See the full workload
Recurring chores, resets, maintenance, and one-off work live in one system instead of disappearing into texts or memory.
Use Case
Most household task apps stop at lists. HousIQ is built to show recurring work, room drift, daily essentials, and who keeps absorbing the load.
If the real problem is not forgetting a single task but seeing the full pattern of invisible work, you need more than a shared checklist. HousIQ organizes tasks by rooms, routines, urgency, and ownership so the house stops running on memory.
Recurring chores, resets, maintenance, and one-off work live in one system instead of disappearing into texts or memory.
Tasks can be assigned, shared, rebalanced, or held in one place until someone clearly owns them.
Room-based task structure makes it easier to see which spaces generate the most hidden labor.
Reports and neglected-work views show what keeps slipping and who keeps picking it up.
Household work is not just a list of to-dos. It is recurring, uneven, and tied to rooms, routines, and the person who notices the mess first. A general task manager usually hides that pattern instead of showing it.
HousIQ treats household work like an operating system. Daily essentials stay visible, rooms can carry their own recurring task load, and the Today screen shows actual ownership instead of a flat inbox.
You can manage recurring chores, one-time requests, room-based resets, kids lanes, reports, assignment rules, and simple household weather context without splitting the system across multiple apps.
No. It is designed around workload visibility, recurring routines, room ownership, and household imbalance, not just checking boxes.
Yes. Recurring tasks, daily essentials, and ongoing room work are core parts of the system.
Yes. Adults can manage the full household system, while kids can use simplified lanes and checklists without seeing the entire household load.
Use the shortest path for the question you actually have. Cost, workflow fit, and live household setup do not need the same next step.
If price is the first filter, check the monthly and annual plans before you do anything else.
Review pricingIf you need to see the screens first, inspect Today, Assignments, Routines, Kids, Rooms, and Reports before starting a trial.
Open previewIf the model already looks right, start the trial and test the product with your real household, tasks, and rooms.
Start the 14-day trial