cozi is stronger in the US; TimeTree is dominant in Asia and generous with its free tier.
If your calendar needs to co-exist with chores, meals, and lists, you’re better off with Kyrio or FamilyWall — the context-switching tax of running a standalone calendar app plus three others is what kills most family organization setups within a month.
Best kitchen display (hardware)
Hearth Display and Skylight Calendar are the two wall-mounted tablets worth considering. Both look beautiful, both force your family to actually notice the shared calendar, and both cost meaningfully more than a pure software subscription.
If you already have an old iPad or a cheap Android tablet lying around, you can run Kyrio in kiosk mode and get most of the same benefit for free. If you want polished hardware, Skylight is cheaper than Hearth and its new “Plus” tier adds chores and rewards.
Pricing compared
- Free with ads: Cozi, TimeTree, OurHome (no ads, just feature-frozen).
- Freemium with useful free tier: FamilyWall, Picniic, S’moresUp, Kyrio.
- Free trial only: Homey (14 days), Joon (7 days).
- Subscription required: Greenlight/GoHenry ($5.99+/mo), Any.do Family ($8.33/mo).
- Hardware + subscription: Hearth ($599 + $99/yr), Skylight ($199+ + $39/yr).
Who should pick which app
- You mostly need a shared calendar → Cozi (US) or TimeTree (everyone else).
- You want chores to actually motivate kids → Kyrio, OurHome, or Homey.
- You have an ADHD kid → Joon, or Kyrio if you want the rest of the family tools too.
- You want money + chores → Greenlight/GoHenry, paired with Kyrio.
- You want one app to replace the other ten → Kyrio.
- You want a physical wall display → Skylight (cheaper) or Hearth (fancier).
- You’re GDPR-first → Kyrio or FamilyWall.
Final verdict
The honest truth is that most families don’t need a “family organization app” — they need an app that gets the actual family (and the actual kids) to participate. That’s a design problem, not a feature-count problem. Cozi has a beautiful calendar that adults ignore. Fancy hardware ends up covered in fridge magnets. Chore charts on the wall last two weeks.
Kyrio wins this roundup because it turns chores into a game kids actually play, then wraps every other household tool around that core — so the app has a reason to exist on everyone’s phone, not just the household manager’s.
Still not sure which one fits your household? Take the Kyrio Balance Check. It’s three minutes, no email required, and it tells you exactly where your household’s mental load is stuck — often the real reason a chore chart isn’t working.