GritSprout is an app that replaces the classic chore chart with a digital version that tracks progress automatically and rewards kids with real prizes.
The chore chart, but digital and with prizes
The same simple concept you know - but instead of stickers on paper, the child checks off digitally, streaks are calculated automatically, and prizes unlock on their own.
What doesn't work with paper charts
- 1The fridge chart gets forgotten, torn, or buried under magnets. After 2 weeks, nobody looks at it anymore.
- 2The parent must manually verify, stick on stars, and keep score in their head - it's yet another task to manage.
- 3There is no automatic reward mechanism - the promise "when you get 30 stars you'll get..." fades into oblivion.
Why the digital version works better
Always accessible
The child portal is accessible from any phone or tablet. It doesn't get lost, torn, or fall behind on updates.
Automatic streak tracking
No more counting stars manually. The app automatically tracks consecutive days and shows progress toward each prize.
Self-unlocking prizes
When the child hits the set condition, the prize shows as unlocked. Nobody forgets, nobody has to calculate.
Real example
The Garcia family tried 3 paper charts in one year - none lasted more than 3 weeks. With GritSprout, Miguel (9) kept his "tidy bedroom" streak going for 45 days. The difference: he sees live progress and the prize (a soccer ball) gets closer every day.
Try it free
7-day free trial, no commitment. Set up your family in minutes and see if it works for you.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, but better. Same principle - daily activities checked off - but with automatic streaks, configurable prizes, and visible progress the child tracks themselves.
Absolutely. GritSprout is not limited to household chores - you can add reading, sports, instrument practice, or any habit you want.
Data is preserved. If you come back, you'll find everything as it was - streaks, history, prizes.
The parent receives email reports with the daily summary. You can print them or show them to the child on screen.