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Chore Bear is a household chore management app designed for families. Rather than positioning itself as a complex productivity tool, it focuses on helping parents and children assign, complete, and review chores in a calmer way. It is developed by a small team in California, with an emphasis on no ads, no data selling, and avoiding design patterns such as social feeds or addictive mechanics.
The product is built around a flow of “task — completion — verification — reward — review.” Parents can set up daily, weekly, or custom-frequency chores, while the system automatically maintains schedules and recurring tasks. Children see their own to-do queue, and parents can review pending tasks from their side. The paid plan supports photo verification: children upload a completion photo, and parents can approve it with one tap or send it back with a note. The reward system is points-based, allowing parents to define how points can be exchanged for screen time, allowance, outings, or other rewards, with redemption approval. Weekly summaries track each child’s completed chores, points, and streaks, making them useful for family review sessions.
Chore Bear uses a freemium model. Free Cub is free forever and supports up to 2 children, 5 active chores, basic rewards, and weekly summaries, making it suitable for small families getting started. The Den Family Plan costs $4.99/month or $39.99/year, and unlocks unlimited children and chores, photo verification, a custom reward catalog, recurring schedules, and priority support. The page also mentions that users can start a free trial, but does not specify the trial length.
Its strengths are clear product boundaries, a low learning curve, transparent pricing, and a free plan that can be used long term. Features such as photo approval, point-based rewards, and weekly reports map well to real family scenarios. Its privacy messaging is also friendly, explicitly stating that it does not sell data or serve ads. The downside is limited disclosure: there is no visible information about third-party integrations, APIs, self-hosting, encryption, or compliance certifications. Permissions also appear limited to separate parent/child views, without the depth needed for enterprise collaboration.
Chore Bear is best suited to families with children, especially parents who want to reduce nagging and manage chores through points and lightweight verification. It is not intended for business teams or users who need complex project management. Access from mainland China is unknown. Pricing is in USD, and payment methods are not disclosed, so there may be uncertainty around both payment and network access. If access or payment is restricted, alternatives worth considering include 滴答清单, Todoist, Notion family templates, shared family calendars, or local WeChat mini-programs.
⚠ 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 chorebear.com official site.
chorebear.com is an United States SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach chorebear.com directly.