Yeahday turns today into a game you actually want to win. Plan your tasks and check them off, then end the day with fireworks. It is built for anyone whose brain fights a plain list, whether you lose focus easily or bounce off apps that drown you in options.
Sound familiar?
Most apps are a wall of everything you haven't done yet. Opening them feels like a reproach, so you quietly stop opening them.
Every postponed task lands on a mythical future day where you have infinite energy. That day has never once arrived.
You clear the whole list and the app just sits there, silent. No wonder your brain never craves coming back for more.
Procrastination is not a discipline problem. It is a reward problem, and Yeahday fixes the reward.
Built like a game
Every mechanic in Yeahday is built so that coming back tomorrow feels like a reward instead of an obligation.
Finish your day and comets rise into rings of light while a big YEAH stamps across the screen, then the room washes back in through a growing circle. The moment stays satisfying every single time.
Every task earns XP, and the boss of the day pays triple. Level up to unlock new celebration styles and ambiences.
Miss a day? Pardon tokens protect your streak. Punishing games get deleted; kind ones get opened every morning.
One recurring task tells you when to go to bed. Checking it plays a slow, starlit good-night scene instead of fireworks.
A real alarm rings until you stop it, even through silent mode. Stopping it checks your first task, so the day opens with a win already behind you.
Lay out a whole week in advance. Group tasks into projects with deadlines, and they launch themselves on the right morning.
Start two projects on the same morning and Yeahday warns you before your week collides with itself.
A menu-bar icon that lives your day with you, home-screen widgets, and private sync across every device with just your email.
Twenty synthesized chimes and alarm tones, a soft pop when you check a task, and a small fanfare when the fireworks begin. Every sound can be switched off.
Pricing
You pay once and never see a subscription.
Questions
Yes, and it is private by design rather than by promise. Everything lives on your device unless you sign in, and the app ships with no analytics, no ads and no trackers. The privacy page explains all of it in two minutes of plain language.
You never need an account to use Yeahday. One only exists to sync between devices, and it is just your email. You sign in with a 6-digit code, so there is no password to invent.
Nothing cruel happens when you miss a day. Pardon tokens protect your streak, and unfinished tasks kindly offer to move to today. Your XP never goes down either, because Yeahday celebrates wins instead of punishing losses.
Yeahday is made for everyone, and that very much includes people who find a normal to-do list impossible to stick with. The reward lands the moment you check something off, so starting feels lighter and finishing actually registers. There are no nested folders and no wall of settings to get lost in, so nothing pulls your attention away from the one thing in front of you. If tools like ClickUp or Notion feel like more work than the work itself, Yeahday was built as the calm opposite of that.
Yeahday runs on iPhone, Android, Mac and Windows, and your account carries everything between them. On your phone, small home and lock screen widgets show what is left today without opening the app. On your computer, a tiny Yeahday icon lives in the menu bar next to the clock, so the day's count never leaves your sight. Store releases are on the way.