Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
HALO positions itself as a “Personal Life Operating System.” Rather than being a single-purpose to-do app, it brings six categories of data—health, wealth, growth, tasks, home, and family—into one platform. It supports PWA, so it can be used in a near-native way on iPhone, iPad, and Android, and is aimed at individuals, families, and small teams.
In terms of features, HALO is broad in scope. The health module can track water intake, sleep, mood, nutrition, and more, and uses a strand chart to show correlations. The wealth module manages accounts, transactions, budgets, debt, and recurring expenses. The tasks module supports views such as Kanban, Gantt, Timeline, and Eisenhower Matrix. The growth module provides SMART goals, habit streaks, and an achievement system. The family plan also supports shared schedules, meals, activity logs, and multi-user role permissions. The Quest system turns tasks, habits, and goals into a growth journey, with trust points, family review, and a template marketplace.
The site repeatedly uses phrases such as “intelligent platform” and “Daily Intelligence Brief,” but it does not disclose specific AI models, LLM providers, or the logic behind any automated generation. As such, it should not be treated as a clearly AI-native product. The confirmed “intelligence” mainly appears in personalized daily briefs, analytics reports, and cross-module insights. For integrations, HALO supports calendar sync, CSV imports for task/finance/health data, CSV or ZIP exports, and API access on the Personal and Team plans, with rate limits of 60 req/min and 300 req/min respectively.
The free plan supports up to 3 modules. Personal costs $4.99/month, Family costs $9.99/month, and Team costs $19.99/month. Note that the annual pricing shown on the marketing page differs from the pricing in the terms, so the checkout page should be treated as authoritative before purchase. Payments are processed via Stripe, and the platform states that it does not directly store full card numbers. On privacy, it says data is encrypted at rest and in transit, is GDPR-compliant, is not sold, uses only necessary cookies, and supports account deletion and data export.
Its strengths are a comprehensive set of modules, relatively low pricing, solid family collaboration features, and good data portability. The downsides are limited transparency around its AI capabilities, some Quest pages still containing placeholder screenshots and testimonials, and no clear information on Chinese-language support, access from mainland China, or local payment methods. It is best suited to users who want to centralize life data, manage family matters, and track habits and goals. If you only need a Chinese to-do app, budgeting tool, or health tracker, alternatives or complements such as TickTick, Notion, Trello, Habitica, YNAB, and Apple Health may be a better fit. Access from China is unknown, and Stripe payments may also create a payment barrier.
⚠ 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 halo.fit official site.
halo.fit is an United States AI Apps provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $4.99, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach halo.fit directly.