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DayLogr is an online everyday life-logging tool operated by StampyCode Limited in the UK. Its core purpose is to record daily activities, thoughts, actions, habits, and small events that are easy to forget. It is closer to a personal journal, habit tracker, and lightweight time-review tool than a traditional enterprise SaaS product built around organizational workflows.
Free accounts can create log entries for any past or future date. With a subscription, users can create multiple named logs to organize different topics, and share selected logs with friends, family, or the public. The permission model is fairly simple: data is private by default and accessible only to the user; even when a log is shared, only the owner can add entries. The product also supports CSV/JSON import and calendar interoperability via ICS links. Features such as notifications and website embedding are marked as in development.
DayLogr uses a free-plus-subscription model. The Early Bird subscription costs 3 GBP, 3 EUR, or 3 USD every 3 months, with a 30-day free trial. Credit cards are processed by Stripe; billing starts automatically after the trial ends, and users can disable auto-renewal at any time. Overall pricing is very low, but key value-added features such as multiple logs, sharing, and calendar import/export require a subscription.
Login relies on third-party authentication providers such as Google, Facebook, Twitter, and GitHub, so the site states that it does not store passwords. The privacy policy says data is stored on UK servers and follows UK privacy law and the Data Protection Act 1998. However, the subscription terms also explicitly state that data integrity or security is not guaranteed, and advise users not to store sensitive or personal data. Integrations include Stripe, Google Analytics, social accounts, and ICS calendars. An API is only mentioned in the terms’ definitions, with no clear developer documentation available.
Its strengths are simplicity, low pricing, and a clearly defined journaling use case. It is suitable for personal diaries, habit tracking, reviewing life events, and sharing a small number of logs with friends or family. Its drawbacks are the lack of team roles, enterprise permissions, audit logs, SLA, self-hosting, and advanced security capabilities, making it unsuitable for enterprise knowledge bases, project management, or compliance-heavy scenarios. The collected text does not clarify accessibility from China; since payment depends on Stripe credit cards, users in mainland China may need to check availability. Alternatives include Day One, Journey, Penzu, Notion, OneNote, or Flomo.
⚠ 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 daylogr.com official site.
daylogr.com is an United Kingdom Knowledge provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $3.00, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach daylogr.com directly.