ChoreTracking

Why I built ChoreTracking

Fairness is one of the hardest problems at every scale.

Countries debate who creates environmental costs and who receives the benefits. Societies debate taxes, social programs, opportunity, and responsibility. At home, couples face the same question in a more personal way: who is carrying more of the daily load?

That load is often hard to see. It is not just cleaning or dishes. It is driving, meals, laundry, bedtime, groceries, appointments, planning, remembering, and noticing what needs to happen before anyone asks.

When that work stays invisible, people fill the gaps with memory, emotion, and bias. That is where resentment can grow.

I built ChoreTracking because the goal is to make the invisible visible.

Clear data gives couples and households a shared picture of what is actually happening. With that picture, the conversation can become less defensive and more practical: what feels unbalanced, what can change, and what should we adjust this week?

Better visibility can lead to better conversations. Better conversations can lead to a fairer home.

Open ChoreTracking →