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DailySelfTrack is a self-tracking tool for individual users, positioned as a “personal life dashboard.” It combines journaling, health logs, and habit tracking into a customizable app, aiming to help users record mood, sleep, habits, diet, and any custom metrics, then use the data to uncover patterns in their personal lives.
Based on the information on the page, the product centers on three ideas: Customize, Consolidate, and Visualize. Users can define what they want to track; bring daily journaling, habit streaks, and health data into one interface; and then use easy-to-read charts to observe trends, understand correlations, and optionally receive AI insights. It emphasizes being “100% local-first,” which suggests the product is designed around user control of local data rather than relying entirely on the cloud.
DailySelfTrack is currently still in the waitlist stage. The page offers free waitlist signup and promises early access after launch. The main content does not disclose official plans, subscription pricing, one-time purchase pricing, or payment methods. It also does not clarify whether there will be a free version or a long-term free plan beyond any trial period. In terms of deployment, the only confirmed point is that it is local-first; there is no information on whether it will support web, desktop, mobile, cloud sync, or self-hosting.
Its strengths are a clear positioning and a good fit for quantified-self users who do not want to switch between multiple apps. The ability to customize metrics makes it more flexible than habit trackers built around fixed templates. The local-first approach also fits privacy-sensitive use cases involving health data and journaling. The downside is that the currently available information is still very early-stage. Key details are missing, including actual product screenshots, platform support, pricing, import/export, third-party integrations, APIs, encryption, and backup mechanisms, making it difficult to assess maturity and long-term usability.
It is better suited to individuals who want to systematically track mood, sleep, diet, habits, and journaling, especially those who prefer local data control and need personalized fields. It is not a strong match for enterprise users who need team collaboration, enterprise permissions, compliance audits, or system integrations. Access from China cannot be determined from the available content, so actual network testing is recommended. If access or payment is limited, alternatives could include Notion/Obsidian templates, Daylio, Bearable, or combinations of domestic tools such as TickTick and Evernote China.
⚠ 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 dailyselftrack.com official site.
dailyselftrack.com is an Unknown Health 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 dailyselftrack.com directly.