Not even us. One click, and they’re writing. No login, no account, no data floating around the internet with their name on it.
Free. No account. No catch.
Most kids’ apps ask for an email, a birthday, sometimes a parent’s card — before a child has written a single word. And a blank page is intimidating enough without wondering who’s reading over your shoulder. A diary is the most private thing a child will ever write. It deserved a product built around that, not around collecting more from them.
The whole product, in three steps — the same three steps every time.
A big, calm page opens instantly. No login screen, no waiting, no email to type. If they're stuck, one tap offers an idea to get started.
Whenever they're ready — today or in a year — one click turns their entries into a keepsake.
Print it, save it as a PDF, or download a plain backup file. It's theirs to keep forever, in their hands.
We didn’t write a privacy policy promising to protect your child’s words. We built a product that never receives them.
There's no account to create and nothing to forget. Open the page and start writing — that's the whole flow.
Every word is stored in this browser, on this computer. We built no server for it to travel to, so it never does.
We don't collect what we never receive. There's no database of children's journals anywhere — including ours — because we chose not to build one.
Because nothing leaves this device, clearing your browser’s data will erase the journal, and it won’t appear on another device. That’s the cost of never collecting it. It’s why making a keepsake — a print, a PDF, a backup file — matters: it’s not just the payoff, it’s the backup too.
No subscription, no account required to unlock anything, no upsell waiting at the keepsake step. Free, forever, for this product.