The reminder app that won’t let you forget.
Nudge reminds you at a time that fits your day, around your calendar and quiet hours. If you don’t do the thing, it checks back later instead of giving up.
On Android, Nudge runs in your browser. A native app is in the works.
Half the things you logged this month are already gone from your head.
You didn’t finish them. Your reminder app fired once, you dismissed it (you were driving, or in a meeting), and the task quietly left your list.
By the time you remember, it’s too late.
It pings once,
then gives up.
You’re driving, so you swipe the reminder away. The app never asks again, and the task is gone.
You remember on your own.
The reminder fired on Tuesday and never came back. By the time it crosses your mind again, the flight prices have doubled.
It checks back
until you do it.
Nudge logs the task and picks a moment to remind you. If you don’t act, it comes back later instead of giving up.
Type it, say it, or snap a photo.
Nudge reads the date and time from how you write or say it. Snap a photo of a list, and it pulls out the tasks.
Transcribed with Apple’s speech recognition, the same one the iPhone keyboard uses. Nudge never stores the audio.
Nudge reads your calendar, and can add to it.
Tell it who to meet and when. It creates the event, sends the invite, and adds the Meet link.
It also plans reminders around your meetings, and can ping you before an event. Works with your Google Calendar.
When a notification isn't enough, it rings
Turn any reminder into a real iOS alarm. It rings loud on your lock screen, even if the app isn't running.
iOS 26 and up. On Android, reminders are notifications. On web you can view and edit alarms, but they ring on your phone.
This week
What you’re getting done.
Nudge recaps what you finished, what’s still open, and a few patterns it noticed — this week, this month, or all time.
Miss a week and nothing piles up, there’s no streak to protect. If you share the recap card, it strips out people’s names first.
The more you use it, the less you have to say.
Nudge keeps plain notes on how you work, most picked up on its own. Every note is yours to read, edit, or delete.
It follows up, and it knows when to stop.
A reminder that checks back could easily become noise. These are the rules it follows.
- There's a daily limit on reminders. Nudge plans its day each morning and stays under it.
- It times reminders around your calendar and your quiet hours. In a meeting or asleep, the reminder waits.
- If you keep ignoring a task, it gets more direct. After weeks of silence it asks whether the task still matters, instead of repeating itself forever.
Reminders you set for an exact time are the exception. Quiet hours and daily limits never move them.
The first week, day by day.
The first days feel like any reminder app. The differences show up as it learns how your days run.
Reminders that follow up until you do the thing.
Free in early access. The core stays free.