
Strides can also track projects, showing you each aspect’s progress so you know where to focus. Its graphs also show helpful information like pace lines, rolling averages, projected completion dates, and current streaks. Strides lets you tag bad habits, set goal streaks, and pick from a list of example habits ranging from calling your mom more often to stretching daily.


You can build daily checklists, see all your habits on a dashboard, and get reminders for unfinished habits so you don’t break your streak. Tracking falls into four categories: habits, targets, averages, or projects, each with its own set of tools for the job. It lends itself particularly well to long-term habits, like saving money, tracking gym progress, or tracking sleep. Love charts, graphs, and lines? Well, you’ll get a kick out of Strides, a habit-tracking app that presents your progress and projected results visually, making it easy to understand how much (or little) progress you’ve made.
Daily time tracker app upgrade#
Its free version is limited to tracking three habits, but a $4.99 in-app upgrade lets you track as many as you’d like, and unlocks a few extra features, like multiple reminders and passcode protection. You can see your progress represented visually through some colorful line graphs, too. Tally lets you reset your progress at certain intervals, specify which days you’re tracking a habit, set tallying targets, and get notifications to make sure you stay on track. Furthermore, you can sync them to either Dropbox or iCloud so you have a record of your progress. You can also make notes in each habit to add some context to each tally. Tally supports both widgets and Apple Watch complications, lets you create groups for similar habits, set reminders, and filter your list to see particular habits.

Whether you’re counting the cups of coffee you guzzle or how often you do that weird thing with your elbow, Tally lets you track as many habits as you’d like, and offers some pretty advanced tools to keep on top of your habits. Tally bills itself as the “anything tracker,” which makes sense considering how deceptively simple the counting app is.
