Summer routines fall apart fast without a system. The right app turns "did you do your chores?" into an automatic loop kids actually follow — and several now connect chores to allowance, saving, and even investing. Here are the seven worth comparing.
The 7 best chore apps for kids
Pairs a kid debit card with chore-based allowance, savings goals, and parent-guided investing. Parents approve spending and see every transaction. Around $5.99–$14.98/month depending on tier. Best for families who want chores and real money management in one place.
2. BusyKid — best for turning chores into earning, saving, and giving
Kids complete chores, get paid real allowance, then split it into spend, save, share, and even buy fractional stock or gift cards. Roughly $4/month. Best for teaching the full earn-save-give cycle.
3. GoHenry — best for younger kids learning money habits
A prepaid debit card with chore tasks, automated allowance, and in-app money lessons (Money Missions). About $4.99/child per month. Best for ages 6–12 just starting with money.
4. Homey — best for connecting chores directly to allowance
Built specifically around the chore-to-pay link, with recurring jobs, one-off "bonus" tasks, and savings goals. Best for families who want a clear, fair payment system without a separate debit card.
5. S''moresUp — best free full-featured family organizer
A free chore and family-management app with point systems, rewards, and a built-in social feed for the household. Best for budget-minded families who want structure without a subscription.
6. OurHome — best free shared chore chart
Free, simple, and effective: assign chores, award points, redeem rewards, and share a family calendar and grocery list. Best for families who want a no-cost, no-money-handling chore tracker.
7. Cozi — best for whole-family scheduling with chores built in
Less a pure chore app and more a shared family calendar with to-do and chore lists everyone can see. Best for busy households juggling multiple kids'' schedules alongside chores.
Money-handling vs. organization: pick your category first
- Want chores tied to real money? Greenlight, BusyKid, and GoHenry use real debit cards and allowance. These add financial literacy but carry a monthly fee.
- Want chores tied to allowance without a card? Homey links jobs to pay you control directly.
- Just want a chore chart and rewards? S''moresUp, OurHome, and Cozi are free and skip money entirely.
What to look for in a chore app
- Age fit. Younger kids need simple visuals and parent approval; teens benefit from saving and investing features.
- Real money vs. points. Decide whether you want to teach money management or just track tasks.
- Fairness and flexibility. Recurring chores, one-off bonus tasks, and rotation keep siblings from arguing.
- Parent controls. Approval steps, spending limits, and transaction visibility matter most for the money apps.
- Cost. Free apps cover organization well; the paid apps justify their fee mainly through banking and financial-education features.
Bottom line
For families who want chores to teach money skills, Greenlight is the strongest all-in-one in 2026, with BusyKid and GoHenry close behind. If you just need a reliable chore chart, OurHome and S''moresUp do the job for free. Start with one app, set up recurring chores for the week, and let the automatic reminders do the nagging for you.