
Start a timer. That's it.
Tap a category, the day starts filling in. No setup, no taxonomy debates, no Sunday-night planning ritual. The timeline writes itself while you live.
You are not bad at scheduling.
Schedules are bad at you.
Most productivity apps assume you can decide today what tomorrow will look like, and then follow that plan to the minute. If that has never quite worked for you — if you bounce off rigid calendars, time-block templates, the whole guilt-shaped industry — you are not the broken part of the equation.
Horae works the other way around. Open it, tap what you're doing, and it starts a timer. At the end of the day, the day is just there: a soft ring of how the hours actually went. Set goals if you want them. Watch the patterns emerge. Adjust as you go. No plans. No guilt.

Tap a category, the day starts filling in. No setup, no taxonomy debates, no Sunday-night planning ritual. The timeline writes itself while you live.

Set a daily or weekly target — say, eight hours of sleep, or under six hours of screens. Horae shows you where you are, not where you should be.
Everything is stored locally. No accounts, no sync server, no analytics SDK quietly phoning home. Lose the phone, lose the data — that is the deal.
No accounts. No sync. No analytics, telemetry, advertising IDs, or background phone-home. The app is a single sandboxed file on your device, and it stays that way.