Daypass is a free online booking and scheduling SaaS tool built around Google sign-in and Google Calendar sync. Its key differentiator is not simply generating a booking link, but allowing users to show different availability to different relationships: for example, colleagues or clients can see 9–5 work hours, while friends can see 5–9 personal hours.
The product supports connecting Google Calendar, reading and syncing calendars, generating bookable time slots based on availability, and creating and managing calendar events after meetings are scheduled. Users can also set “life contexts” such as work, fitness, sleep, kids, pets, and more, so their available time updates automatically. On the sharing side, Daypass supports different links for different audiences, which gives it a clearer use case compared with standard scheduling tools.
The page clearly states that it is free to use, has no premium paid tier, and requires no credit card, making it good value at the moment. Deployment is cloud-based SaaS; no self-hosting or private deployment information was found. The iOS app and group scheduling features are marked as coming soon, indicating that mobile support and multi-person coordination are still under development.
The main advantages are that it is quick to get started—the official workflow is to connect Google Calendar, set life contexts, and share a link—making it suitable for use within a couple of minutes. Relationship-based control over visible availability also helps balance work and personal life. The downside is that the disclosed integrations are currently focused mainly on the Google ecosystem, with no visible support for common business tools such as Outlook, Microsoft 365, Zoom, or Slack. Team permissions, admin controls, audit logs, SLA terms, and compliance certifications are also not disclosed, so companies should evaluate it carefully before procurement.
Daypass is better suited to individual users, freelancers, consultants, and early-stage team members for managing client meetings, colleague communication, and boundaries around personal appointments. The text does not provide information about access from China, and the product depends on Google sign-in and Google Calendar. For users in mainland China, actual usability may be affected by access to Google services, so network and account conditions should be verified independently. If local payment, Chinese-language support, and stable access are required, alternatives to consider include Feishu Calendar, WeCom scheduling, Tencent Meeting booking, or international options such as Calendly, Cal.com, and Microsoft Bookings.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on daypass.io official site.
daypass.io is an Unknown SaaS Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach daypass.io directly.