M

Moodnotes

Also analyzed in: 1 other industry
Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
37
/ 100
Present

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
58
/ 100
Category-Strong

What the model believes about Moodnotes without web search.

LLM Authority?
17
/ 100
Marginal · Recall-Led

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
52
/ 100
Specialty-Recall

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Moodnotes from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
58/100
Category-Strong
Quality?
0.68
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.60
Top associations for Moodnotes
mood-tracking app 3 helps notice thought patterns 2 reflection and self-awareness 2 helpful for everyday stress 2 sync issues 2 too limited for the price 2 identifying thinking patterns 2 reflection on thoughts 1 supports emotional self-awareness 1 uses cognitive behavioral therapy 1 poor value for money 1 journaling for reflection 1 CBT-inspired tools 1 improving emotional wellbeing 1 mood-tracking app 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
emotion logging over time 2 trigger spotting 1 personal reflection tool 1 mental well-being support 1 pattern and trigger tracking 1 daily emotion logging 1 behavior insight 1 personal mood history 1 daily check-ins 1 wellness tracking 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Moodnotes is firmly in the model's "mood tracking app" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Moodnotes known for?
Moodnotes is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app designed to help people reflect on their feelings, identify thought patterns, and support mental well-being using techniques inspired by cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Moodnotes known for?
Moodnotes is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app that helps users reflect on their thoughts, identify thinking patterns, and improve emotional wellbeing using CBT-inspired tools.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
17/100
Marginal · Recall-Led
Recall mode (no web)?
25

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
10

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps for anxiety symptoms? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which mood tracking apps are good for depression tracking? not mentioned #5
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps for bipolar disorder? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What mood tracking app is best for therapy clients? #3 #3
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps for teens? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps for parents? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which mood tracking apps let you track triggers and habits? #5 not mentioned
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps with medication logs? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps with symptom tracking? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which mood tracking apps are easy to use every day? #3 not mentioned
discovery What are the best simple mood tracker apps? #2 not mentioned
discovery Which mood tracking apps have reminders and notifications? #2 not mentioned
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps for journaling? #5 #3
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps with charts and insights? #6 not mentioned
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps for couples? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps for caregivers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which mood tracking apps work well on iPhone? #3 #2
discovery Which mood tracking apps work well on Android? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps with exportable reports? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best mood tracking apps for managing stress? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to the most popular mood tracking app? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison How do the top mood tracking apps compare for symptom logging? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a simple mood diary app? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which mood tracking apps are better than basic journal apps? #3 #5
comparison What are the best alternatives to free mood tracker apps? #2 not mentioned
comparison How do mood tracking apps compare with paper mood journals? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to therapy note apps for mood tracking? #2 not mentioned
comparison Which mood tracking apps are better for clinical use? #4 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a basic emotion tracker? #4 #3
comparison How do mood tracking apps compare for privacy and data sharing? #3 not mentioned
problem How do I track my mood every day without forgetting? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I keep a mood log that actually helps me? #2 not mentioned
problem How do I track emotions and triggers in one place? #3 not mentioned
problem How do I monitor mood swings over time? not mentioned #2
problem How can I track symptoms for my therapist? not mentioned #3
problem How do I remember to log medication and side effects? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I identify patterns in my mood changes? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I track anxiety triggers throughout the day? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I prepare a mood summary for my doctor? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I make mood tracking easier to stick with? #3 not mentioned
transactional Are mood tracking apps free? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest mood tracking app with premium features? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which mood tracking apps have a free plan? #8 not mentioned
transactional How much do mood tracking apps cost? #3 not mentioned
transactional What are the best value mood tracking apps? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which mood tracking apps are worth paying for? #4 #4
transactional Do mood tracking apps offer monthly subscriptions? not mentioned #1
transactional Are there mood tracking apps without ads? #2 not mentioned
transactional Which mood tracking apps have a free trial? #3 not mentioned
transactional What are the best budget mood tracker apps? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: Which mood tracking apps are good for depression tracking? · discovery · retrieval mode
Yes — a few good ones for **depression tracking** are: - **eMoods** — best if you want a more clinical, symptom-focused tracker. It tracks depression, anxiety, PTSD, sleep, meds, and lets you send reports to a clinician. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best if you want very customizable tracking of moods, symptoms, sleep, meds, triggers, and treatments. It has a dedicated depression tracker page. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/depression-tracker/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodfit** — best if you want mood tracking plus CBT, breathing, mindfulness, goals, and weekly reports. ([getmoodfit.com](https://www.getmoodfit.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best if you want something simple and low-friction for daily mood logging with charts and activity correlations. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodnotes** — best if you want mood tracking plus journaling/reflection to spot thinking patterns. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow these down to: 1. **best free option**, 2. **best for therapy/psychiatry reporting**, or 3. **best for very low energy / easiest to stick with**.
Prompt: What mood tracking app is best for therapy clients? · discovery · retrieval mode
For **therapy clients**, my pick is **Bearable** if you want the most therapist-friendly tracking: it supports mood + symptom correlation, and it’s explicitly designed to make sharing data with a **doctor, therapist, and medical team** easier. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/medical-professionals/?utm_source=openai)) **Best picks by use case:** - **Bearable** — best for therapy because it tracks mood, symptoms, habits, meds, and exports/summary-style sharing. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/medical-professionals/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best if you want the **simplest** daily mood log; it has quick logging plus **PDF/CSV export** for sessions. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodnotes** — best for CBT-style reflection and thought-pattern work. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) **If I had to choose one:** - **Bearable** for most therapy clients. - **Daylio** if the client needs something ultra-fast and low-friction. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/medical-professionals/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best app for anxiety / bipolar / ADHD / teen clients”** breakdown.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
52/100
Specialty-Recall
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best mood tracking apps? 90 5/5 8, 2, 7, 2, 5
What are the top mood tracking app options? 0 2/5 2, 6
Which mood tracking apps are most recommended? 0 4/5 6, 2, 2, 5
What are the most popular mood tracking apps? 0 3/5 8, 6, 3
What are the best apps for tracking moods and emotions? 90 2/5 3, 7
Which mood tracking app should I use? 0 2/5 4, 3
What are the best mental health mood tracker apps? 30 3/5 5, 5, 2
What are the best emotion tracking apps? 0 0/5
What are the best mood log apps? 0 4/5 2, 5, 3, 3
What are the best mood diary apps? 90 3/5 3, 6, 3
Which apps are good for tracking moods over time? 0 5/5 2, 3, 3, 3, 4
What are the best mood tracking apps for mental health? 0 1/5 5
What are the best mood tracking apps for anxiety? 0 2/5 4, 6
What are the best mood tracking apps for depression? 0 1/5 5
What are the best mood tracking apps for personal wellness? 0 2/5 3, 6
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best mood tracking apps? (no web search)
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall Super easy mood tracking, quick logging, good charts, habits, and streaks. - **Moodflow** — Best for detailed insights Great for tracking mood, sleep, anxiety, triggers, and notes in one place. - **Bearable** — Best for health + mood correlation Strong at linking mood with symptoms, meds, sleep, pain, and lifestyle factors. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health check-ins Structured mood assessments and useful reflections; very good if you want more than simple tracking. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling + mood Pretty interface, guided journaling, and mood logging combined. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar tracking Designed for tracking mood patterns, sleep, meds, and symptoms in more detail. - **Finch** — Best if you want motivation + self-care Less clinical, more gamified, but good for daily emotional check-ins. - **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-style thought tracking Helpful if you want to track moods and reframe negative thoughts. **Quick pick:** - Simple and effective: **Daylio** - Most detailed: **Bearable** - Best for bipolar: **eMoods** - Best journaling feel: **Reflectly** If you want, I can also recommend the **best free ones** or the **best iPhone/Android apps**.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What are the best mood tracking apps? (no web search)
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps: - **Daylio** — the most popular simple mood tracker; quick one-tap logging, habits, goals, and nice charts. - **Moodnotes** — great if you want mood tracking plus CBT-style reflection to spot thinking patterns. - **eMoods** — strong for bipolar disorder/mood episode tracking; good if you want detailed symptom logging. - **Bearable** — very customizable; tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and lifestyle factors in one app. - **MindDoc** — good for mental health self-monitoring with guided check-ins and reports. - **Reflectly** — more journaling-focused, with mood logging and prompts for reflection. - **Stoic** — combines mood tracking with journaling, mindfulness, and routines. - **Youper** — AI-guided mood check-ins and emotional support tools. **Best overall for most people:** **Daylio** **Best for deep tracking:** **Bearable** **Best for CBT-style journaling:** **Moodnotes** If you want, I can also recommend the best free mood tracking apps or the best one for iPhone/Android.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Also analyzed in Moodnotes in 1 other industry

This report focuses on Mood Tracking Apps because that is where Moodnotes scores highest. The model also evaluates it against the industries below, with their own prompts and competitor sets. Click any industry for its full leaderboard.

What to do next Recommendations for Moodnotes

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Push product-specific content into authoritative sources

The model knows your category but may not name your specific products. Get product-level content into independent reviews, comparison articles, and ranked lists.

+5 to +15 on LBA

Defend retrieval position

You score 25 on recall but only 10 on retrieval (gap of +14.2). Training-data authority is outpacing your current web footprint. Publish fresh, well-cited content to keep search-augmented responses including your brand.

Close the fragility gap

Identify and shore up oscillating differentiators

Core TOM is strong. Watch for specific differentiators (slogans, signature products) that appear in only some iterations. Push those into training-data-crawled headlines.

Maintain / refine TOM

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 2:16 AM

All 210 AI responses for Moodnotes

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Moodnotes" in the mood tracking app category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I recognize Moodnotes as a mood-tracking/journaling app and know its general purpose and psychology-focused approach, but I’m not confident on detailed current features or pricing." }
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":6,"justification":"I’m familiar with Moodnotes as a mood-tracking/journaling app and know some of its core self-reflection features, but I don’t have deep, confident knowledge of its current pricing or market positioning."}
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I know Moodnotes as a mood-tracking/journaling app with cognitive-behavioral style features, but I’m not confident on its current pricing or competitive positioning." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 6, "justification": "I know Moodnotes as a mood-tracking and thought-journaling app with CBT-oriented features, but I’m not fully confident on its current pricing, ownership, or exact positioning versus competitors." }
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":6,"justification":"I’m familiar with Moodnotes as a mood tracking/journaling app and know its general purpose and positioning, but I don’t have deep, detailed knowledge of its current features or pricing."}
What is Moodnotes known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app designed to help people reflect on their feelings, identify thought patterns, and support mental well-being using techniques inspired by cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app that helps users reflect on their thoughts, identify thinking patterns, and improve emotional wellbeing using CBT-inspired tools.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app that helps people reflect on their feelings, identify thinking patterns, and build healthier habits using principles from cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app that helps people notice, challenge, and reframe negative thought patterns using CBT-inspired techniques.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is known as a mood-tracking and journaling app that helps users reflect on their feelings and challenge negative thinking patterns, often using ideas from cognitive behavioral therapy.
What are Moodnotes's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes’ main strengths are its simple, user-friendly design, strong focus on CBT-based mood tracking and reflection, and the way it helps users spot thought patterns over time. It’s especially good for people who want a gentle, structured mental-wellness journaling tool rather than a full therapy app. Main weaknesses: it can feel limited if you want deeper mental-health features, more customization, or broader habit/wellness tracking. Some users may also find it too lightweight for serious therapy support, and the value depends a lot on whether you consistently log your moods.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes’ main strengths are its simple, polished design, ease of daily mood logging, and its CBT-style reflection prompts that help users notice thought patterns and build self-awareness. It’s also beginner-friendly and feels more guided than a basic mood tracker. Its weaknesses are that it can feel limited if you want deep therapy features, more advanced analytics, or strong customization. Some users may also find the premium price hard to justify, and its benefits depend on consistent use over time.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes’ main strengths are its simple, user-friendly design, guided mood tracking, and CBT-inspired prompts that help people notice patterns in their thoughts and emotions. It’s good for quick daily reflection and building self-awareness without feeling overwhelming. Its main weaknesses are that it’s fairly lightweight compared with fuller mental health apps, so it may feel limited for users who want deeper journaling, advanced analytics, or broader therapy-style features. It can also become repetitive over time, and it’s not a substitute for professional mental health support.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes’ main strengths are its simple, user-friendly design, strong focus on CBT-style mood tracking and reflection, and its ability to help users notice thought patterns over time. It’s good for quick daily check-ins, building self-awareness, and encouraging healthier thinking habits. Its main weaknesses are that it’s more of a lightweight self-help tool than a full mental health solution, so it may feel limited for users who want deeper therapy features, community support, or advanced analytics. It also depends on consistent use, and some people may find the journaling/reflection prompts repetitive or too structured.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes’ main strengths are its simple, polished mood-tracking experience, CBT-based reflection prompts, and helpful focus on identifying thinking patterns rather than just logging emotions. It’s especially good for people who want a lightweight self-help journal with gentle guidance. Its main weaknesses are that it can feel limited compared with fuller mental-health apps, it relies on user consistency, and it may not offer enough depth or personalization for people needing more advanced therapy tools, community features, or clinical support.
Who should use Moodnotes? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is best for people who want a simple tool for mood tracking, reflection, and spotting negative thinking patterns—especially if they like journaling, CBT-style prompts, or self-awareness exercises. It may be less suitable for people who need immediate crisis support, intensive therapy, or a clinical mental health treatment plan. If someone is in severe distress, having thoughts of self-harm, or needs urgent help, they should use professional support instead of relying on an app alone.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is best for people who want a simple mood journaling and thought-tracking app to spot patterns, reflect on feelings, and practice CBT-style reframing. It may be a good fit for someone managing everyday stress, low mood, anxiety, or self-awareness habits. People should avoid relying on it if they need urgent mental health support, are in crisis, or have severe depression, self-harm thoughts, psychosis, or other conditions that require professional care. It’s also not ideal for anyone who doesn’t want to spend time journaling or who expects a replacement for therapy.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is best for people who want to track moods, notice thought patterns, and practice simple CBT-style reflection to build emotional awareness. It can suit adults or teens who are dealing with everyday stress, low mood, or wanting a journaling/check-in tool. Avoid it as a substitute for professional mental health care. People in crisis, with severe depression, suicidal thoughts, active mania/psychosis, or complicated trauma should not rely on Moodnotes alone and should seek a clinician or emergency support. It may also be a poor fit for anyone who doesn’t want to self-reflect regularly or prefers more structured therapy than an app can provide.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is best for people who want a simple mood-tracking and CBT-style journaling app to notice thought patterns, reflect on feelings, and build better habits. It can be useful for mild stress, low mood, or general self-awareness. People should avoid relying on it as a substitute for professional care if they have severe depression, suicidal thoughts, self-harm urges, mania, psychosis, or a crisis. It’s also not ideal for anyone who finds mood tracking increases rumination or anxiety. If someone is in immediate danger or thinking about self-harm, they should contact emergency services or a crisis hotline right away.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is best for people who want a simple mood diary, reflection prompts, and CBT-style help spotting thinking patterns. It may suit someone dealing with everyday stress, low mood, or wanting better self-awareness and journaling habits. Avoid it if you need urgent mental health support, have severe depression/anxiety, suicidal thoughts, or want a substitute for a therapist or medical care. It’s also not a great fit if you don’t want to track moods regularly or prefer a highly clinical, treatment-focused tool.
How does Moodnotes compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is a mood-tracking / CBT-style journaling app, and it usually compares against apps like Daylio, Moodpath/Medito-type mental health trackers, Reflectly, Stoic, and generic journaling apps. - Versus Daylio: Moodnotes is more therapy-oriented and focused on identifying thinking patterns; Daylio is simpler, faster, and better for quick habit-style mood logging. - Versus Reflectly: Moodnotes is more structured around CBT and self-reflection; Reflectly tends to feel more polished and journal-like, but less clinically grounded. - Versus Stoic or journaling apps: Moodnotes is more guided and mental-health specific; journaling apps are more flexible but less opinionated. - Versus clinical mood trackers: Moodnotes is usually more user-friendly and approachable, but less data-heavy or research-oriented than some newer mental health platforms. Overall: Moodnotes stands out for guided CBT-inspired reflection, but competitors often win on simplicity, design, or broader feature sets.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is generally stronger than many mood trackers at structured reflection: it’s built around CBT-style prompts, cognitive distortions, and guided journaling, so it feels more like a mental-wellness tool than a simple log. Compared with main competitors: - Daylio: simpler and faster for pure mood tracking/habit stats; Moodnotes is better for deeper reflection, but less lightweight. - Reflectly: more polished and motivational; Moodnotes is usually more clinically grounded and more focused on thought patterns. - Stoic / journaling apps: often broader journaling tools; Moodnotes is more specialized for mood + CBT. - Wysa / similar mental health assistants: those offer more AI/chat support and coaching; Moodnotes is less conversational but more focused on self-reflection. - MindDoc / mood-monitoring apps: those can be stronger for long-term symptom tracking and mental health check-ins; Moodnotes is stronger for in-the-moment reframing. Bottom line: Moodnotes stands out for evidence-based reflection and thought reframing, but it’s not the best if you want the fastest tracker, the most social/AI-like experience, or the deepest clinical monitoring.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is generally more of a guided mood-reflection and CBT-style journaling app than a simple mood tracker. Compared with its main competitors: - Daylio: much easier and faster for passive mood logging, streaks, and stats; less focused on deep reflection or cognitive restructuring. - Reflectly: more polished and journal-like, with a stronger emphasis on AI-driven prompts and self-reflection; Moodnotes is usually seen as more clinically grounded. - MindDoc (Moodpath): stronger on mental-health screening, symptom tracking, and therapist-style assessments; Moodnotes is lighter and more personal. - Stoic / journaling apps: often broader and more customizable for journaling, but less structured around CBT techniques than Moodnotes. Overall: Moodnotes stands out for its structured, psychology-based approach to noticing and reframing thoughts, but it can feel less feature-rich and less habit-tracking-focused than top mood tracker competitors like Daylio.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes stands out as a CBT-style mood journal: it helps you log feelings, spot thinking traps, and reframe thoughts. Compared with main competitors: - Daylio: simpler and faster for pure mood tracking, with better charts/stats; Moodnotes is more reflective and therapeutic. - Reflectly: more polished and “coach-like” in tone; Moodnotes is usually more structured and evidence-based. - Journey / Stoic: broader journaling apps with more writing and lifestyle features; Moodnotes is narrower but better for mental-health-focused reflection. - Moodpath / similar wellness apps: often stronger in screening/assessment and habit programs; Moodnotes is lighter and more user-friendly. Overall: choose Moodnotes if you want guided self-reflection and cognitive reframing. Choose competitors like Daylio if you want faster tracking, or Journey/Stoic if you want a full journaling app.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Moodnotes is best known as a guided mood-reflection app, and it tends to sit between simple mood trackers and full mental-health journaling tools. Compared with **Daylio**, Moodnotes is usually more reflective and CBT-inspired, while Daylio is faster, more data-heavy, and better for quick logging and charts. Compared with **Reflectly**, Moodnotes is typically less flashy and more clinically grounded; Reflectly leans more into AI-style journaling and motivation, while Moodnotes focuses on helping you identify thought patterns. Compared with **Bearable**, Moodnotes is much narrower: Bearable is stronger for tracking symptoms, sleep, meds, and broader health correlations, while Moodnotes is better for emotional awareness and reframing negative thoughts. Compared with a general journal like **Journey** or **Day One**, Moodnotes is more structured and opinionated about mood improvement, but less flexible for free-form writing. Overall: **Moodnotes is strongest for guided self-reflection and cognitive restructuring; its competitors often win on speed, analytics, or breadth of tracking.**
What do people typically complain about with Moodnotes?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Moodnotes can feel too limited for the price, with basic tracking and journaling features compared with other mood apps. Some also mention occasional bugs, sync/account issues, and that the CBT-style prompts can feel repetitive or not very deep. A few users dislike the subscription model and say the app works better for quick check-ins than for more serious mental health support.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Moodnotes can feel too limited for the price, with a lot of users wanting more features, better insights, or more flexibility in tracking moods. Other common complaints are occasional bugs/crashes, clunky or dated UI, and that the journaling prompts can feel repetitive or not deep enough for serious mental health tracking.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain about Moodnotes being pricey for a subscription app, occasional bugs/sync issues, limited customization and export options, and that it can feel too simple or repetitive after a while.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Moodnotes can feel a bit repetitive or tedious to use daily, with too many taps/reflection prompts. Others mention the subscription cost, occasional app glitches/sync issues, and that it can feel too structured or not customizable enough for some users.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Moodnotes can feel too limited for the price, with some features behind the paywall. Others mention occasional bugs/sync issues, a clunky interface, and that the mood-analysis prompts can feel repetitive or not very personalized.
What is a typical mood tracking app known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical mood tracking app is known for helping users log their emotions over time, spot mood patterns or triggers, and support mental wellness through simple daily check-ins, charts, and reminders.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical mood tracking app is known for helping users log their emotions over time, spot patterns or triggers, and support self-awareness and mental health habits.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical mood tracking app is known for helping users log their daily emotions, spot patterns or triggers over time, and support mental well-being with insights, reminders, and charts.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical mood tracking app is known for helping users log their emotions over time, spot patterns or triggers, and gain insight into their mental well-being. Many also offer reminders, journaling, charts, and sometimes coping tips or mindfulness tools.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical mood tracking app is known for helping users log their emotions over time, spot patterns or triggers, and build self-awareness for mental well-being.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best mood tracking apps for anxiety symptoms? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps for **anxiety symptoms**: 1. **Bearable** - Best overall for tracking anxiety, sleep, triggers, meds, and physical symptoms - Very customizable and good for spotting patterns 2. **Daylio** - Best simple mood tracker - Easy daily logging with tags like “panic,” “restless,” or “overthinking” 3. **Moodfit** - Best for anxiety + CBT-style tools - Includes mood tracking, breathing, gratitude, and habit tracking 4. **MindDoc** - Best for mental health check-ins - Good if you want more structured symptom tracking and self-reflection 5. **eMoods** - Best if anxiety comes with mood swings or you want very detailed symptom charts - More clinical-feeling, but useful for trend tracking 6. **Stoic** - Best if journaling helps your anxiety - Combines mood tracking with reflection prompts and coping exercises **If you want the easiest pick:** - **Daylio** for simple use - **Bearable** for the most useful anxiety tracking If you want, I can also give you the **best free apps**, or the **best apps for iPhone vs Android**.
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Here are the best picks, depending on what you want to track: - **Bearable** — best all-around if you want to track **anxiety + mood + sleep + meds + triggers** in one place. It’s built for symptom correlation and supports anxiety, panic attacks, PTSD, and more. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best if you want the **simplest daily mood tracker** with very low effort. It’s more mood/journal-focused than anxiety-specific, but many people use it to spot anxiety patterns over time. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) - **MindDoc** — best if you want a **mental-health-focused tracker** with daily questions, mood tracking, guided reflections, and expert-backed assessments. It specifically says it can help ease symptoms of anxiety and depression. ([minddoc.com](https://minddoc.com/magazin/en/minddoc-app?utm_source=openai)) - **MindShift CBT** — best if your anxiety benefits from **CBT tools plus progress tracking**. It includes daily check-ins, coping tools, and progress tracking. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mindshift-cbt-anxiety-relief/id634684825?utm_source=openai)) If you want a quick recommendation: - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Easiest to stick with:** Daylio - **Best anxiety-specific support:** MindShift CBT - **Best guided mental-health companion:** MindDoc ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this down to **free only**, **iPhone only**, or **apps with export for therapists**.
Which mood tracking apps are good for depression tracking? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A few good ones for **depression/mood tracking**: - **Daylio** — very easy to use, quick mood logging, activities, stats, reminders. - **Bearable** — great for tracking mood + sleep, meds, symptoms, habits, and spotting patterns. - **eMoods** — especially good if you want more structured tracking of depression/bipolar symptoms. - **Moodfit** — broader mental health tracking with goals, CBT-style tools, and trend charts. - **Journey** — good journaling app with mood tracking built in. If you want the **simplest**: **Daylio**. If you want the **most detailed**: **Bearable**. If you want, I can also suggest the best one for **iPhone vs Android**, or for **free vs paid**.
retrieval Mentioned
Yes — a few good ones for **depression tracking** are: - **eMoods** — best if you want a more clinical, symptom-focused tracker. It tracks depression, anxiety, PTSD, sleep, meds, and lets you send reports to a clinician. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best if you want very customizable tracking of moods, symptoms, sleep, meds, triggers, and treatments. It has a dedicated depression tracker page. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/depression-tracker/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodfit** — best if you want mood tracking plus CBT, breathing, mindfulness, goals, and weekly reports. ([getmoodfit.com](https://www.getmoodfit.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best if you want something simple and low-friction for daily mood logging with charts and activity correlations. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodnotes** — best if you want mood tracking plus journaling/reflection to spot thinking patterns. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow these down to: 1. **best free option**, 2. **best for therapy/psychiatry reporting**, or 3. **best for very low energy / easiest to stick with**.
What are the best mood tracking apps for bipolar disorder? discovery 90/mo
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recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for bipolar disorder: 1. **eMoods Bipolar Mood Tracker** - Best bipolar-specific option - Tracks mood, sleep, meds, anxiety, psychosis, and triggers - Easy charts for spotting patterns - Good if you want something simple and focused 2. **Daylio** - Best for quick daily check-ins - Very easy to use, with custom moods and activities - Great for tracking patterns over time - Less bipolar-specific, but very popular 3. **Bearable** - Best for tracking lots of factors - Tracks mood, sleep, meds, symptoms, energy, stress, and habits - Strong charts and correlation features - Good if you want more detail 4. **MindDoc** - Good for mental health symptom tracking - Includes mood, sleep, and anxiety monitoring - Has structured check-ins and reports - Useful if you want a more clinical feel 5. **Moodflow** - Clean, customizable mood tracking - Tracks sleep, meds, and triggers - Good visuals and reminders - Nice balance of simple and detailed **Best overall for bipolar disorder:** **eMoods** **Best simple app:** **Daylio** **Best detailed tracker:** **Bearable** If you want, I can also narrow these down by **free vs paid**, **iPhone vs Android**, or **best for sharing with a psychiatrist**.
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Here are the best **mood tracking apps for bipolar disorder** right now: - **eMoods** — best all-around bipolar-specific tracker. It’s built for tracking daily highs/lows, sleep, medications, and other symptoms, and it can email a monthly PDF report to your doctor or therapist. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/emoods-bipolar-mood-tracker/id1184456130?utm_source=openai)) - **Bipolar UK Mood Tracker** — best free bipolar-focused option. Bipolar UK says it records daily mood, medications, emotions, and sleep, and is meant to help spot patterns, triggers, and early warning signs. ([bipolaruk.org](https://www.bipolaruk.org/Blog/apps-for-managing-mood?utm_source=openai)) - **Bipolar Mood Tracker** — best if you want more customization. It lets you define your own mood levels, add custom attributes, make notes, and export PDF/CSV reports. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bipolar-mood-tracker/id1565336314?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best for simple daily logging and strong stats. It’s very fast to use, highly customizable, and has advanced charts/correlations, but it’s not bipolar-specific. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **How We Feel** — best free journal-style tracker. It’s a free app with check-ins, tags, and reflection tools, but it’s more general-purpose than bipolar-specific. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/how-we-feel/id1562706384?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - For bipolar disorder specifically: **eMoods** or **Bipolar UK Mood Tracker**. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/emoods-bipolar-mood-tracker/id1184456130?utm_source=openai)) - For the easiest habit: **Daylio**. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this down to **best free**, **best for iPhone**, or **best for sharing with your psychiatrist**.
What mood tracking app is best for therapy clients? discovery
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recall Not mentioned
**Best overall for therapy clients: _Daylio_** Why it’s a good fit: - super easy daily check-ins - tracks mood, activities, sleep, and habits - good charts for spotting patterns to bring into therapy - low-friction, so clients actually use it **Other strong options** - **_Bearable_** — best if you want detailed symptom + mood tracking; great for mental health, sleep, meds, and triggers. - **_Moodnotes_** — best for CBT-style reflection; helps clients identify thought patterns. - **_eMoods_** — best for bipolar / mood disorder tracking; simple and clinician-friendly. - **_MindDoc_** — good guided mood tracking with more mental health structure. **If you want the simplest recommendation:** - **Daylio** for most clients - **Bearable** if they want more detail - **eMoods** if bipolar symptoms are a focus If you want, I can also give you the **best app for iPhone vs Android**, or a **therapist-friendly comparison chart**.
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For **therapy clients**, my pick is **Bearable** if you want the most therapist-friendly tracking: it supports mood + symptom correlation, and it’s explicitly designed to make sharing data with a **doctor, therapist, and medical team** easier. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/medical-professionals/?utm_source=openai)) **Best picks by use case:** - **Bearable** — best for therapy because it tracks mood, symptoms, habits, meds, and exports/summary-style sharing. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/medical-professionals/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best if you want the **simplest** daily mood log; it has quick logging plus **PDF/CSV export** for sessions. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodnotes** — best for CBT-style reflection and thought-pattern work. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) **If I had to choose one:** - **Bearable** for most therapy clients. - **Daylio** if the client needs something ultra-fast and low-friction. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/medical-professionals/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best app for anxiety / bipolar / ADHD / teen clients”** breakdown.
What are the best mood tracking apps for teens? discovery
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recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for teens: 1. **Daylio** — very easy to use, mood + activity tracking, good charts and streaks. 2. **Moodflow** — clean design, customizable moods, journaling, and trends over time. 3. **MindDoc** — better for tracking emotions alongside anxiety/depression symptoms; more structured. 4. **Bearable** — great if teens want to track mood plus sleep, energy, stress, and habits. 5. **eMoods** — simple and useful for tracking mood patterns, especially if symptoms fluctuate a lot. 6. **Reflectly** — more journal-focused, with mood check-ins and prompts. **Best overall for most teens:** **Daylio** **Best for deeper mental-health tracking:** **MindDoc** **Best for tracking mood + habits:** **Bearable** A few things to look for: - **Privacy controls** - **No social feed** - **Easy daily check-in** - **Export/share reports** for a therapist or parent if needed If you want, I can also give you: - **best free mood apps for teens**, or - **best iPhone vs Android picks**.
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Here are the best picks for teens: - **BeMe** — best **teen-specific** option; it’s built “with teens in mind” and includes mood tracking plus coaching/support. ([beme.com](https://beme.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best **simple, private tracker**; it’s a mood journal with charts, reminders, PIN lock, export, and it says it does not store or collect your data. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-daily-diary/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodfit** — best **all-in-one** option; it combines mood journaling with CBT tools, mindfulness, breathwork, gratitude, and tracking for sleep/exercise/nutrition. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodfit-mental-health-tools/id1054458809?utm_source=openai)) - **Finding Balance** — best for **younger teens / families**; it’s designed for kids and teens and tracks mood, sleep, physical activity, and mindfulness. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/finding-balance/id1529239647?utm_source=openai)) - **Sanvello** — best if they want **structured anxiety/depression tools**; Common Sense Media notes its mood tracker and says it can help teens track moods and build healthy habits. ([commonsensemedia.org](https://www.commonsensemedia.org/app-reviews/sanvello?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - Want the easiest daily check-in? **Daylio** - Want teen-focused support? **BeMe** - Want more mental-health tools, not just tracking? **Moodfit** If you want, I can also give you the **best free ones**, or a **best for privacy / best for anxiety / best for parents** list.
What are the best mood tracking apps for parents? discovery
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recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps for parents: - **Daylio** — super easy mood logging with quick taps, good for busy parents. - **Bearable** — best for spotting patterns between mood, sleep, stress, hormones, and parenting load. - **Moodfit** — good all-around mental wellness app with mood tracking, habits, and coping tools. - **Reflectly** — more journal-style, great if you like writing a little each day. - **MindDoc** — strong for tracking emotional trends over time, especially if you’re monitoring anxiety or depression. - **Apple Journal / Google Fit-style notes + reminders** — not as advanced, but simple if you want something lightweight. If you’re a new parent or postpartum, I’d especially look at **Bearable** and **MindDoc**. If you want the fastest, easiest option, **Daylio** is usually the best pick. If you want, I can also give you the **best apps for postpartum mood tracking specifically** or **the best free ones**.
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If you mean **mood tracking for busy parents**, my top picks are: 1. **Daylio** — fastest to use: two-tap mood + activity logging, reminders, charts, and strong privacy. Good if you want something you can log in under a minute. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Bearable** — best if you want to connect mood with sleep, energy, stress, meds, and custom factors. It’s very customizable and has exports/reports, which is great for spotting parent-burnout patterns. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **MindDoc** — best for structured check-ins. It uses daily questions plus mood tracking and personalized insights, so it’s good if you want more than just a diary. ([minddoc.com](https://minddoc.com/de/app-download?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Finch** — best if you want a gentler, more motivating experience. It includes daily quests, friends, and “Good Vibes,” which can help you actually stick with the habit. ([help.finchcare.com](https://help.finchcare.com/hc/en-us/articles/37943131828749-Daily-and-Special-Quests?utm_source=openai)) **My quick take:** - **Simplest:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Most guided:** MindDoc - **Most encouraging:** Finch ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow these down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free vs paid**, or **for postpartum/new parents specifically**.
Which mood tracking apps let you track triggers and habits? discovery
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recall Mentioned
A few good ones: - **Bearable** — strong for **triggers, habits, symptoms, sleep, meds**, and correlations. - **Daylio** — simple, popular, lets you track **mood plus custom activities/habits** that can act as triggers. - **MindDoc** — better for **mental health check-ins** and tracking **symptoms, causes/triggers, and routines**. - **eMoods** — especially good if you want **mood + triggers + sleep + meds + habits** in a bipolar-focused tracker. - **Moodnotes** — more CBT-style; good for **mood + thought patterns/triggers**, but lighter on habits. If you want the best overall for **triggers + habits**, I’d start with **Bearable** or **Daylio**. If you want, I can also narrow it down by **iPhone vs Android** or **free vs paid**.
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Yes — these are solid picks: - **Bearable** — best if you want to track **mood, triggers, habits, sleep, symptoms, and meds** together, with correlation/insight reports. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — great for simple mood logging plus **activities, goals, and habit tracking**, with stats/correlations to spot patterns. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodflow** — includes **mood analysis, custom tags, habit-building, and symptom journaling** to help identify triggers. ([moodflow.co](https://moodflow.co/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow these down to **best free**, **best for ADHD**, or **best for therapy/journaling**.
What are the best mood tracking apps with medication logs? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps that also include **medication logs**: 1. **Bearable** - Strong all-in-one tracker for mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, habits - Very customizable and good charts - Great if you want to spot patterns over time 2. **Daylio** - Simple, popular mood tracker - Has a **mood + activity** journal and medication tracking via custom goals/notes - Best for quick daily check-ins 3. **eMoods** - Built for bipolar/mood disorder tracking - Includes mood, sleep, anxiety, and **medication tracking** - Good if you want a more clinical-style log 4. **Moodflow** - Clean mood journal with symptoms, habits, and **medication reminders/logs** - Good balance of simplicity and detail 5. **Symple** - Symptom and mood tracker with medication logging - Easy to use, good for linking meds with how you feel 6. **CareClinic** - More robust health tracker - Tracks mood, meds, symptoms, appointments, and reminders - Best if you want a full health management app **Best overall:** **Bearable** **Best simple option:** **Daylio** **Best for bipolar tracking:** **eMoods** If you want, I can also narrow this down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free vs paid**, or **best for anxiety/depression/bipolar**.
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Here are the best ones I’d look at first: - **Bearable** — best overall if you want deep tracking. It logs **mood, symptoms, and medications** and is built to spot patterns over time. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodfit** — best if you want a more mental-health-focused app with **mood journal + medication/custom activity tracking**. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodfit-mental-health-tools/id1054458809?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — best for **bipolar/mood-disorder tracking**. It tracks **mood, sleep, medications, and symptoms**, and can export reports for your doctor. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/emoods-bipolar-mood-tracker/id1184456130?utm_source=openai)) - **MyTherapy** — best if your main need is **medication reminders/logs** with mood tracking as a bonus. ([mytherapyapp.com](https://www.mytherapyapp.com/depression-mood-tracker-app?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best for the simplest mood logging, but it’s **less medication-focused** than the others. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Most comprehensive:** Bearable. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for bipolar tracking:** eMoods. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/emoods-bipolar-mood-tracker/id1184456130?utm_source=openai)) - **Best medication management:** MyTherapy. ([mytherapyapp.com](https://www.mytherapyapp.com/depression-mood-tracker-app?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this to **iPhone only, Android only, free apps only, or privacy-first apps**.
What are the best mood tracking apps with symptom tracking? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps with symptom tracking: 1. **Bearable** - Best overall for detailed symptom tracking - Tracks mood, sleep, meds, pain, energy, stress, habits, and more - Good charts and correlations 2. **Daylio** - Best simple mood tracker - Fast daily check-ins with custom activities and notes - Great if you want low-friction tracking 3. **eMoods** - Best for bipolar and cycle-related tracking - Tracks mood, sleep, meds, irritability, anxiety, and more - Very symptom-focused and structured 4. **Moodfit** - Best for mental health habits + symptom tracking - Tracks mood alongside sleep, exercise, gratitude, and goals - Includes exercises and wellness tools 5. **TherapyNotes / Quenza / Up! app** - Better if you want therapist-style worksheets and symptom logs - More clinical, less casual **My top picks:** - **Bearable** if you want the most comprehensive symptom tracking - **Daylio** if you want the easiest app to stick with - **eMoods** if you need structured mental health symptom tracking If you want, I can also narrow this down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free vs paid**, or **best for anxiety/depression/bipolar/PMDD**.
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If you want **mood tracking + symptom tracking**, my short list is: - **Bearable** — best if you want the **most flexible symptom tracker** plus mood, sleep, meds, and custom health metrics in one app. It’s built around symptom severity/frequency tracking and correlation reports. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/symptom-tracker/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio** — best if you want the **simplest mood journal** with optional activity tagging and strong stats, but it’s more mood/activity-first than symptom-first. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — best if you want a **bipolar-focused** tracker for mood, sleep, meds, and symptoms, with printable reports for clinicians. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/emoods-bipolar-mood-tracker/id1184456130?utm_source=openai)) - **MindDoc** — best if you want **mood tracking plus guided mental-health support**, daily questions, and symptom/pattern reflection. ([minddoc.com](https://minddoc.com/magazin/minddoc-app?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Best overall:** Bearable. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/symptom-tracker/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for bipolar symptom tracking:** eMoods. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/emoods-bipolar-mood-tracker/id1184456130?utm_source=openai)) - **Best simple/free-ish mood journal:** Daylio. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow it down to **free apps only**, **iPhone/Android**, or **apps best for anxiety/depression vs bipolar vs PMDD/chronic illness**.
Which mood tracking apps are easy to use every day? discovery
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recall Mentioned
Here are a few **easy-to-use daily mood tracking apps**: - **Daylio** — super simple: pick a mood, add a few activities, done. Great if you want fast daily check-ins. - **eMoods** — very easy for tracking mood trends, sleep, meds, and symptoms. Good for mental health tracking. - **Moodnotes** — clean design, quick mood logging, and helpful reflection prompts. - **Bearable** — a bit more detailed, but still friendly for daily use; great if you want to track mood plus sleep, pain, energy, and habits. - **Stoic** — simple mood journaling with gentle prompts; good if you like short reflection. **Best for the easiest daily habit:** **Daylio** **Best for more mental health detail:** **eMoods** **Best for journaling + mood:** **Moodnotes** If you want, I can also recommend the **best one for iPhone, Android, or free apps only**.
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For an **easy daily habit**, I’d start with **Daylio** and **DailyBean**. Daylio is built around a **two-tap daily entry** and says you can capture your day **without writing a single word**; it also keeps the mood choices simple by default. DailyBean is designed as a **minimal journal** and the App Store describes it as the **easiest** way to capture moods, using a simple tap-based log. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/)) If you want a bit more structure, **Bearable** is a good pick: it tracks **mood, symptoms, meds, habits, and more**, and its site says the app is designed to be **simple and easy to use** with reminders and quick-entry work in progress. It’s better if you want to see patterns, but it’s more feature-heavy than Daylio/DailyBean. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bearable-symptom-tracker/id1482581097)) **Finch** can also be easy to stick with if you like a more playful, wellness-style app, since it mixes mood check-ins with habit and mindfulness features. ([help.finchcare.com](https://help.finchcare.com/hc/en-us/articles/37936993488397-Changing-Your-Mood-Check-In-Rating?utm_source=openai)) **Best “easy every day” picks:** - **Daylio** — simplest quick log. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/)) - **DailyBean** — minimal, cute, low-friction. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/dailybean-simplest-journal/id1553223828?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best if you want mood + symptoms. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bearable-symptom-tracker/id1482581097)) If you want, I can narrow this down to **free apps only** or **iPhone vs Android**.
What are the best simple mood tracker apps? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are some of the best **simple mood tracker apps**: - **Daylio** — probably the best overall. Very easy tap-based mood logging, habits, charts, reminders. - **Moodnotes** — great if you want mood tracking plus a bit of CBT-style reflection. - **Bearable** — simple but more detailed than Daylio; good if you want to track mood, sleep, symptoms, and habits together. - **Reflectly** — clean design and journaling-focused, good for quick daily check-ins. - **eMoods** — best if you want very straightforward mood tracking with minimal fuss, especially for mental health monitoring. - **Moodflow** — lightweight, simple interface, nice for quick mood entries and trends. **Best pick for most people:** **Daylio** **Best if you want journaling:** **Reflectly** **Best if you want more health tracking:** **Bearable** If you want, I can also give you the **best free ones only** or the **best for iPhone vs Android**.
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If you want **simple, low-friction mood tracking**, I’d start with these: - **Daylio** — best all-around “tap and go” mood tracker; quick check-ins, activities, and charts. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **DailyBean** — probably the **simplest** option; uses a few mood “beans” and is very lightweight. ([dailybean.app](https://dailybean.app/en?utm_source=openai)) - **How We Feel** — best if you want to pick the exact feeling word without a lot of typing; it’s a free emotion journal from the How We Feel Project. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/in/app/how-we-feel/id1562706384?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — good if you want a very simple daily tracker plus mood/sleep/medication charts, especially for bipolar or anxiety tracking. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/emoods-bipolar-mood-tracker/id1184456130?utm_source=openai)) - **DearMood** — simple “log how you feel in seconds” style app with mood-insight tools if you want a bit more analysis later. ([dearmood.app](https://dearmood.app/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Simplest overall:** DailyBean - **Best balance of simple + useful:** Daylio - **Best for emotion words / awareness:** How We Feel If you want, I can narrow it down to **iPhone only**, **Android only**, or **free only**.
Which mood tracking apps have reminders and notifications? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
A few good mood-tracking apps with **reminders/notifications**: - **Daylio** — custom reminders, push notifications, streaks - **Moodnotes** — reminder notifications for check-ins and journaling - **Moodfit** — configurable reminders for mood logging and habits - **eMoods** — reminders plus daily mood tracking, especially for bipolar tracking - **Bearable** — customizable notifications for mood, symptoms, meds, and routines - **Youper** — check-in reminders and AI-guided mood tracking - **Moodflow** — notifications for daily mood entries and streaks If you want, I can also narrow this down to: - **best free apps** - **best for iPhone/Android** - **best for anxiety/depression** - **best for simple, quick check-ins**
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — a few mood tracking apps that support reminders/notifications are: - **Daylio** — reminders to create an entry. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — reminders and push notifications, including unlimited reminders on premium. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodistory** — random reminders to fit your routine. ([play.google.com](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?hl=en_US&id=com.matoph.moodistory&utm_source=openai)) - **Pixels** — daily reminders/notifications to log your day. ([play.google.com](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?hl=en_US&id=ar.teovogel.yip&utm_source=openai)) - **Moodpress** — daily reminder notifications at your chosen time. ([play.google.com](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?hl=en_IE&id=com.selfcare.diary.mood.tracker.moodpress&utm_source=openai)) - **MoodJourney** — reminder notifications for daily mood recording. ([play.google.com](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?hl=en_US&id=com.pata.moodjourney&utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best free ones** or the **best iPhone/Android options**.
What are the best mood tracking apps for journaling? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for journaling: 1. **Daylio** Best overall for quick mood logging. - Tap-to-log mood + activities - Great charts and trends - Simple journaling without much typing 2. **Journey** Best for full journaling with mood tracking. - Rich text, photos, tags, and calendar views - Works across phone, web, and desktop - Good if you want deeper reflective journaling 3. **Reflectly** Best for guided self-reflection. - Mood check-ins with prompts - Clean, motivating interface - Good for people who like structured journaling 4. **Bearable** Best for tracking mood alongside symptoms, habits, and health factors. - Excellent for spotting patterns - Tracks sleep, meds, pain, energy, and more - Strong if your mood is tied to wellness goals 5. **Moodnotes** Best for CBT-style mood journaling. - Helps identify thought patterns - Good for reframing negative thinking - More therapeutic than a standard journal 6. **Stoic** Best for mindfulness + journaling. - Mood tracking, prompts, and reflection exercises - Nice design - Good if you want a calm, guided experience **My quick picks:** - **Easiest/simple:** Daylio - **Best all-around journal:** Journey - **Best for mental health pattern tracking:** Bearable - **Best guided reflection:** Reflectly If you want, I can also narrow this down to **free apps**, **iPhone-only**, or **best for anxiety/depression tracking**.
retrieval Mentioned
Here are the best mood-tracking apps for journaling, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — best overall for quick daily mood journaling. It’s super fast to log a mood, activities, notes, photos, voice memos, and it gives charts, goals, reminders, and export options. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) - **DailyBean** — best minimalist option. It focuses on simple mood capture and daily reflection, with a very clean journal-style feel. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/dailybean-simplest-journal/id1553223828?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodnotes** — best for thought-awareness and mental reframing. It combines mood tracking with journaling and self-reflection prompts aimed at spotting thinking patterns. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best if you want mood + symptoms + habits together. It’s more of a self-tracking dashboard than a pure journal, so it’s great for understanding links between mood, sleep, pain, meds, and routines. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodistory** — best for privacy-first mood journaling with deeper stats. It supports diary-like entries and emphasizes privacy and lock features. ([moodistory.com](https://moodistory.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Daylio - **Best simple/pretty:** DailyBean - **Best for mental-health reflection:** Moodnotes - **Best for detailed health tracking:** Bearable If you want, I can also narrow these down to **free apps only**, **iPhone only**, or **apps with no subscription**.
What are the best mood tracking apps with charts and insights? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps with strong **charts, trends, and insights**: 1. **Daylio** - Best overall for simple mood tracking + great charts - Strong visuals, habit tracking, custom activities, exportable stats 2. **Bearable** - Best for detailed insights - Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, pain, triggers, and gives solid correlation charts 3. **Moodflow** - Best for clean design and easy journaling - Good mood calendar, trends, and quick-entry interface 4. **eMoods** - Best for mental health/self-monitoring, especially bipolar tracking - Excellent symptom charts and reports you can share with a clinician 5. **Reflectly** - Best for guided journaling with mood insights - More reflective/coach-like, with nice charts and prompts 6. **Moodnotes** - Best if you want mood tracking plus thought patterns - Helpful CBT-style insights and mood trend views **My quick pick:** - **Daylio** if you want the best balance of ease + charts - **Bearable** if you want the deepest insights If you want, I can also recommend the **best free apps** or the **best iPhone/Android options** specifically.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **mood tracking with charts + real insights**, my top picks are: - **Daylio** — best all-around for most people. Fast logging, strong stats/charts, activity correlations, goals, reminders, and exports. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best for **deep correlations**. Tracks mood plus symptoms, sleep, meds, and other factors, with weekly reports and customizable correlation graphs. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — best if you want something more **mental-health / bipolar focused**. It charts daily highs/lows, sleep, medications, and other symptoms, with rich visualizations and exports. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **iMoodJournal** — best for **therapy-style analysis**. It offers daily/weekly/monthly charts, hashtag-based filtering, and correlation views for triggers like sleep or medication. ([imoodjournal.com](https://www.imoodjournal.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **How We Feel** — best for a more **emotion-first** approach. It uses a color-coded mood system and includes reflections, takeaways, and weekly review tools. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/story/id1638393948?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Simple + polished:** Daylio - **Most detailed insights:** Bearable - **Bipolar tracking:** eMoods - **Therapy/doctor sharing:** iMoodJournal - **Emotion vocabulary + reflection:** How We Feel If you want, I can also rank these by **best free version**, **best privacy**, or **best for iPhone/Android**.
What are the best mood tracking apps for couples? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best **mood tracking apps for couples** (or couple-friendly apps that work well for shared emotional check-ins): 1. **Between** - Best overall for couples - Private shared space for messages, photos, calendars, and check-ins - Good if you want mood tracking to feel natural inside a couple app 2. **Paired** - Best for relationship check-ins - Daily questions, relationship exercises, and conversation prompts - Great for tracking how each partner is feeling over time 3. **Lasting** - Best for guided relationship improvement - Uses short relationship sessions and emotional check-ins - Better for couples who want structure, not just logging moods 4. **Couple Game** - Best for lighthearted mood/relationship check-ins - Fun prompts and conversation starters - Good for staying emotionally connected without it feeling clinical 5. **Daylio** - Best standalone mood tracker that couples can use together - Not made for couples specifically, but great for individual mood logging - Works well if each partner wants their own tracker and then shares patterns 6. **Moodflow** - Best for simple mood tracking - Clean, easy journaling and mood charts - Good if you want minimal setup and private tracking **Best pick:** - **Between** if you want a couple app - **Paired** if you want relationship + mood check-ins - **Daylio** if you want the best pure mood tracker If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or **best apps for long-distance couples**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **mood tracking specifically for couples**, these look like the best current picks: 1. **MoodMe** — best overall for relationship mood tracking + check-ins. It has weekly check-ins, relationship mood tracking, validation prompts, and quizzes. ([moodme.co](https://moodme.co/)) 2. **Midnight** — best for couples who want mood tracking plus fun extras. It includes emotional check-ins, shared widgets, and couples games; it’s currently iOS-only. ([getmidnight.app](https://getmidnight.app/)) 3. **Pebbles** — best for a clean, shared mood journal. It focuses on mood tracking, energy/intimacy, daily streaks, and small relationship nudges. ([pebbles.love](https://pebbles.love/)) 4. **BetterUs** — best for structured daily connection. It includes mood check-ins, journal prompts, and a couple-code setup so both partners stay synced. ([getbetterus.com](https://www.getbetterus.com/)) 5. **Synced Hearts** — best for quick daily check-ins. It emphasizes short 2-minute check-ins, mood sharing, love notes, and milestone tracking. ([syncedhearts.com](https://syncedhearts.com/)) 6. **Minute Mood** — best if you want something very simple and therapist-informed. It lets couples share feelings in under a minute and optionally loop in a therapist. ([minutemood.com](https://www.minutemood.com/)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Most couples:** MoodMe - **Long-distance / playful:** Midnight - **Simple and private:** Pebbles or Minute Mood - **Try-now daily habit:** Synced Hearts If you want, I can also narrow this down to **iPhone only**, **Android only**, or **free apps only**.
What are the best mood tracking apps for caregivers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for caregivers: - **Daylio** — Best overall for quick, low-effort mood logging. Super fast, visual charts, easy to spot patterns. - **Bearable** — Best for linking mood to sleep, stress, meds, symptoms, and caregiving burnout. Very detailed. - **Moodfit** — Best for mental wellness tracking plus exercises like breathing and gratitude. - **Reflectly** — Best if you like journaling along with mood tracking; more guided and reflective. - **Wysa** — Best for emotional support with an AI coach, especially during stressful caregiving days. - **Sanvello** — Good for mood tracking plus anxiety/stress tools and CBT-based support. If you want the simplest option: **Daylio**. If you want the most caregiver-relevant insights: **Bearable**. If you want, I can also narrow this down to **free apps only**, **iPhone/Android**, or **apps best for caregiver burnout**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best **mood-tracking apps for caregivers** if you want something practical for stress, burnout, and pattern tracking: 1. **Moodfit** — best all-around. It tracks mood plus sleep, gratitude, journaling, and other wellness factors, so it’s good if you want to see how caregiving stress affects your day. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodfit-mental-health-tools/id1054458809?utm_source=openai)) 2. **eMoods Wellness Tracker** — best for shareable reports. It tracks mood, anxiety/depression, sleep, meds, and habits, and can export a monthly PDF to email to a therapist, caregiver, family member, or friend. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/emoods-wellness-tracker/id1505546556?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Moodtrack Social Diary** — best for support/sharing. It lets you track moods, work offline, and share with a counselor or friend. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodtrack-social-diary/id549251057?utm_source=openai)) 4. **MoodWell** — best for privacy. It keeps data on your device, has no ads/subscriptions, supports charts, reminders, and export to CSV/JSON. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodwell-moody-tracker-diary/id1443436795/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Sensive** — best for simple journaling. It offers mood tracking, journaling, stats, reminders, and Apple Health integration. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/sensive-mood-tracking/id1513799237?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - If you want **easy and useful**: **Moodfit**. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodfit-mental-health-tools/id1054458809?utm_source=openai)) - If you want to **share progress with a therapist or family**: **eMoods**. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/emoods-wellness-tracker/id1505546556?utm_source=openai)) - If privacy matters most: **MoodWell**. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodwell-moody-tracker-diary/id1443436795/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this to **iPhone only**, **Android only**, or **free apps only**.
Which mood tracking apps work well on iPhone? discovery 10/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
A few solid mood-tracking apps for iPhone: - **Daylio** — very popular, fast one-tap mood logging, charts, habits, reminders. - **Bearable** — great if you want to track mood plus sleep, symptoms, meds, and triggers. - **Moodnotes** — good for reflection and CBT-style journaling, especially if you want to spot thought patterns. - **MindDoc** — more structured mental health check-ins with mood trends and exercises. - **eMoods** — useful if you want simple tracking with a focus on bipolar/mood disorder patterns. - **Reflectly** — more journal-like, with guided prompts and mood check-ins. If you want the easiest overall, I’d start with **Daylio**. If you want deeper mental health tracking, **Bearable** is excellent. If you want, I can narrow it down to the **best free options** or the **best for anxiety/depression**.
retrieval Mentioned
A few good iPhone options: - **Daylio** — best if you want fast, low-friction mood logging with stats, goals, and no typing required. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodnotes** — good for CBT-style tracking and noticing thought patterns/triggers. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) - **Stoic** — solid if you want mood tracking plus journaling, trends, and iCloud sync across Apple devices. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/stoic/id1312926037?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best if you want mood tracking tied to symptoms, sleep, meds, and other health factors. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bearable-symptom-tracker/id1482581097?utm_source=openai)) - **Sensive** — a simpler mood tracker with charts, reminders, and Apple Health integration. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/sensive-mood-tracking/id1513799237?utm_source=openai)) If you want a **built-in Apple option**, **Journal** is good for reflective journaling and privacy, but it’s more of a journaling app than a dedicated mood tracker. ([apple.com](https://www.apple.com/cm/newsroom/2023/12/apple-launches-journal-app-a-new-app-for-reflecting-on-everyday-moments/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to **best free**, **best for anxiety**, or **best privacy**.
Which mood tracking apps work well on Android? discovery 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A few good mood tracking apps for Android: - **Daylio** — very popular, easy to use, great for quick check-ins and charts. Good if you want low-friction tracking. - **Bearable** — more detailed than Daylio; tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, habits, and possible triggers. Best if you want patterns. - **MindDoc** — solid for mood and mental health tracking, with guided check-ins and insights. Good if you want a more structured app. - **eMoods** — especially good for bipolar mood tracking; includes sleep, meds, and symptoms. More clinical style. - **Moodflow** — simple and clean, with journaling, habits, and mood stats. Good balance of usability and features. - **Pixels** — very minimal mood tracker with a clean design. Best if you just want a quick daily mood log. If you want the easiest pick: **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed: **Bearable**. If you want, I can also narrow these down by **free vs paid** or **privacy-focused** options.
retrieval Not mentioned
A few good Android options: - **Daylio** — best if you want fast, tap-to-log mood tracking with strong stats and habits/activity tracking. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodfit** — best all-around mental health app; includes mood journaling plus tools like mindfulness, CBT, sleep, exercise, and weekly reports. ([getmoodfit.com](https://www.getmoodfit.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — a solid choice if you want a more clinical-style tracker for highs/lows, sleep, meds, and related symptoms. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **DailyBean** — very simple and lightweight, good if you want mood logging in just a few taps. ([dailybean.app](https://dailybean.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Reflectly** — better if you prefer guided reflection/journaling with an AI-style journal experience. ([reflectly.app](https://reflectly.app/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Easiest daily tracking: **Daylio** - More mental-health tools: **Moodfit** - Bipolar/symptom tracking: **eMoods** If you want, I can narrow it down to **free**, **best privacy**, or **best for bipolar/anxiety**.
What are the best mood tracking apps with exportable reports? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps with **exportable reports**: - **Daylio** — Best overall - Easy daily mood logging, habits, notes - **Exports**: CSV and shareable reports/charts - **Bearable** — Best for tracking symptoms + mood - Great if you want mood, sleep, pain, meds, triggers all together - **Exports**: CSV and report-style summaries - **Moodfit** — Best for detailed mental health tracking - Tracks mood, anxiety, sleep, gratitude, habits - **Exports**: downloadable reports/data export - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar / mood disorder tracking - Simple, clinical-style tracking - **Exports**: PDF reports for sharing with a therapist/doctor - **Stoic** — Best for journaling + mood insights - Combines mood tracking, journaling, CBT-style exercises - **Exports**: data export and reports **My quick pick:** - **Simple + polished:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best doctor-friendly reports:** eMoods If you want, I can also give you the **best iPhone-only** or **Android-only** options.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best mood tracking apps with exportable reports: 1. **Daylio** — best all-around pick. Exports **PDF or CSV**, and the PDF can include entries, moods, and activity counts. Good if you want simple sharing plus spreadsheet analysis. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Bearable** — best for **deep health/mood correlation tracking**. It can export **all your data to CSV**, and premium adds longer report windows and richer correlation reports. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/support/common-questions/bearable-free-vs-premium-features/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **eMoods** — best for **therapy/clinical-style monthly reports**. It exports **CSV data** and **PDF reports** you can email or download, including monthly summaries. ([help.emoodtracker.com](https://help.emoodtracker.com/article/20-importing-exporting-your-emoods-data?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Moodistory** — best for **privacy-first journaling with printable reports**. It supports **PDF export** and **CSV export**, and stores data locally on your device. ([moodistory.com](https://moodistory.com/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **iMoodJournal** — best for **advanced mood logging + doctor sharing**. It exports mood records to **CSV** or **PDF**, and the PDF can be emailed to a doctor. ([imoodjournal.com](https://www.imoodjournal.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best free option** - **best for therapists** - **best privacy** - **best iPhone / Android**
What are the best mood tracking apps for managing stress? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for managing stress: 1. **Daylio** - Best for: fast daily mood check-ins - Why it’s good: super simple, lets you log mood, activities, and habits in under a minute - Great if you want easy patterns without a lot of typing 2. **Moodfit** - Best for: stress management with tools - Why it’s good: combines mood tracking with breathing exercises, CBT-based tools, journaling, and goal tracking - Good all-around choice 3. **Bearable** - Best for: detailed tracking - Why it’s good: tracks mood, stress, sleep, symptoms, meds, and lifestyle factors - Best if you want to spot triggers 4. **Reflectly** - Best for: journaling + mood tracking - Why it’s good: guided prompts make it easier to reflect on stressful days - More “wellness journal” than clinical tracker 5. **MindDoc** - Best for: mental health awareness - Why it’s good: mood tracking plus exercises and symptom monitoring - Useful if stress is tied to anxiety or low mood 6. **Stoic** - Best for: calm, structured self-reflection - Why it’s good: mood tracking, journaling, and evidence-based prompts - Clean design, good for daily use **Best overall picks:** - **Daylio** for simplicity - **Moodfit** for stress tools - **Bearable** for deep tracking If you want, I can also recommend the **best free apps**, or the **best iPhone/Android apps** specifically.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want the **best mood-tracking apps for stress**, I’d start with these: 1. **Moodfit** — best all-around. It combines mood journaling, CBT tools, mindfulness/meditation, breathwork, gratitude, and progress insights, so it’s strong for actually managing stress patterns. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodfit-mental-health-tools/id1054458809?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Daylio** — best simple tracker. It’s fast to log, has strong stats/charts, goals, reminders, and exports, which makes it great if you want low-friction tracking. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) 3. **How We Feel** — best for emotional awareness. It focuses on identifying patterns, uses HealthKit tracking, and suggests emotional regulation strategies. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/how-we-feel/id1562706384?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Moodpress** — best if you use Apple Watch. It tracks stress, emotion, and HRV, and ties in sleep/activity data. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/stress-monitor-moodpress/id1552180803?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Mood Balance** — best if you want stress relief extras. It includes mood tracking plus relaxing music, breathing, and games. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mood-balance-self-care-tracker/id1471631164?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Want **deep stress management** → **Moodfit** - Want **simple daily logging** → **Daylio** - Want **Apple Watch stress tracking** → **Moodpress** - Want **emotion insight + guidance** → **How We Feel** Mood-tracking apps can help with coping with stress by showing triggers and patterns over time. ([healthline.com](https://www.healthline.com/health/diy-top-iphone-android-apps?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me **iPhone or Android**, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your device.
What are the best alternatives to the most popular mood tracking app? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **Daylio** (the most popular mood-tracking app for many people), the best alternatives are: 1. **Moodflow** – very similar: mood tracking, habits, notes, stats, and clean UI. 2. **Bearable** – best for people who want deeper symptom + mood tracking, especially for mental health or chronic conditions. 3. **eMoods** – strong if you want bipolar/depression-focused tracking with simple charts and reminders. 4. **Reflectly** – more journaling-focused, with guided prompts and a polished experience. 5. **MindDoc** – good for structured mental health tracking with check-ins and trend analysis. 6. **Aloe Bud** – great if you want gentle self-care reminders plus light mood tracking. 7. **Journey** – best if you want mood tracking mixed with a full journal app. **Best picks by use case:** - **Closest to Daylio:** Moodflow - **Best for detailed health tracking:** Bearable - **Best for mental health focus:** MindDoc or eMoods - **Best journaling alternative:** Journey or Reflectly If you want, I can also give you the **best free alternatives** or the **best iPhone/Android options**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **Daylio**, the best alternatives depend on what you want: - **Bearable** — best for **symptom + mood correlations**; it tracks mood, symptoms, medications, sleep, energy, and more. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **How We Feel** — best for **emotion labeling and reflection**; it uses a mood meter and helps spot patterns with HealthKit tracking. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/how-we-feel/id1562706384?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — best for **bipolar-focused tracking**; it charts daily highs/lows, sleep, medications, and related symptoms. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Day One** — best if you want a **full journal** that can also support mood logging through journaling. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Day_One_%28app%29?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - Want simplest replacement for Daylio: **How We Feel** - Want deeper analytics: **Bearable** - Need bipolar-specific tracking: **eMoods** - Want journaling first, mood tracking second: **Day One** ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow it to **free apps only**, **iPhone-only**, or **best for anxiety/depression/bipolar**.
How do the top mood tracking apps compare for symptom logging? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here’s a quick comparison of the best-known mood apps **for symptom logging**: | App | Best for | Symptom logging | Notes | |---|---|---:|---| | **Bearable** | Most detailed tracking | **Excellent** | Tracks mood, anxiety, sleep, pain, meds, habits, and custom symptoms. Best if you want correlations. | | **eMoods** | Bipolar-focused tracking | **Excellent** | Built for mood episodes, sleep, meds, and symptoms like irritability, anxiety, and psychosis. Very clinical. | | **Daylio** | Fast, easy daily logging | **Good** | Great for quick mood + activity logs; symptoms are more limited unless you customize heavily. | | **Moodfit** | General mental health tracking | **Good** | Good symptom and habit tracking, with charts and mental health tools. Less granular than Bearable. | | **Sanvello** | Mood + anxiety support | **Fair** | More CBT/support-oriented; symptom logging exists, but it’s not as flexible. | ### Best picks by use case - **Most comprehensive symptom logging:** **Bearable** - **Bipolar symptom tracking:** **eMoods** - **Simplest daily logging:** **Daylio** - **Balanced option:** **Moodfit** ### Bottom line If your main goal is tracking **symptoms over time**—fatigue, pain, anxiety, sleep, meds, triggers—**Bearable** is usually the strongest choice. If you’re specifically tracking **bipolar patterns**, go with **eMoods**. If you want, I can also rank them by **free version quality**, **privacy**, or **best iPhone/Android app**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here’s a quick symptom-logging comparison of the strongest mood apps: | App | Symptom logging strength | Best for | |---|---|---| | **Bearable** | **Best overall for detailed symptom tracking**: mood, pain, sleep, meds, habits, custom symptoms, correlations, exports. | People who want the most granular health/symptom diary. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bearable-symptom-tracker/id1482581097?utm_source=openai)) | | **eMoods** | **Best for bipolar-focused symptom charting**: daily highs/lows, sleep, meds, and disorder-specific symptoms; strong graphing and reports. | Bipolar / mood-disorder tracking. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/features/?utm_source=openai)) | | **Moodfit** | **Best balanced mental-health tracker**: mood journal plus meds, custom activities, sleep, exercise, nutrition, and validated screens (PHQ-9/GAD-7). | General mood + wellness tracking with some symptom context. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodfit-mental-health-tools/id1054458809?utm_source=openai)) | | **Daylio** | **Simplest**: great for quick mood + activity check-ins, but not as symptom-deep as Bearable/eMoods. | Fast, low-friction mood logging. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) | **Bottom line:** - **Most detailed symptom logging:** **Bearable** - **Best for bipolar symptom charts:** **eMoods** - **Best all-around mental health app:** **Moodfit** - **Best if you want it very simple:** **Daylio** ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bearable-symptom-tracker/id1482581097?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **free tier**, **privacy**, or **Android/iPhone**.
What are the best alternatives to a simple mood diary app? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want something better than a plain mood diary, the best alternatives usually add context, patterns, or support: - **Daylio** — best upgrade for quick mood + activity tracking, with strong charts and no full journaling required. - **Moodfit** — best for mood tracking plus habits like sleep, exercise, gratitude, and CBT-style tools. - **Bearable** — best if you want to track symptoms, mood, triggers, meds, and health trends together. - **Reflectly** — best for guided journaling with prompts if you want more reflection than logging. - **Stoic** — best for structured mental wellness journaling, emotions, and mindfulness exercises. - **Journey** — best all-around journaling app if you want a polished diary with media, prompts, and cloud sync. - **Therapy apps like BetterHelp or Talkspace** — best if you need actual human support instead of self-tracking. - **Notion or Apple Journal** — best if you want a flexible personal system rather than a mental-health-specific app. If you tell me what you want most—**mood patterns, journaling, habit tracking, or mental health support**—I can narrow it to the top 3.
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If you want something better than a plain mood diary, the best alternatives are usually: - **CBT-based journaling**: helps you spot triggers and reframe thoughts. Good picks: **MindShift CBT** and **Daily Journal: CBT Mood Log**. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/ca/app/mindshift-cbt-anxiety-relief/id634684825?utm_source=openai)) - **All-in-one symptom + mood tracking**: better if your mood is tied to sleep, pain, meds, or cycles. Good pick: **Bearable**. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/bearable-symptom-tracker/id1482581097?utm_source=openai)) - **Minimal mood + habit tracker**: if you want something simple but more useful than a diary. Good pick: **Daylio**. ([healthline.com](https://www.healthline.com/health/motivation-top-iphone-android-apps?utm_source=openai)) - **Guided meditation / anxiety relief app**: better if you want active coping tools, not just logging. Good pick: **Calm**. ([healthline.com](https://www.healthline.com/health/anxiety/top-iphone-android-apps?utm_source=openai)) - **Therapy-style support apps**: if you want exercises, prompts, and tracking together. Examples include **Wysa** and **Happify**. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wysa?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - For **simple + useful**: Daylio - For **mental-health tools**: MindShift CBT - For **tracking patterns**: Bearable - For **stress relief**: Calm If you want, I can narrow this down to **free apps only**, **iPhone/Android**, or **apps best for anxiety/depression/bipolar**.
Which mood tracking apps are better than basic journal apps? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you want **actual mood tracking** (not just free-form journaling), these are better than basic journal apps: - **Daylio** — best simple mood + activity tracker; very fast to log, great charts, solid reminders. - **Bearable** — best for finding patterns; tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, habits, and can show correlations. - **Moodnotes** — best for CBT-style reflection; helps you label thoughts and moods, more guided than a journal. - **eMoods** — best if you want more clinical tracking, especially for bipolar/depression patterns. - **Reflectly** — best if you want a polished journaling app with some mood tracking and prompts. - **MindDoc** — best for mental-health check-ins; more structured than a diary, good symptom monitoring. **Quick picks:** - **Easiest:** Daylio - **Most insightful:** Bearable - **Most therapeutic:** Moodnotes - **Most structured:** MindDoc If you tell me **iPhone or Android** and whether you want **simple, private, or therapy-oriented**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
retrieval Mentioned
Yes—if you want more than free-form writing, these are usually better than basic journal apps because they add mood scoring, charts, triggers, reminders, and export/sharing. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) **Best picks:** - **Daylio** — best for quick daily check-ins + strong charts and “Year in Pixels.” ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodfit** — best all-in-one option; includes mood journal, CBT tools, mindfulness, breathwork, gratitude, and PHQ-9/GAD-7 tracking. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodfit-mental-health-tools/id1054458809?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — best if you want simple mood/sleep/medication tracking and a monthly PDF to share with a therapist. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/emoods-bipolar-mood-tracker/id1184456130?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best for tracking mood alongside symptoms, sleep, meds, energy, and other health factors. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodnotes** — best if you want CBT-style reflection and help spotting thinking patterns. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) **If you want a more privacy-first app:** **Mindflo** or **eMoods** both emphasize local/on-device storage and no trackers/cloud by default. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mindflo-cbt-daily-mood-tracker/id1532293446?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule:** - Want **simple habit + mood stats** → Daylio - Want **mental-health toolkit** → Moodfit - Want **bipolar/symptom tracking** → eMoods or Bearable - Want **CBT journaling** → Moodnotes / Clarity / Daily Journal ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me **iPhone or Android** and whether you want **free, private, or therapist-friendly**, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.
What are the best alternatives to free mood tracker apps? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are the best alternatives to free mood tracker apps: - **Daylio Premium** — simple, fast mood logging with stats and goals. - **Moodnotes** — better if you want CBT-style reflection, not just tracking. - **Stoic** — good for mood journaling plus prompts and mental health routines. - **Reflectly** — more guided journaling, polished UI. - **Bearable** — strongest for tracking mood alongside sleep, meds, symptoms, and triggers. If you want a non-app option: - **The Five Minute Journal** by Intelligent Change - **Moleskine Passion Journal** - **Leuchtturm1917 Bullet Journal** If you want the best overall replacement, I’d pick: 1. **Daylio Premium** for easiest daily use 2. **Bearable** for deeper pattern tracking 3. **Moodnotes** for mood + thought work If you want, I can also give you the **best free alternatives that aren’t apps** or the **best paid apps by iPhone/Android**.
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If you want **better alternatives to free mood tracker apps**, these are the strongest picks: - **Bearable** — best for **serious mood + symptom tracking**. It tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, habits, and correlations. Free plan is usable; paid features start at **$34.99/year**. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Daylio Premium** — best for **simple mood logging with better stats**. Daylio keeps a free version, but Premium adds **advanced stats, unlimited moods, reminders, backups, and PDF export**. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/faq/docs/daylio-faq/about/daylio-premium-features/?utm_source=openai)) - **Finch Plus** — best for **self-care and motivation**, not just data. It combines check-ins with goals and a virtual pet; Plus is **$9.99/month or $69.99/year**. ([help.finchcare.com](https://help.finchcare.com/hc/en-us/articles/38755205001869-Finch-Plus-Pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Diarly** — best for **journaling-first mood tracking**. It includes a mood/emotions tracker plus journals, photos, tags, and encryption. ([diarly.app](https://diarly.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Apple Journal** — best **free** option for iPhone users who want a private, built-in alternative. Apple says it helps you reflect on everyday moments and uses on-device ML suggestions. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/journal/id6447391597?utm_source=openai)) My quick take: - **Best overall:** Bearable - **Best simple:** Daylio Premium - **Best gentle/self-care:** Finch Plus - **Best journaling:** Diarly - **Best free iPhone option:** Apple Journal If you want, I can narrow this to **iPhone only**, **Android only**, or **no-subscription only**.
How do mood tracking apps compare with paper mood journals? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
**Mood tracking apps** vs **paper mood journals**: ### Mood tracking apps **Best for:** patterns, reminders, quick logging, charts **Pros** - Fast to use; easy to log multiple times a day - Automatic graphs and trend detection - Reminders help consistency - Often include prompts, tags, meds, sleep, anxiety, etc. **Cons** - Can feel impersonal or distracting - Privacy depends on the app - Subscriptions are common - Screen-based, so easier to skip if you’re trying to reduce phone use **Popular options** - **Daylio** — simple, visual, very popular for quick mood logging - **Bearable** — best if you want mood + symptoms + habits - **Moodfit** — more structured mental wellness tracking - **eMoods** — good for bipolar mood tracking ### Paper mood journals **Best for:** reflection, deeper writing, mindfulness **Pros** - Slower, more reflective, often more personal - No privacy or app-data concerns - No charging, no notifications - Can be more therapeutic for some people **Cons** - Harder to spot trends over time - No automatic reminders or summaries - Easy to forget entries - Requires more effort to review past patterns **Popular options** - **The Five Minute Journal** — simple daily prompts - **Intelligent Change Mood Journal** — focused on reflection - Any **Leuchtturm1917** or **Moleskine** notebook can work well as a custom mood journal ### Quick take - Choose an **app** if you want **data, patterns, and convenience**. - Choose **paper** if you want **reflection, privacy, and a calmer routine**. If you want, I can also recommend the **best app or journal based on your goal** (anxiety, depression, bipolar, ADHD, or general self-awareness).
retrieval Not mentioned
**Mood tracking apps** and **paper mood journals** both help you notice patterns, but they fit different styles. **Mood tracking apps** - Fast and convenient - Often include reminders and charts - Easy to spot trends over time - May let you track sleep, anxiety, meds, etc. - Downsides: can feel like another screen, may have privacy concerns, and some people stop using them **Paper mood journals** - More flexible and reflective - Good for free-writing, sketches, or deeper thoughts - No app notifications or data privacy issues - Downsides: harder to analyze patterns, easier to forget, less portable for some people **Best choice depends on your goal:** - If you want **quick daily check-ins and data trends**, use an app. - If you want **deeper self-reflection and less screen time**, use paper. - If you want both, do a **hybrid**: app for ratings, paper for notes. If you want, I can also recommend **specific apps** or give you a **simple paper mood journal template**.
What are the best alternatives to therapy note apps for mood tracking? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you want **mood tracking without a therapy-note app**, the best alternatives are: - **Daylio** — best simple mood tracker; fast tap-based logging, habits, charts. - **Moodnotes** — best if you like reflection + CBT-style prompts. - **Bearable** — best for tracking mood alongside sleep, symptoms, meds, and triggers. - **Reflectly** — best journaling-style mood tracking with guided prompts. - **Apple Health / Google Fit + Notes/Journal app** — best if you want a more private, low-friction DIY setup. - **Notion** or **Google Sheets** — best customizable option if you want full control. If you want a quick pick: - **Easiest:** Daylio - **Most insightful:** Bearable - **Most reflective:** Moodnotes If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or **best privacy-focused ones**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **mood tracking without a “therapy note” vibe**, the best alternatives are usually: - **Daylio** — best for super quick daily check-ins and habit/activity correlation. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best if you want mood + symptoms + sleep + meds in one place, with more clinical-style detail. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — best for bipolar / depression tracking, with simple mood, sleep, meds, and symptom charts. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodflow** — best if you want a more journaling-style mood tracker with detailed emotion logging. ([moodflow.co](https://moodflow.co/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodscope** — best for a more structured online mood tracker with a stronger focus on emotional patterns over time. ([moodscope.com](https://www.moodscope.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick picks:** - **Most simple:** Daylio. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-journal-mood-tracker/id1194023242?utm_source=openai)) - **Most detailed:** Bearable. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for mood disorder tracking:** eMoods. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best free apps**, **best privacy-focused apps**, or **best iPhone/Android picks**.
Which mood tracking apps are better for clinical use? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For **clinical use**, the better mood-tracking apps are usually the ones that support **structured symptom tracking, exports, and clinician sharing**—not just daily journaling. ### Good options - **Bearable** – very good for detailed symptom + trigger tracking, exportable reports. - **eMoods** – strong for **bipolar** and mood episode tracking; simple and clinician-friendly. - **Daylio** – easy to use, good adherence, but more basic for clinical workflows. - **Moodnotes** – better for CBT-style reflection than formal tracking. - **Ginger / Headspace Health** – more employer/behavioral-health oriented; not ideal if you need precise clinical data. - **Clinically oriented platforms:** - **UpLift** - **Owly / Owl Insights** (depending on region/availability) - **Thriveport** - **Proem Behavioral Health** These are better if you need **patient-reported outcomes, care-team visibility, and structured monitoring**. ### Best for different clinical needs - **General mood monitoring:** **Bearable** - **Bipolar disorder:** **eMoods** - **High patient adherence / simplicity:** **Daylio** - **CBT-informed self-monitoring:** **Moodnotes** - **More formal behavioral health workflow:** **Proem Behavioral Health** ### What matters most clinically Look for: - **PDF/CSV export** - **PHQ-9 / GAD-7 / mood scale support** - **Medication and sleep tracking** - **Clinician sharing** - **HIPAA compliance** if used in the U.S. If you want, I can give you a **top 5 list for psychiatrists vs therapists vs research use**.
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For **clinical use**, I’d pick these: 1. **eMoods** — best if the main issue is **bipolar / mood episode tracking**. It’s built for mood, sleep, meds, and symptom charting, and the app says it should be used **under the supervision of a licensed professional**. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/additional-apps/classic?utm_source=openai)) 2. **MindDoc** — best for **general clinical mood + anxiety tracking**. It’s developed by clinical psychologists/researchers, is described as a **risk class I medical product** in the EU, and in an APA-style app evaluation it was the only one of the final three apps that enabled easy sharing with an external party like a clinician. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/minddoc-mental-health-support/id1052216403?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Bearable** — best if you want **broader symptom tracking** (mood + sleep + meds + pain + other health factors) and exportable data, but it’s more of a customizable tracker than a clinically validated mental-health tool. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/experiments-portal/?utm_source=openai)) **My short ranking:** - **Bipolar-focused care:** eMoods - **Therapist-friendly general use:** MindDoc - **Multi-symptom / whole-health logging:** Bearable ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/additional-apps/classic?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-condition list** (bipolar, depression, anxiety, ADHD, PTSD) or **best free options only**.
What are the best alternatives to a basic emotion tracker? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you want something better than a simple emotion tracker, these are the best upgrades: - **Daylio** — best overall for quick mood + habit tracking - **Bearable** — best for tracking mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers - **Stoic** — best for guided journaling and deeper reflection - **Moodnotes** — best for CBT-style thought tracking - **Finch** — best if you want emotional support with a gamified routine - **Reflectly** — best for journaling with a cleaner, more guided experience **My top picks:** - **Most practical:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best for mental clarity:** Stoic If you tell me whether you want **journaling, habit tracking, therapy-style tools, or a wearable-based option**, I can narrow it down further.
retrieval Mentioned
If you want something better than a basic emoji check-in, the best alternatives are usually: - **Guided journaling** — try **Apple Journal** or **Day One** if you want richer reflection, photos, audio, tags, and prompts instead of just mood taps. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/journal/id6447391597?utm_source=openai)) - **CBT-style mood tracking** — **Moodnotes** is a strong pick if you want to spot thinking traps, triggers, and patterns, not just log feelings. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) - **Mood + activity tracking** — apps like **Moody** or **Mood AI** let you log moods alongside activities/triggers and see charts over time. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moody-mood-tracker-journal/id1402824590?utm_source=openai)) - **Holistic wellness tracking** — if your mood is tied to sleep, exercise, meds, or heart data, a tracker with **Apple Health** integration can be more useful than a standalone emotion log. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mood-tracker-journal/id6446790238?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - For most people: **Day One** - For mental-health insight: **Moodnotes** - For simplest daily use: **Apple Journal** If you want, I can narrow it down to **iPhone only**, **free options**, or **the best app for anxiety/depression tracking**.
How do mood tracking apps compare for privacy and data sharing? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here’s the short version: **mood apps vary a lot**. The most privacy-friendly ones usually: - let you use them **without an account** - store data **locally/on-device** - have **no ads** - share little or nothing with third parties ### Quick comparison | App | Privacy feel | Data sharing | |---|---|---| | **Daylio** | **Good** | Typically minimal; good if you want simple tracking without lots of social/account features | | **Bearable** | **Mixed** | Collects more health/context data, so it’s more feature-rich but also more data-heavy | | **Moodnotes** | **Good** | Usually more private/personal, but you should still check what’s synced via Apple/iCloud | | **Reflectly** | **Mixed to lower** | More account/subscription oriented; tends to feel less privacy-minimal | | **MindDoc** | **Mixed** | More clinical/assessment-oriented, so expect more sensitive data handling | ### Best picks by privacy goal - **Best simple privacy-friendly choice:** **Daylio** - **Best for detailed tracking (with more data tradeoff):** **Bearable** - **Best if you want a polished journaling feel:** **Moodnotes** ### What to look for before installing - “**No account required**” - “**Data stored on device**” - “**Export/delete data**” options - No “**personalized ads**” - Clear statement that they **don’t sell data** If you want, I can make you a **privacy-first ranking of the top 5 mood trackers** or compare them for **Android vs iPhone**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here’s the short version: - **Most private / least sharing:** **Daylio**. It says it has **no account**, stores data **locally on your device**, and only uses optional backups to your own Google Drive/iCloud. The company says it does **not** have access to your entries. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/faq/privacy-policy/)) - **More cloud-connected:** **Moodfit**. Its privacy policy says it collects entries you save, uses **secure HTTPS**, and stores data on **its servers**. ([getmoodfit.com](https://www.getmoodfit.com/privacy-policy?utm_source=openai)) - **Health-data heavy, but explicit about limits:** **Bearable**. It stores mood/symptom/health data, can sync with **Apple HealthKit/Google Fit**, and says it **does not sell** personal data; if you create an account, your data is stored on Bearable servers and encrypted. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/privacy-policy/)) - **More social / sharing features:** **Finch**. It now uses accounts and cloud backups, and it has social features like **Friends**, **Goal Buddies**, and **Accountability Buddies** where progress can be shared with others. ([help.finchcare.com](https://help.finchcare.com/hc/en-us/articles/41834952026381-Accounts-and-Cloud-Backups)) - **Mixed, with analytics and cloud storage:** **Reflectly**. Its policy says it shares data with **cloud storage providers** and **analytics providers**, and retains personal data up to **30 days** after deletion requests in some cases. ([reflectly.app](https://reflectly.app/assets/privacy-policy.pdf)) **Practical ranking for privacy:** **Daylio > Bearable > Moodfit > Reflectly > Finch** (based on how much the apps describe storing, syncing, and sharing data). That ranking is an inference from the policies and features above. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/faq/privacy-policy/)) If you want, I can turn this into a **simple table** or recommend the **best one for strongest privacy**.
How do I track my mood every day without forgetting? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Make it **automatic + tiny**: 1. **Pick one daily trigger** Tie it to something you never miss: - after brushing teeth - with your first coffee - when you plug in your phone at night 2. **Use a 10-second mood tool** Best easy options: - **Daylio** (very good for quick mood logging) - **Bearable** (great if you want mood + symptoms + habits) - **Apple Journal** or **Google Keep** if you want super simple notes 3. **Set a recurring reminder** - iPhone: **Reminders** app - Android: **Google Calendar** or **Google Tasks** Set it for the same time every day. 4. **Keep the input minimal** Log just: - mood score (1–5) - one word (“tired,” “good,” “anxious”) That’s enough to stay consistent. 5. **Make it impossible to miss** - Put the app on your home screen - Use a smartwatch if you have one: - **Apple Watch** - **Fitbit Charge 6** - **Garmin Venu 3** If you want the easiest setup, I’d do: **Daylio + a daily phone reminder**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Make it **too easy to skip**. Best ways: - **Attach it to a daily habit**: after brushing teeth, coffee, lunch, or bedtime. - **Use one-tap tracking**: a notes app, mood app, or even a text to yourself. - **Set a recurring reminder** at the same time every day. - **Keep the format tiny**: `Mood 1–10 + 1 word why` - **Use a visible cue**: put the app/widget on your home screen. - **Don’t aim for perfect**: if you miss a day, just resume. Simple system: 1. Pick a time: “9:30 PM.” 2. Set a daily alarm. 3. Track with one line: `6/10, stressed, slept poorly`. 4. Review once a week. If you want, I can suggest the **best app-free method**, or recommend a **mood tracking app**.
How can I keep a mood log that actually helps me? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
A mood log helps when it’s **easy to keep** and **specific enough to reveal patterns**. ### Keep it simple Log just 4 things, once or twice a day: - **Mood:** 1–10 - **What happened:** one sentence - **Body:** sleep, food, exercise, caffeine, alcohol, meds - **Thought/trigger:** what was running through your mind Example: - **Mood:** 4/10 - **What happened:** tense meeting, skipped lunch - **Body:** 5 hrs sleep, 3 coffees - **Thought:** “I’m falling behind” ### Make it useful Each week, look for: - **Triggers:** people, places, tasks - **Patterns:** poor sleep → low mood; social days → better mood - **Protective factors:** exercise, sunlight, routines, certain people ### Use a format you’ll actually do Good options: - **Daylio** — fastest app for mood tracking - **Moodnotes** — good for spotting thought patterns - **Bearable** — more detailed if you want symptoms, sleep, habits - **Notion** or a simple **Notes** app if you prefer manual ### Best rule Don’t aim for perfect records. Aim for **consistency**: - log at the same time daily - keep it under 1 minute - review once a week If you want, I can give you a **one-minute mood log template** you can copy into Notes or Daylio.
retrieval Not mentioned
Keep it **simple, consistent, and action-focused**. **A useful mood log tracks:** - **Date/time** - **Mood** (1–10 or words like calm, anxious, flat) - **What happened right before** - **What you did** - **What helped / didn’t** - **Any pattern noticed** **Best format:** ```text Date: Mood: Trigger/Context: What I did: What helped: Next time I’ll try: ``` **Tips that make it actually useful:** - Log **once or twice a day**, not constantly. - Be honest, not polished. - Keep entries to **1–3 minutes**. - Track **patterns**, not just feelings. - Review weekly and ask: - What reliably improves my mood? - What tends to make it worse? - What situations drain me most? **Example:** - Mood: 4/10, tense - Trigger: bad sleep + argument at work - What I did: skipped lunch, doomscrolled - What helped: 10-minute walk - Next time: eat earlier, step outside before reacting If you want, I can give you a **one-page mood log template** or a **Notion/Notes app version**.
How do I track emotions and triggers in one place? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Use a **single mood-tracking app with notes + trigger tags**. Best options: - **Daylio** — very simple mood tracker, custom activities/triggers, charts. - **Bearable** — best if you want to track mood, sleep, symptoms, meds, and triggers together. - **Moodnotes** — more focused on emotions and thought patterns. - **Journey** — good if you want journaling plus mood tracking in one place. If you want the easiest setup: 1. Pick **Daylio** or **Bearable** 2. Track: - mood - trigger - intensity - note 3. Review weekly for patterns If you want a physical option: - **The Five Minute Journal** - **The Self-Love Journal** by Sasha O’Hara If you want, I can recommend the **best app for iPhone/Android** or make you a **simple tracking template**.
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Use **one daily log** with 4 fields: 1. **Emotion** — what you felt 2. **Trigger** — what happened right before 3. **Intensity** — 1–10 4. **Response** — what you did / what helped Example entry: - **Emotion:** anxious - **Trigger:** unread work email - **Intensity:** 7/10 - **Response:** took 5-minute walk **Best ways to keep it in one place:** - **Notes app**: Apple Notes, Google Keep - **Spreadsheet**: Google Sheets / Excel - **Mood tracker app**: Daylio, Bearable - **Journal app**: Notion, Day One **Simple template:** ```text Date: Emotion: Trigger: Intensity (1-10): Body feeling: What I did: What helped: ``` If you want, I can make you a **copy-paste template** for Notes, Notion, or Google Sheets.
How do I monitor mood swings over time? problem
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recall Not mentioned
A simple way is to **track the same few things every day**: **What to record** - Mood: 1–10 - Anxiety/stress: 1–10 - Sleep hours + sleep quality - Energy level - Meds/supplements, alcohol, caffeine - Major events/triggers - For people who menstruate: cycle day **Best tools** - **Daylio** (easy mood-tracking app) - **eMoods** (great if you want more detail, especially for bipolar symptoms) - **Moodfit** (good all-around tracker with graphs) - Paper option: **Moleskine Classic Notebook** or **Leuchtturm1917 Bullet Journal** **How to make it useful** - Log it at the **same time each day**. - Use **short notes**, not essays. - Review **weekly** for patterns like poor sleep, caffeine, conflict, or cycle-related changes. **Watch for patterns** - Mood swings after **less sleep** - Big changes around **periods** - Irritability after **alcohol/caffeine** - Ups and downs tied to **stressors** or missed medication If mood swings are intense, include **risky behavior, not sleeping for days, or feeling hopeless**, it’s worth talking to a clinician. If you want, I can make you a **1-minute daily mood tracker template**.
retrieval Mentioned
Track them like a pattern, not a feeling. **Simple method:** - **Log daily** at the same time. - Rate: - **Mood**: -5 to +5 - **Energy**: 1–10 - **Anxiety/irritability**: 1–10 - **Sleep hours** - **Alcohol/drugs/caffeine** - **Stressors / meds / period / exercise** - Add a **1-line note**: what happened before the swing. **Best format:** - Notes app, spreadsheet, or mood-tracking app - Keep it **under 1 minute per day** **Watch for patterns:** - Same time of day? - Linked to poor sleep? - Before/after conflict, caffeine, alcohol, or missed meals? - Cycles with menstruation? - Triggered by work, loneliness, or overstimulation? **Useful apps:** - Daylio - Moodnotes - Bearable **When to get help:** - Mood swings are **severe, frequent, or disruptive** - You have **less need for sleep**, racing thoughts, impulsive behavior, or risk-taking - You feel **hopeless** or have thoughts of self-harm If you want, I can make you a **simple mood tracker template** you can copy into Notes or Google Sheets.
How can I track symptoms for my therapist? problem
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The easiest way is to use a simple **daily symptom tracker** and share a summary with your therapist. ### What to track - **Mood** (0–10) - **Anxiety/stress** (0–10) - **Sleep** (hours + quality) - **Triggers/events** (what happened before symptoms) - **Symptoms** (panic, sadness, irritability, etc.) - **Coping tools used** (walk, breathing, journaling, meds) - **Notes** (anything important) ### Good options - **Daylio** — very easy mood + activity tracking - **Bearable** — great for symptoms, sleep, habits, and charts - **eMoods** — good if you want a simple mental health tracker - **Notion** or **Google Sheets** — best if you want full control ### Simple template Each day, write: - Date: - Mood: - Anxiety: - Sleep: - Main symptoms: - Trigger(s): - What helped: ### For your therapist Bring: - a **1–2 week summary** - any **patterns** you notice - examples of **worst/best days** If you want, I can make you a **copy-paste symptom tracker template** for Notes, Notion, or Google Sheets.
retrieval Mentioned
Use a simple, consistent symptom log. **Track each entry:** - **Date/time** - **Symptom** - **Intensity** (0–10) - **Duration** - **What was happening before it started** - **Possible trigger** (stress, sleep, food, conflict, etc.) - **What you did** - **Whether it helped** **Easy format:** - Morning / afternoon / evening - Mood: 6/10 - Anxiety: 8/10 - Sleep: 4 hours - Trigger: argument at work - Coping: breathing, walk - Result: anxiety down to 5/10 **Tools you can use:** - Notes app - Paper journal - Spreadsheet - Mental health apps like **Daylio**, **Bearable**, or **Moodnotes** **For therapy, it helps to also track:** - Sleep - Appetite - Energy - Panic attacks - Flashbacks - Irritability - Medication/substance use If you want, I can make you a **one-page symptom tracker template** you can copy into Notes or print.
How do I remember to log medication and side effects? problem
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recall Not mentioned
Make it as automatic as possible: - **Tie it to a routine**: log right after taking meds (e.g., with breakfast/teeth brushing). - **Use one dedicated app**: - **Medisafe** (best all-around med reminders + logging) - **CareClinic** (good for meds + side effects + symptoms) - **MyTherapy** (simple, solid reminders) - **Set two reminders**: one for the med, one **30–60 min later** to log side effects. - **Keep a tiny note template** in your phone: - Time taken - Dose - Side effects (0–10) - Anything unusual - **Use widgets / alarms**: phone alarm labeled “Log meds + side effects.” - **Pair with a tool you already use**: Apple Reminders, Google Calendar, or a paper tracker on the fridge. - **If symptoms are important**, use a symptom tracker like **Bearable**. If you want, I can make you a super simple daily log template you can copy into Notes.
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Make it **frictionless and automatic**: - **Tie it to a routine**: log right after taking meds, with breakfast, lunch, or bedtime. - **Use one place only**: phone notes, app, or paper card—don’t spread it out. - **Set 2 daily alarms**: one for taking meds, one for logging. - **Keep the log tiny**: - Medication - Time - Dose - Side effect? (yes/no) - What it was + how bad (1–10) - **Use a template** like: - `8:00 AM — Metformin 500 mg — nausea 3/10` - **Make side effects easy to spot**: use quick tags like `headache`, `sleepy`, `dizzy`. - **Review weekly**: look for patterns and bring it to your clinician. If you want, I can make you a **super simple tracking template** for phone notes or a printable version.
How do I identify patterns in my mood changes? problem
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recall Not mentioned
Start by **tracking your mood daily** for 2–4 weeks. ### What to record - **Mood** (1–10) - **Sleep** (hours + quality) - **Stress level** - **Food/caffeine/alcohol** - **Exercise** - **Period/hormonal changes** if relevant - **Big events / conflicts / workload** - **Medication or supplements** - **Time of day** mood changes happen ### Look for patterns Ask: - Does your mood dip **after poor sleep**? - Is it worse **on weekdays vs weekends**? - Does it change **before your period**? - Is it linked to **certain people, places, or tasks**? - Do mood swings happen at **specific times of day**? - Are there **repeating triggers** like alcohol, missed meals, or isolation? ### Good tools - **Daylio** – simple mood tracking - **Bearable** – great for spotting triggers and symptoms - **Moodfit** – good for structured mental health tracking - **eMoods** – especially useful for bipolar / cyclical mood tracking - A paper journal like **Moleskine** or **Leuchtturm1917** if you prefer analog ### Quick tip Use a **1–2 sentence note** each day. Small, consistent entries are better than perfect detail. If your mood changes are **severe, frequent, or include thoughts of self-harm**, talk to a mental health professional promptly.
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Try tracking **mood + context** for 2–4 weeks, then look for repeats. **What to log daily:** - Mood (1–10) - Sleep length/quality - Food/caffeine/alcohol - Exercise - Stress level - Social time / isolation - Meds or substances - Major events - Time of day mood shifts **How to spot patterns:** - Look for **triggers**: “After little sleep, I feel worse.” - Look for **timing**: mornings vs evenings, weekdays vs weekends. - Look for **cycles**: every few days, monthly, around deadlines. - Look for **clusters**: low mood + poor sleep + more caffeine. - Compare **good days vs bad days** to see what’s different. **Simple method:** Use a notes app or spreadsheet and write: - Date - Mood - Sleep - Stress - Anything unusual - One sentence about the day **Red flags to pay attention to:** - Mood changes that are intense, frequent, or last >2 weeks - Big energy spikes with little sleep - Mood swings affecting work, relationships, or safety If you want, I can give you a **one-page mood tracking template**.
How can I track anxiety triggers throughout the day? problem
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recall Not mentioned
A simple way is to do a **2-minute anxiety log** each time you notice a spike. ### Track these 6 things - **Time** - **Where you were** - **What happened right before** - **Thoughts you had** - **Body symptoms** (tight chest, nausea, racing heart) - **Intensity** 0–10 Example: “2:15 pm, at work, after email from boss, thought ‘I’m behind,’ chest tight, 7/10.” ### Best tools - **Daylio** — super quick mood + trigger logging - **Bearable** — best for tracking symptoms, sleep, stress, and patterns - **Notion** or **Google Sheets** — best if you want a custom tracker - **Apple Health** / **Fitbit** / **Oura** — useful if anxiety seems tied to sleep, heart rate, or activity ### Look for patterns At the end of the day or week, check: - common times - certain people or places - hunger, caffeine, lack of sleep - work stress, conflict, scrolling, noise ### Quick tip Use **one note or app only**. Keeping it very easy makes it more likely you’ll stick with it. If you want, I can make you a **simple anxiety tracker template** you can copy into Notes, Notion, or Sheets.
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Use a simple **trigger log** for 1–2 weeks. **Track each episode with:** - **Time** - **Where you were** - **What happened right before** - **What you were thinking** - **Body symptoms** (tight chest, racing heart, nausea, etc.) - **Intensity** 1–10 - **What helped** **Easy format:** ```text 10:30am — meeting Trigger: manager asked for update Thought: “I’m going to mess this up” Symptoms: shaky, tense shoulders Intensity: 7/10 Helped: deep breathing, short walk ``` **Best ways to do it:** - Notes app on your phone - Paper notebook - Mood-tracking app - Voice memo if writing feels like too much **Look for patterns in:** - People - Places - Times of day - Hunger, caffeine, sleep, hormones, overstimulation - Specific thoughts or situations **Keep it brief** If logging feels stressful, just record: - **Trigger** - **Feeling** - **Intensity** If you want, I can make you a **1-minute anxiety trigger tracker template** you can copy into your phone.
How do I prepare a mood summary for my doctor? problem
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A good mood summary is a **1-page snapshot** of what’s been happening and how it affects you. **Include:** - **Time frame:** “Last 2 weeks / 3 months” - **Main mood changes:** sad, anxious, irritable, numb, high/energized, etc. - **How often:** daily? a few days/week? - **Severity:** mild/moderate/severe, or 1–10 scale - **Sleep:** too little, too much, trouble falling asleep, waking early - **Appetite/weight:** increased, decreased, unchanged - **Energy/focus:** fatigue, racing thoughts, concentration problems - **Functioning:** work/school, relationships, self-care, motivation - **Triggers:** stress, conflict, grief, hormones, substances, seasons - **What helps/what worsens it** - **Safety:** any thoughts of self-harm, hopelessness, or risky behavior **Simple format you can bring:** - **Mood:** - **Symptoms:** - **Sleep:** - **Appetite:** - **Energy/focus:** - **Daily life impact:** - **What’s changed recently:** - **Medications/substances:** - **Questions for doctor:** If you want, use a mood-tracking app like **Daylio** or **Moodfit** to gather notes before your visit. If you tell me your symptoms, I can help you turn them into a clean summary.
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Make it short, specific, and date-based. **A simple mood summary template:** - **Time period:** “Over the last 2 weeks…” - **Mood range:** “Mostly low/irritable/anxious, with 2 good days.” - **Sleep:** “Sleeping 5–6 hours, waking early.” - **Energy:** “Low energy most days.” - **Interest/pleasure:** “Less interested in usual activities.” - **Appetite/weight:** “Appetite down / up.” - **Focus:** “Harder to concentrate at work.” - **Anxiety/panic:** “3 panic episodes this month.” - **Safety:** “No thoughts of self-harm” or “I’ve had passive suicidal thoughts.” - **Triggers/supports:** “Stress worsens it; exercise helps.” - **Medication/substances:** “Started/stopped meds; alcohol/cannabis use changed.” **Best format for your doctor:** > “For the past 2 weeks, my mood has been low most days. I’m sleeping about 5 hours a night, feel tired, and have little interest in things. My anxiety is worse in the mornings. Work focus is poor. No self-harm thoughts.” **Tips:** - Use **numbers** when possible: days per week, hours of sleep, panic attacks. - Mention **what changed** since last visit. - Bring a note on your phone or paper. - If you have **suicidal thoughts**, tell them directly. If you want, I can turn your symptoms into a polished 1-minute doctor summary.
How do I make mood tracking easier to stick with? problem
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recall Mentioned
Make it **tiny, fast, and automatic**. ### What helps most - **Use a 10-second check-in**: rate mood 1–5 + add 1 word. - **Track at the same time every day**: after brushing teeth, lunch, or before bed. - **Keep categories simple**: mood, sleep, stress, energy. That’s enough. - **Don’t aim for perfect**: missing days is normal. Just restart the next day. - **Use reminders**: one daily alert, not many. - **Link it to an existing habit**: “After I plug in my phone, I log my mood.” - **Review weekly, not daily**: look for patterns once a week so it feels useful. ### Easy tools - **Daylio** — very fast mood tracking, lots of one-tap options. - **Bearable** — better if you want symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers too. - **Moodnotes** — good if you want reflection with your tracking. - **Notion** or **Google Sheets** — if you prefer a simple custom tracker. ### Make it stick - Start with **2 weeks only**. - Use **one app only**. - Set a goal of **“80% done”**, not 100%. - Put the app on your home screen. If you want, I can give you a **super simple mood-tracking template** you can use in Daylio, Notes, or Notion.
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Make it **ridiculously easy**: - **Track one thing only** at first: “mood 1–5” or “good / ok / bad.” - **Attach it to a daily habit**: after brushing teeth, lunch, or before bed. - **Use a 10-second format**: `Mood: 3/5 | Sleep: 6h | Note: stressed at work` - **Make the default obvious**: keep the app/widget on your home screen, or use a paper tracker by your bed. - **Don’t aim for perfect streaks**: missing a day is fine; just resume the next day. - **Track at the same time every day** so it becomes automatic. - **Use reminders that don’t annoy you**: one gentle alarm or calendar ping. - **Review weekly, not daily**: look for patterns, not flawless data. If you want, I can give you: 1. a **super-minimal mood tracker template**, or 2. a **habit plan to build the streak in 7 days**.
Are mood tracking apps free? transactional 40/mo
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Many are **free to download**, but most use a **freemium** model: - **Free version:** basic mood logging, reminders, simple charts - **Paid upgrade:** advanced insights, exports, custom themes, CBT tools, or unlimited journaling Examples: - **Daylio** — free basic tracking, paid premium - **Moodfit** — free core features, paid add-ons - **Bearable** — free limited tracking, premium for deeper analysis - **eMoods** — free basic version, paid pro features If you want, I can recommend the **best completely free** mood tracker apps.
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Some are, yes. - **Free to use:** many offer basic mood logging at no cost. - **Freemium:** the app is free, but extras like reports, reminders, or therapy features cost money. - **Paid only:** a few require a subscription. If you want, I can list a few **actually free** mood tracking apps.
What is the cheapest mood tracking app with premium features? transactional
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**Daylio Premium** is usually the **cheapest solid mood-tracking app with premium features**. - **Price:** typically around **$12/year** (varies by platform/region) - **Premium features:** unlimited entries, detailed stats, reminders, exports, goals, custom activities If you want the **best cheap alternative**, check **eMoods**: - **Good for:** simple mood tracking, especially for mental health / bipolar tracking - **Usually low-cost**, but features are less polished than Daylio If you want, I can also list the **cheapest mood apps by platform**: **iPhone, Android, or web**.
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The cheapest **premium** mood tracker I found is **Daylio**: its App Store listing shows a **One Month Premium / Daylio Premium at $2.99**, and Daylio’s own FAQ says premium adds features like advanced stats, unlimited moods, backups, PDF export, and more. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/daylio-diario/id6738355260?l=es-MX&utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also compare it with **Bearable**, **eMoods**, and **Mood Balance** to find the cheapest **annual** option instead.
Which mood tracking apps have a free plan? transactional
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recall Mentioned
Here are some mood-tracking apps that offer a **free plan**: - **Daylio** — popular, easy mood + habit tracking; free version is solid. - **Bearable** — tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, pain, and triggers; free plan available. - **Moodfit** — mood tracking plus CBT-style tools and mental wellness features; free tier included. - **eMoods** — simple mood tracker, especially useful for bipolar tracking; free version available. - **How We Feel** — very user-friendly mood logging with emotion prompts; free to use. - **Reflectly** — journaling-focused mood app; free plan with limited features. - **MindDoc** — mental health check-ins and mood monitoring; free basic plan. - **Moodnotes** — mood journaling app; typically offers a free trial/free limited access depending on platform. If you want, I can also narrow this down to: - **best free overall** - **best for iPhone** - **best for Android** - **best for anxiety/depression tracking**
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Here are a few mood-tracking apps with a **free plan / free tier**: - **eMoods** — has an **“Always Free”** level with mood tracking, charts, reminders, and reports. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/pricing/)) - **Mudo** — offers a **$0 free plan** with daily mood tracking, basic analytics, and the last 7 days of history. ([mudoapp.com](https://mudoapp.com/pricing)) - **Balance Journal** — says its **core features stay free forever** and calls itself a **free mood tracker**. ([balancejournal.app](https://balancejournal.app/)) - **MoodLine** — includes a **free plan** with daily journaling, mood tracking, basic streaks, and offline mode. ([moodline.win](https://moodline.win/pricing)) - **MoodMentor** — says a **free plan is available** with unlimited mood logging, streaks, charts, and reminders. ([moodmentor.app](https://www.moodmentor.app/)) - **Moodly** — says mood tracking and AI insights are **completely free**, with no subscription required. ([appmoodly.com](https://www.appmoodly.com/)) If you want, I can also narrow these down by **iPhone vs Android**, or by **best free app for privacy / journaling / bipolar tracking**.
How much do mood tracking apps cost? transactional
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recall Mentioned
Mood tracking apps are often **free to start**, with paid plans usually around **$3–$15/month**. Examples: - **Daylio** — free; Premium about **$3–$5/month** (or yearly plan) - **Bearable** — free; Premium about **$5–$10/month** - **Moodnotes** — usually a **one-time purchase** or app-store fee, depending on platform - **Reflectly** — free trial; then around **$10–$15/month** - **Journey** — free basic plan; paid options vary, often **$4–$8/month** Typical pricing model: - **Free**: basic mood logging - **Subscription**: extra insights, reminders, charts, exports, or unlimited entries - **One-time purchase**: less common, but some apps do this If you want, I can recommend the **best free apps** or the **best paid app for privacy/features**.
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Mood tracking apps are often **free to start**, with optional paid tiers. A typical premium price is about **$3–$7/month** or **$19–$35/year**. For example, Bearable lists an optional subscription at **$6.99/month** or **$34.99/year** (often discounted), and Daylio says it has a free version plus a premium subscription with monthly and yearly options. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/blog/pricing-and-principles/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **current price list for the most popular mood apps**.
What are the best value mood tracking apps? transactional
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Here are the **best value mood tracking apps**: 1. **Daylio** — **best overall value** - Super easy daily logging - Great charts, habits, and journal features - Free version is useful; premium is usually affordable - Best if you want something simple and fast 2. **Bearable** — **best for detailed tracking** - Tracks mood, sleep, symptoms, meds, pain, stress, and triggers - Very customizable - Good free tier; paid plan is strong value if you want deeper insights 3. **eMoods** — **best for bipolar mood tracking** - Built specifically for mood disorder tracking - Great for spotting patterns and sharing reports with a clinician - Simple and focused, good value for the price 4. **Moodflow** — **best free/low-cost option** - Clean design, quick logging - Good if you want mood + habits without paying much - Strong value for a lightweight app 5. **MindDoc** — **best if you want guided mental health check-ins** - Includes mood tracking plus mental health exercises - Good free experience - Better for reflection than pure tracking **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Daylio - **Best detailed tracker:** Bearable - **Best for bipolar:** eMoods - **Best free value:** Moodflow If you want, I can also narrow it down by **iPhone/Android**, **free-only**, or **anxiety/depression/bipolar** use case.
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If you want **best value**, I’d start with these: 1. **Daylio** — best overall value Free unlimited version, very fast to log, strong stats, and a paid tier if you want more features. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/faq/docs/daylio-faq/about/daylio-premium-features/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Bearable** — best value if you want mood + symptoms The free version is unusually generous: unlimited mood, sleep, energy, notes, charts, CSV export, and more. Premium adds deeper correlations. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/support/common-questions/bearable-free-vs-premium-features/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **eMoods** — best free mood tracker for more detailed logging It has a free tier with mood tracking, charts, reminders, and reports; paid tiers are clearly optional. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **MindShift CBT** — best free option for mood/anxiety support It includes daily mood tracking plus CBT tools, and it’s free. ([healthline.com](https://www.healthline.com/health/mental-health/mental-health-apps?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Simplest + best value:** Daylio. - **Most generous free tier:** Bearable. - **Most structured mood-only tracker:** eMoods. If you want, I can also narrow this down for **iPhone vs Android**, or **free-only** apps.
Which mood tracking apps are worth paying for? transactional
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recall Mentioned
If you want a mood app that’s actually worth paying for, these are the best bets: - **Bearable** — Best all-around. Great for tracking mood, sleep, symptoms, meds, food, and habits together. Strong if you want patterns and triggers, not just journaling. - **Daylio Premium** — Best simple daily mood tracker. Fast, clean, and very good at building habits without feeling like homework. - **MindDoc Premium** — Best for mental-health-focused check-ins. Good structure, guided tracking, and solid insights over time. - **Moodnotes** — Best if you want mood tracking plus CBT-style thought work. Good for spotting thinking patterns. - **Reflectly Premium** — Best for journaling with a polished, motivational feel. More style than analytics, but pleasant to use. My short pick: - **Best value:** Daylio Premium - **Best features:** Bearable - **Best for guided mental health tracking:** MindDoc If you want, I can narrow it down by your goal: **depression/anxiety tracking, habit patterns, journaling, or simple mood logging**.
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If you want the **paid mood apps most worth it**, I’d shortlist these: - **Daylio Premium** — best for most people. Fast 1-tap logging, solid stats, reminders, backups, and unlimited moods/goals in premium. Daylio also keeps a free version, so paying mainly gets you convenience + deeper tracking. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/faq/docs/daylio-faq/about/daylio-premium-features/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bearable** — best if you want to connect mood with sleep, symptoms, habits, meds, and other health factors. Its paid plan is optional; most features are free, with the subscription mainly adding more flexibility and customization. ([bearable.app](https://bearable.app/our-pricing-and-principles/?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodfit** — best “all-in-one” mental fitness app if you want mood tracking plus CBT, mindfulness, breathing, gratitude, medication, and validated assessments. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodfit-mental-health-tools/id1054458809?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodnotes** — best if you like journaling and cognitive reframing. Premium unlocks unlimited entries, mood insights, notes, and more educational content. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — best for more clinical-style tracking, especially bipolar/symptom tracking. It’s free at the base level, with paid plans for custom tracking and extra sharing/customization features. ([emoodtracker.com](https://emoodtracker.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My quick take:** - **Worth paying for for most users:** **Daylio** - **Worth paying for if you have chronic symptoms / want correlations:** **Bearable** - **Worth paying for if you want therapy-style tools too:** **Moodfit** - **Worth paying for if you journal a lot:** **Moodnotes** - **Worth paying for if you need bipolar-focused tracking:** **eMoods** ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/faq/docs/daylio-faq/about/daylio-premium-features/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best by budget”** list or **best for iPhone vs Android**.
Do mood tracking apps offer monthly subscriptions? transactional
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Yes—many mood tracking apps offer monthly subscriptions, usually as part of a free app with premium features. Examples: - **Daylio Premium** — monthly, yearly, and lifetime options - **Moodfit Plus** — monthly subscription available - **Bearable Premium** — monthly plan available - **Reflectly Premium** — typically monthly or yearly - **MindDoc** — some premium features via subscription, depending on region If you want, I can also list the **best mood tracking apps with monthly pricing** for iPhone or Android.
retrieval Mentioned
Yes. Many mood-tracking apps do offer **monthly subscriptions**, though some also offer yearly plans or one-time purchases. Examples: **Moodnotes** has a 1-month plan, **Moody** offers optional monthly or annual subscriptions, **Mudo** has monthly pricing for its premium tier, and **Daylio** lists a monthly Premium option. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moodnotes-mood-tracker/id1019230398)) If you want, I can list a few **budget-friendly mood apps with monthly pricing**.
Are there mood tracking apps without ads? transactional
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recall Mentioned
Yes — several mood tracking apps are ad-free, especially paid ones or ones with optional subscriptions. Good options: - **Daylio** — clean, popular mood tracker; free version is ad-free, with a paid upgrade. - **Moodnotes** — ad-free, CBT-style mood journal; paid app. - **Bearable** — no ads; good for tracking mood, symptoms, sleep, and habits. - **Reflectly** — journaling + mood tracking; generally ad-free with subscription features. - **eMoods** — simple, ad-free mood tracker, especially useful for bipolar tracking. If you want, I can also suggest: - the **best free ad-free** options - **iPhone vs Android** picks - apps that are **private / no account needed**
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — there are several mood-tracking apps that are ad-free. Good current options include: - **Even Mind** — no ads, with a small one-time charge instead of a recurring subscription. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/even-mind-mood-tracker/id1529960499?utm_source=openai)) - **MoodArc** — says “no accounts, no tracking, no ads.” ([moodarc.app](https://moodarc.app/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mindflo** — listed as “Ad-free, forever” and privacy-focused. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mindflo-cbt-daily-mood-tracker/id1532293446?utm_source=openai)) - **eMoods** — free mood and habit tracker; it says no data leaves your phone unless you choose to share it. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/emoods-wellness-tracker/id1505546556?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodly** — claims zero ads and local-only storage. ([appmoodly.com](https://www.appmoodly.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **CleanMyMood** — says core features are free with no ads and no tracking. ([cleanmymood.app](https://www.cleanmymood.app/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow these down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free only**, or **best for privacy**.
Which mood tracking apps have a free trial? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
A few popular mood-tracking apps that **often offer a free trial** (usually for premium features) are: - **Daylio** - **Bearable** - **Moodnotes** - **Reflectly** - **MindDoc** Trial lengths and availability can vary by **iPhone vs Android**, region, and current app-store promos. If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best free-trial options for iPhone or Android**.
retrieval Not mentioned
A few mood-tracking apps that currently advertise a free trial: - **MoodKit** — 7-day free trial. ([moodkit.co](https://moodkit.co/?utm_source=openai)) - **Mood Balance** — 3-day free trial on weekly plan; 1-month free trial on yearly plan. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mood-balance-self-care-tracker/id1471631164?utm_source=openai)) - **MoodStead** — 30-day free trial. ([moodstead.com](https://moodstead.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **TrackMyAura** — 7-day free trial, no credit card. ([trackmyaura.com](https://www.trackmyaura.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **FeelTrack** — 30-day free trial. ([feeltrack.tech](https://feeltrack.tech/?utm_source=openai)) - **MoodLine** — has a “Start Free Trial” pricing page. ([moodline.win](https://moodline.win/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **iPhone only**, **Android only**, or **the best free-trial apps with no credit card required**.
What are the best budget mood tracker apps? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **budget-friendly mood tracker apps**: 1. **Daylio** - **Best overall** - Very popular, easy to use, strong free tier - Great for quick mood logging, habits, and charts - **Price:** Free; premium is usually affordable 2. **eMoods** - **Best for detailed tracking / mental health patterns** - Especially good if you want to track mood, sleep, meds, and symptoms - Simple and practical - **Price:** Free basic version; paid upgrade available 3. **MindDoc** - **Best for guided mood tracking** - Includes check-ins and mental health insights - More structured than a simple journal - **Price:** Free with optional premium 4. **Moodflow** - **Best budget option for visuals** - Clean design, mood calendar, stats, reminders - Good if you want something lightweight - **Price:** Free; premium is inexpensive 5. **Bearable** - **Best for tracking mood + symptoms + lifestyle** - Excellent if you want to connect mood with sleep, exercise, stress, and health factors - **Price:** Free tier; paid plan is fairly low-cost **My quick pick:** - **Daylio** if you want the best free/budget all-around option - **eMoods** if you want more mental-health-focused tracking - **Bearable** if you want the most detailed tracking on a budget If you want, I can also give you the **best mood tracker apps for iPhone vs Android**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best **budget-friendly mood tracker apps** right now: - **Daylio** — best overall free option. It has a free unlimited version, with a 7-day premium trial if you want extras like advanced stats and unlimited moods. ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/faq/docs/daylio-faq/about/daylio-premium-features/?utm_source=openai)) - **DailyBean** — best for a simple, cute mood diary. It’s free to download with in-app purchases, and the app is built around quick logging and basic analysis. ([apps.apple.com](https://apps.apple.com/ge/app/dailybean-simplest-journal/id1553223828?utm_source=openai)) - **Moodfit** — best if you want mood tracking plus mental-health tools. It has a free account, and Premium is one-time or subscription-based depending on platform/offer; the official purchase page lists a one-year plan at $35.99 and a lifetime option at $119.99. ([getmoodfit.com](https://www.getmoodfit.com/purchase-options?utm_source=openai)) - **Mudo** — best low-cost private tracker. Free includes 7-day history, and mudo+ is $34.99/year with a 14-day trial. ([mudoapp.com](https://mudoapp.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Finch** — best if you want motivation/gamification with mood tracking. The app has a free version, and Finch Plus is $9.99/month or $69.99/year. ([help.finchcare.com](https://help.finchcare.com/hc/en-us/articles/38755205001869-Finch-Plus-Pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Most people:** Daylio - **Simplest UI:** DailyBean - **More self-care tools:** Moodfit - **Privacy/value:** Mudo - **Gamified motivation:** Finch ([daylio.net](https://daylio.net/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this down to **best free on iPhone**, **best free on Android**, or **best for anxiety vs depression vs journaling**.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best mood tracking apps? 90/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall Super easy mood tracking, quick logging, good charts, habits, and streaks. - **Moodflow** — Best for detailed insights Great for tracking mood, sleep, anxiety, triggers, and notes in one place. - **Bearable** — Best for health + mood correlation Strong at linking mood with symptoms, meds, sleep, pain, and lifestyle factors. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health check-ins Structured mood assessments and useful reflections; very good if you want more than simple tracking. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling + mood Pretty interface, guided journaling, and mood logging combined. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar tracking Designed for tracking mood patterns, sleep, meds, and symptoms in more detail. - **Finch** — Best if you want motivation + self-care Less clinical, more gamified, but good for daily emotional check-ins. - **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-style thought tracking Helpful if you want to track moods and reframe negative thoughts. **Quick pick:** - Simple and effective: **Daylio** - Most detailed: **Bearable** - Best for bipolar: **eMoods** - Best journaling feel: **Reflectly** If you want, I can also recommend the **best free ones** or the **best iPhone/Android apps**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps: - **Daylio** — the most popular simple mood tracker; quick one-tap logging, habits, goals, and nice charts. - **Moodnotes** — great if you want mood tracking plus CBT-style reflection to spot thinking patterns. - **eMoods** — strong for bipolar disorder/mood episode tracking; good if you want detailed symptom logging. - **Bearable** — very customizable; tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and lifestyle factors in one app. - **MindDoc** — good for mental health self-monitoring with guided check-ins and reports. - **Reflectly** — more journaling-focused, with mood logging and prompts for reflection. - **Stoic** — combines mood tracking with journaling, mindfulness, and routines. - **Youper** — AI-guided mood check-ins and emotional support tools. **Best overall for most people:** **Daylio** **Best for deep tracking:** **Bearable** **Best for CBT-style journaling:** **Moodnotes** If you want, I can also recommend the best free mood tracking apps or the best one for iPhone/Android.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Super easy mood logging, good stats, goals, and habit tracking. Great if you want something simple but useful. - **Bearable** — Best for connecting mood with symptoms, sleep, meds, and lifestyle. Excellent if you’re tracking mental health or chronic conditions. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar / mood disorder tracking. Strong for tracking cycling patterns, meds, and symptom trends. - **Moodflow** — Best for visual mood journaling. Clean design, daily check-ins, and reminders. - **MindDoc** — Best for guided mental health tracking. Includes mood logs plus check-ins and exercises. - **Reflection.app** — Best for journaling plus mood tracking. Good if you like writing and self-reflection. - **Moodnotes** — Best for cognitive reframing. Helps you spot thought patterns, not just record moods. If you want the easiest pick: **Daylio**. If you want deeper symptom tracking: **Bearable**. If you have bipolar disorder: **eMoods**. If you want, I can also give you the **best free mood tracking apps** or **best mood apps for iPhone/Android**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps right now: 1. **Daylio** Best overall for most people. Super fast logging, great visuals, easy habit tracking, and very customizable. 2. **Moodnotes** Best if you want mood tracking plus CBT-style thought reflection. Great for identifying patterns in thinking. 3. **Bearable** Best for tracking mood alongside symptoms, sleep, meds, pain, and lifestyle factors. Very detailed and useful for health issues. 4. **Reflectly** Best for journaling-focused mood tracking. More reflective and “wellness” oriented, with a polished design. 5. **eMoods** Best for bipolar mood tracking. Built specifically for tracking mood episodes, sleep, and meds. 6. **Youper** Best for AI-guided emotional check-ins. More interactive, with conversation-style mood support. 7. **MindDoc** Best for mental health tracking with structured assessments. Good if you want more clinical-style insights. **My quick picks:** - **Simplest and best overall:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best for bipolar:** eMoods - **Best for journaling:** Reflectly If you want, I can also give you the **best free mood tracking apps** or the **best iPhone vs Android picks**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best mood tracking apps, by category: - **Daylio** — best overall. Super easy daily mood logging, habits, stats, reminders, and charts. Great if you want something quick and low-friction. - **Bearable** — best for deeper tracking. Tracks mood plus sleep, pain, meds, symptoms, activity, and triggers. Very good if you want to spot patterns. - **Moodfit** — best for mental wellness tools. Mood tracking plus CBT-style exercises, gratitude, goals, and insights. - **eMoods** — best for bipolar/depression tracking. Simple, structured tracking for mood episodes, sleep, meds, and symptoms. - **Moodnotes** — best for reflection and thought patterns. More journaling/CBT-focused than pure tracking. - **Reflectly** — best for journaling-first users. Nice UI, prompts, and mood reflections. **My quick pick:** - Want the simplest? **Daylio** - Want the most detailed? **Bearable** - Want mental health tools too? **Moodfit** - Want bipolar-specific tracking? **eMoods** If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or **best iPhone/Android apps only**.
What are the top mood tracking app options?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps, depending on what you want: 1. **Daylio** - Best all-around for quick mood logging - Fast, visual, easy habit + mood tracking - Great if you want minimal typing 2. **Moodnotes** - Best for reflection and CBT-style journaling - Helps you spot thinking patterns - Good if you want more mental-health support 3. **Bearable** - Best for tracking mood alongside symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers - Very customizable - Great for people managing anxiety, depression, chronic conditions, or PMDD 4. **MindDoc** - Best for structured mental health check-ins - Includes assessments and tracking over time - Good if you want a more clinical feel 5. **eMoods** - Best for bipolar disorder / mood episode tracking - Simple daily tracking for moods, sleep, meds, and symptoms - Useful for sharing reports with a clinician 6. **Reflectly** - Best for journaling-focused mood tracking - Clean design and guided prompts - Good if you like writing a little each day 7. **How We Feel** - Best free option for emotional awareness - Strong on emotion labeling and mood patterns - Simple and non-judgmental **Quick pick:** - **Easiest:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best for therapy-style reflection:** Moodnotes - **Best for bipolar tracking:** eMoods If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best free apps**, **best iPhone apps**, or **best for anxiety/depression**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Top mood tracking apps to consider: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Very easy tap-based mood logging, great charts, habits, and reminders. - **Moodflow** — Strong for detailed mood insights and journaling, with a clean interface. - **Reflectly** — Best if you want a journal-style app with guided prompts and mood check-ins. - **eMoods** — Good for mental health tracking, especially if you want to track symptoms, sleep, and cycles alongside mood. - **Bearable** — Best for tracking mood plus triggers, sleep, pain, meds, and habits in one place. - **Moodnotes** — Good for CBT-style reflection and identifying thought patterns. - **How We Feel** — Free, simple, and research-backed, with emotion vocabulary and trend tracking. If you want the easiest one: **Daylio**. If you want the most comprehensive: **Bearable**. If you want journaling + mood: **Reflectly**. If you want, I can also rank these by **free features**, **iPhone/Android**, or **best for anxiety/depression tracking**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top mood-tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Best all-around. Fast mood logging, habits, stats, and easy visual trends. - **Moodpath / MindDoc** — Best for mental health insights. Good guided check-ins and symptom tracking. - **Bearable** — Best for detailed tracking. Logs mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, food, and more. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar/disorder-specific tracking. Simple and focused on mood patterns. - **Moodflow** — Clean, modern mood journal with reminders and charts. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling + mood tracking. More reflective, less clinical. - **Wysa** — Best if you want mood tracking plus AI support/coaching. - **Youper** — Good for mood check-ins and emotional support tools. If you want the simplest pick: **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed: **Bearable**. If you want a more mental-health-focused option: **MindDoc**. If you want, I can also rank these by **best free apps**, **best for iPhone/Android**, or **best for anxiety/depression**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps to consider: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood tracking. Fast daily check-ins, charts, habits, and streaks. Great if you want low effort. - **Bearable** — Best for detailed mental/physical health tracking. Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, food, and triggers. Very customizable. - **Moodflow** — Good for clean design and visual mood patterns. Nice journaling + mood calendar experience. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar mood tracking. Strong symptom and episode tracking, especially for clinical use. - **MindDoc** — Best for guided mood tracking with mental health exercises. Includes assessments and mood logs. - **Reflectly** — Best if you want a journaling-first app with mood check-ins. More reflective, less clinical. - **Finch** — Best if you want a self-care/gamified approach. Mood tracking is built into a pet-care style experience. Quick picks: - **Simplest:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Bipolar-focused:** eMoods - **Most motivating:** Finch If you want, I can also rank these by **free features**, **iPhone vs Android**, or **privacy**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top mood-tracking app options: 1. **Daylio** — best all-around - Quick tap-based mood logs, habits, stats, custom goals - Great if you want simple tracking without much typing 2. **Bearable** — best for deeper symptom tracking - Tracks mood, sleep, meds, pain, energy, triggers - Good if you want to spot patterns with health factors 3. **MindDoc** — best for mental health insights - Mood check-ins plus structured questionnaires - Useful if you want more guided reflection 4. **Moodfit** — best for CBT-style tools - Mood tracking plus gratitude, breathing, habits, journaling - Good if you want self-help features built in 5. **eMoods** — best for bipolar mood tracking - Designed for mood episodes, sleep, meds, and symptoms - Strong choice if you need more clinical-style tracking 6. **Reflectly** — best for journaling + mood tracking - AI-guided journaling with mood check-ins - Nice if you prefer a more reflective, journal-like app **My quick pick:** - **Simplest:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best for bipolar:** eMoods If you want, I can also rank these by **free vs paid**, **iPhone vs Android**, or **best for anxiety/depression/bipolar**.
Which mood tracking apps are most recommended?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most recommended mood tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — best overall for simple, fast mood tracking with stats and habits - **Bearable** — best for linking mood with sleep, meds, symptoms, and triggers - **Moodflow** — good for clean design and journaling alongside mood tracking - **eMoods** — popular for bipolar / mental health symptom tracking - **Reflectly** — best if you want a more guided journaling experience - **Moodnotes** — good for CBT-style mood reflection and thought patterns If you want the safest “start here” pick, I’d suggest **Daylio** for ease of use or **Bearable** if you want deeper insights. If you want, I can also give you the **best free options**, **best for iPhone/Android**, or **best for anxiety/depression**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the most recommended mood tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Very popular and easy to use. Great for quick daily check-ins, habits, and simple charts. - **Moodnotes** — Best if you want CBT-style mood reflection and help spotting thinking patterns. - **Bearable** — Strong for tracking mood plus symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers. Good for detailed health tracking. - **eMoods** — Often recommended for bipolar disorder or more structured mood tracking. - **Sanvello** — Good all-around app with mood tracking, coping tools, and guided support. - **Moodflow** — Clean design and solid mood logging with patterns and stats. - **Aloe Bud** — Gentle reminders for self-care and emotional check-ins. **Best overall for most people:** **Daylio** **Best for detailed health tracking:** **Bearable** **Best for thought-pattern work:** **Moodnotes** If you want, I can also recommend the **best free mood tracking apps** or the **best ones for anxiety/depression/bipolar**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A few of the most recommended mood-tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — the most popular “quick log” option; very easy, visual charts, low effort. - **Moodflow** — nice if you want more detailed mood + habit tracking with clean design. - **Bearable** — best for linking mood with symptoms, sleep, meds, food, and triggers. - **Reflectly** — good if you want journaling plus mood check-ins and a more guided feel. - **eMoods** — often recommended for people tracking bipolar symptoms, sleep, and meds. - **MindDoc** (formerly Moodpath) — strong for structured mental health tracking and check-ins. If you want the simplest pick: **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed: **Bearable**. If you’re tracking bipolar symptoms specifically: **eMoods**. If you want, I can narrow this down to **free apps only**, **iPhone/Android**, or **apps with the best privacy**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most commonly recommended mood tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — very popular, super easy to use, great for quick mood logging and patterns. - **Moodnotes** — good for reflection and CBT-style mood tracking. - **Bearable** — strong if you want to track mood plus sleep, meds, symptoms, and habits. - **eMoods** — often recommended for bipolar disorder and detailed mood charts. - **Moodpath / MindDoc** — good for mental health check-ins and guided tracking. - **Sanvello** — combines mood tracking with stress/anxiety tools. - **Reflectly** — more journal-style, with mood tracking and prompts. If you want the simplest one, start with **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed, try **Bearable**. If you want therapy-style reflection, **Moodnotes** is a solid pick. If you want, I can also give you the **best free apps only** or the **best apps for iPhone/Android**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
A few of the most commonly recommended mood-tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — super popular, quick daily check-ins, easy charts, no journaling required. - **Bearable** — best if you want to track mood *plus* sleep, meds, symptoms, habits, and triggers. - **MindDoc** — very good for mental-health-focused tracking with check-ins and reports. - **eMoods** — often recommended for bipolar mood tracking and symptom tracking. - **Moodnotes** — good for combining mood tracking with CBT-style reflections. - **Stoic** — polished app with mood journaling, gratitude, and mental wellness tools. **Best overall for most people:** **Daylio** **Best for detailed health tracking:** **Bearable** **Best for therapy-style insights:** **MindDoc** If you want, I can also narrow it down by **free vs paid**, **iPhone vs Android**, or **best for anxiety/depression/bipolar**.
What are the most popular mood tracking apps?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular mood tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — one of the best-known mood journals; fast, tap-based tracking with charts and habits. - **Moodfit** — mood tracking plus tools like CBT exercises, gratitude, and sleep tracking. - **eMoods** — especially popular for bipolar mood tracking and symptom logging. - **Bearable** — detailed tracker for mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers. - **MindDoc** (formerly Moodpath) — mental health check-ins and mood insights. - **Reflectly** — journaling-focused app with guided prompts and mood logging. - **Sanvello** — mood tracking plus stress/anxiety support tools. - **Moodnotes** — simple mood journaling with CBT-style reflection. If you want, I can also narrow this down to: - **best free apps** - **best for anxiety/depression** - **best for bipolar tracking** - **best for iPhone/Android**
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular mood tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — very popular, simple mood logging with stats and routines - **Moodfit** — mood tracking plus CBT-style tools, exercises, and habits - **Bearable** — strong for tracking mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers - **MindDoc** — mood check-ins with mental health insights and courses - **eMoods** — especially good for bipolar mood tracking and charting - **Moodnotes** — CBT-based mood journaling and thought reframing - **Reflectly** — more of a reflective mood journal with prompts If you want, I can also rank them by **best for simplicity**, **best for mental health insights**, or **best free options**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular mood tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — very popular, quick emoji-based mood logging, habits, stats, and journaling. - **Moodfit** — mood tracking plus CBT-style tools, gratitude, sleep, exercise, and mental health insights. - **Bearable** — strong for tracking mood alongside symptoms, meds, sleep, and triggers. - **eMoods** — especially popular for bipolar and mood disorder tracking; simple charts and reports. - **I Am Sober** — not strictly a mood app, but widely used for emotional check-ins and recovery tracking. - **Reflectly** — AI journaling with mood tracking and prompts. - **MindDoc** (formerly Moodpath) — more clinical feeling, with mental health screening and mood monitoring. - **Sanvello** — mood tracking plus guided tools for stress, anxiety, and depression. - **Pixels** — simple mood tracker with journaling and daily notes. - **Dailies** — lightweight mood and habit tracker. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free options**, 2. **best for anxiety/depression**, or 3. **best for iPhone vs Android**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular mood tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — very popular, simple mood logging with habits and stats - **Bearable** — strong for tracking mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers - **Moodnotes** — good for mood journaling and CBT-style reflection - **Moodfit** — broad wellness app with mood, habits, and mental health tools - **eMoods** — especially popular for bipolar mood tracking - **Reflectly** — journaling-focused with mood check-ins - **Sanvello** — mood tracking plus guided mental health support - **What’s Up?** — free app with mood diary and CBT/ACT tools If you want, I can also rank them by **best overall**, **best free**, or **best for anxiety/depression/bipolar**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most popular mood tracking apps are: - **Daylio** — very popular, simple mood logging, habits, stats, and journal entries. - **Bearable** — strong for tracking mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers. - **Moodfit** — combines mood tracking with tools for stress, sleep, gratitude, and CBT-style exercises. - **eMoods** — especially popular for bipolar mood tracking and symptom monitoring. - **Reflectly** — journaling-focused app with mood tracking and prompts. - **Youper** — mood tracking plus AI-guided mental wellness check-ins. - **Sanvello** — mood tracking along with stress/anxiety support tools. - **MindDoc** — detailed mood and symptom tracking, often used for mental health monitoring. If you want, I can also rank these by **best free option**, **best for anxiety/depression**, or **best for bipolar tracking**.
What are the best apps for tracking moods and emotions? 90/mo
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood/emotion tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Super easy mood logging with icons, habits, and stats. Great if you want low-friction tracking. - **Moodfit** — Strong for mental health tracking overall: mood, sleep, exercise, gratitude, and CBT-style tools. - **Bearable** — Best if you want to connect mood with symptoms, habits, sleep, meds, and triggers. - **eMoods** — Popular for tracking mood swings, especially if you want a bipolar-focused tracker. - **Reflectly** — More journal-like, with guided prompts and a polished design. - **How We Feel** — Free, simple, and great for identifying and naming emotions more precisely. - **Sanvello** — Combines mood tracking with coping tools, meditation, and support features. If you want the simplest pick: **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed health correlation tracking: **Bearable**. If you want emotion labeling and reflection: **How We Feel** or **Reflectly**. If you want, I can also give you the **best free apps** or **best iPhone/Android options**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood/emotion tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood logging. Fast tap-based tracking, great charts, easy habit tracking. - **Bearable** — Best for connecting moods with sleep, symptoms, meds, and lifestyle factors. Very customizable. - **Moodnotes** — Best for reflection and CBT-style thought tracking. Good if you want to understand triggers and patterns. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health check-ins and self-assessments. More structured, with helpful insights. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar mood tracking. Designed for tracking mood swings, meds, sleep, and symptoms. - **Reflectly** — Best journaling-style mood app. Good if you like prompts and a more personal feel. - **Stoic** — Best for mood + journaling + mindfulness in one app. Clean design and useful daily check-ins. If you want the easiest one: **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed: **Bearable**. If you want emotional insight/journaling: **Moodnotes** or **Reflectly**. If you want, I can also narrow this down to **free apps**, **iPhone/Android**, or **apps for anxiety/depression**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood/emotion tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood logging with stats, habits, and journaling. Very easy to use. - **Moodfit** — Best for a more complete mental health tracker with mood, sleep, exercise, and CBT-style tools. - **Bearable** — Best for seeing patterns between mood and things like symptoms, meds, sleep, and triggers. - **eMoods** — Best if you’re tracking bipolar symptoms or mood swings in detail. - **Sanvello** — Best for mood tracking plus guided mental health support and coping tools. - **Reflectly** — Best if you want a prettier, more journal-like experience. - **MindDoc** — Good for structured mood tracking and mental health check-ins. Quick picks: - **Easiest to use:** Daylio - **Most feature-rich:** Moodfit - **Best for symptom pattern tracking:** Bearable If you want, I can also narrow these down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free vs paid**, or **best for anxiety/depression/bipolar**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood/emotion tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall for most people. Super fast mood logging, great stats, habits, journaling, and reminders. - **Bearable** — Best for spotting patterns. Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, food, and triggers in one place. - **Moodflow** — Best simple mood diary. Clean, easy, and good if you want low-friction tracking. - **eMoods** — Best for mental health tracking, especially if you want symptoms and mood over time. - **Reflectly** — Best if you want a more guided journaling experience with mood check-ins. - **Stoic** — Best for reflection + mindfulness. Good prompts, mood tracking, and journaling together. - **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-style mood awareness and thought tracking. **If you want one recommendation:** start with **Daylio**. **If you want deeper health pattern tracking:** choose **Bearable**. If you want, I can also give you the **best free apps**, **best iPhone/Android picks**, or **best apps for anxiety/depression specifically**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood/emotion tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood logging and stats. Fast, visual, and easy to stick with. - **Bearable** — Best for linking moods with sleep, symptoms, meds, and triggers. Great if you want patterns. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health check-ins and guided reflections. More structured and therapeutic. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar mood tracking and symptom charts. Strong for detailed daily tracking. - **Moodflow** — Best clean, modern mood tracker with journaling and habit tracking. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling-focused mood tracking with a polished, guided experience. If you want the simplest pick: **Daylio**. If you want the most insightful pick: **Bearable**. If you want, I can also narrow these down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free vs paid**, or **privacy-focused**.
Which mood tracking app should I use?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
If you want a solid default: **Daylio**. **Best picks by need:** - **Daylio** — easiest to use, great for quick daily mood logging, habits, and simple charts. - **Bearable** — best if you want to track mood plus symptoms, sleep, meds, pain, stress, and triggers. - **eMoods** — best for bipolar or more clinical mood tracking. - **Moodnotes** — good if you want mood tracking with CBT-style reflection. - **Stoic** — good if you want journaling plus mood check-ins. **My recommendation:** - **Simple and fast:** Daylio - **More detailed health tracking:** Bearable - **Mental health / therapy-style use:** Moodnotes or eMoods If you want, I can narrow it down to the **best free app**, **best iPhone app**, or **best Android app**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want a solid default, use **Daylio**. **Best overall:** **Daylio** - Super easy mood logging - Good charts/streaks without feeling like homework - Great if you want quick taps, not long journaling **Best for mental health insights:** **Bearable** - Tracks mood plus sleep, symptoms, meds, habits - Better if you want to spot patterns and triggers **Best for journaling + mood:** **Journey** - More of a diary app with mood tracking built in - Good if you like writing entries, not just tapping moods **Best for simple Apple users:** **Apple Journal** + **Apple Health/Mindfulness** - Nice if you want something built into iPhone - Less powerful than dedicated mood apps **Best for Android / very simple:** **Reflectly** - Clean design, guided prompts - Good if you like a more reflective, gentle style **My pick by need:** - **Fastest and easiest:** Daylio - **Most detailed tracking:** Bearable - **Best journaling:** Journey If you tell me **iPhone or Android** and whether you want **simple check-ins or deep tracking**, I’ll pick the best one for you.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
If you want a solid default, use **Daylio**. **Best overall:** **Daylio** - Fast to log moods - Great stats/trends - Easy habit tracking too - Good if you want something simple and useful **Best for symptom + mood tracking:** **Bearable** - Tracks mood, sleep, pain, meds, energy, triggers - Best if you want to spot patterns with health symptoms **Best for CBT-style reflection:** **Moodnotes** - Good if you want to write about thoughts and improve patterns **Best free/simple option:** **eMoods** - Good for basic mood tracking, especially if you want minimal setup **My quick recommendation:** - **Use Daylio** if you just want the best all-around mood tracker - **Use Bearable** if you also want to track health symptoms and triggers If you tell me **iPhone or Android** and whether you want **free, private, or detailed tracking**, I can pick the best one for you.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want a solid all-around choice, **Daylio** is the best pick for most people: easy to use, polished, and great for spotting patterns with mood + habits. Other good options: - **Bearable** — best if you want to track mood **plus** sleep, symptoms, meds, energy, pain, etc. - **eMoods** — best for **bipolar / mood disorder** tracking with more clinical-style logs. - **Moodflow** — good if you want something simple and visual. **My quick recommendation:** - **Simple daily check-in:** Daylio - **More detailed health tracking:** Bearable - **Bipolar-focused tracking:** eMoods If you tell me **iPhone or Android** and whether you want **free vs paid**, I can narrow it to one.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want a solid default: **Daylio**. **Best picks by need:** - **Daylio** — best all-around, super quick mood logging, stats, habits. Great if you want minimal effort. - **Bearable** — best for spotting patterns with symptoms, sleep, pain, meds, triggers. More detailed. - **MindDoc** — best if you want more guided mental health check-ins and insights. - **eMoods** — best for bipolar / mood disorder tracking, very structured. - **Stoic** — best if you want mood tracking plus journaling and reflection. **My simple recommendation:** - Want easy and fast? **Daylio** - Want deeper health pattern tracking? **Bearable** - Want more mental-health guidance? **MindDoc** If you tell me **iPhone or Android** and whether you want **simple vs detailed**, I’ll pick the best one for you.
What are the best mental health mood tracker apps? 30/mo
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracker apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best all-around mood tracker. Super fast logging, great stats, habits/activity correlation, clean design. - **Bearable** — Best for connecting mood with sleep, meds, symptoms, pain, and triggers. Very detailed. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health insights and check-ins. Good for tracking anxiety/depression patterns over time. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar mood tracking. Built specifically for mood episodes, sleep, meds, and symptoms. - **Moodnotes** — Best if you want mood tracking plus CBT-style thought reframing. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling-focused mood tracking with prompts and reflections. **My quick picks:** - Simple + effective: **Daylio** - Detailed symptom tracking: **Bearable** - Bipolar-specific: **eMoods** If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or the **best iPhone/Android-only apps**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracker apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple, fast mood tracking. Easy daily check-ins, charts, habits, and mood patterns. - **Bearable** — Best for connecting mood with symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers. Great if you want more detailed health tracking. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health insights and self-reflection. Strong for tracking anxiety/depression patterns with guided questions. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar mood tracking. Popular for tracking mood swings, sleep, medication, and cycles. - **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-style mood journaling. Good if you want help spotting negative thought patterns. - **Stoic** — Best for journaling + mood tracking together. Clean design, reflection prompts, and mental wellness tools. - **Moodflow** — Best for visual mood trends and customization. Simple, attractive, and flexible. If you want the safest picks: - **Simple + easy:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Mental health-focused:** MindDoc - **Bipolar tracking:** eMoods If you want, I can also give you the **best free mood tracker apps** or the **best iPhone/Android picks**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracker apps: 1. **Daylio** — Best overall - Very easy mood logging - Great charts and patterns over time - Also tracks habits, sleep, activities 2. **Bearable** — Best for detailed symptom tracking - Tracks mood, sleep, pain, meds, energy, triggers - Strong for people managing anxiety, depression, or chronic conditions 3. **Moodflow** — Best simple journaling-style tracker - Clean interface - Good mood calendar and notes - Easy if you want something lightweight 4. **eMoods** — Best for bipolar tracking - Built for tracking mood swings, sleep, and symptoms - Often recommended for bipolar disorder management 5. **Reflectly** — Best for guided journaling - Uses prompts and reflections - Good if you want mood tracking plus mental wellness journaling 6. **Sanvello** — Best all-in-one mental wellness app - Mood tracking plus coping tools, mindfulness, and support content If you want the simplest pick, go with **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed, go with **Bearable**. If you want, I can also give you the **best free mood tracker apps** or the **best ones for iPhone vs Android**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracker apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — best overall for simple mood tracking. Fast, visual, easy to stick with. - **Moodnotes** — great if you want CBT-style reflection and thought tracking. - **Bearable** — best for linking mood with sleep, meds, pain, energy, and symptoms. - **MindDoc** — strong option for mental health check-ins and trends over time. - **eMoods** — especially good for bipolar mood tracking and medication tracking. - **Reflectly** — more journaling-focused, with a polished, guided feel. - **Sanvello** — combines mood tracking with coping tools and guided support. - **Youper** — AI-guided emotional check-ins and mood journaling. **Best picks by need:** - **Easiest daily use:** Daylio - **Best for deeper insight:** Bearable - **Best for journaling:** Reflectly or Moodnotes - **Best for bipolar tracking:** eMoods If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best free apps**, 2. **best iPhone/Android apps**, or 3. **best apps for anxiety/depression specifically**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple, fast mood tracking. Great visuals, habits, notes, and stats. - **Bearable** — Best for detailed tracking. Lets you track mood, sleep, symptoms, meds, pain, and triggers. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health insights. Good for tracking depression/anxiety patterns with guided check-ins. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling + mood tracking. More reflective and journaling-focused. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar mood tracking. Designed for tracking mood swings, sleep, and medications. - **Pixels** — Best for a clean, minimalist mood log. Very easy to use. - **Moodfit** — Best for holistic wellness tracking. Includes mood, sleep, exercise, gratitude, and CBT-style tools. If you want the simplest pick: **Daylio**. If you want the most comprehensive: **Bearable**. If you want, I can also recommend the best one for **iPhone**, **Android**, **anxiety**, **depression**, or **bipolar disorder**.
What are the best emotion tracking apps?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best emotion tracking apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood tracking. Fast, visual, great streaks and charts. - **Moodfit** — Best for mood + mental wellness tools. Tracks mood, sleep, exercise, and habits. - **MindDoc** — Best for deeper emotional check-ins. Good for identifying patterns and symptoms. - **Bearable** — Best for tracking mood alongside health factors. Very customizable and detailed. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar mood tracking. Simple, focused, and made for mood episodes. - **Reflectly** — Best journaling-style app. Good if you like writing with mood prompts. - **Sanvello** — Best for stress/anxiety support. Combines tracking with coping tools. - **Pixels** — Best minimalist mood tracker. Clean and very easy to use. **If you want the shortest recommendation:** - **Daylio** if you want easy and effective - **Bearable** if you want the most detailed tracking - **Moodfit** if you want wellness + mood in one app If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or **best apps for iPhone vs Android**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best emotion/mood tracking apps: 1. **Daylio** — best overall - Super easy mood logging with activities, habits, and stats - Great if you want quick check-ins without journaling a lot 2. **Moodfit** — best for mental health insights - Tracks mood, sleep, exercise, gratitude, and CBT-style patterns - Strong for spotting what affects your emotions 3. **Bearable** — best for symptom + mood tracking - Excellent if you want to track mood alongside pain, sleep, meds, or health symptoms - Very customizable 4. **Reflectly** — best for guided journaling - More reflective and journal-focused than pure tracking - Good if you want prompts plus mood records 5. **Sanvello** — best for anxiety/stress support - Includes mood tracking plus tools for stress, anxiety, and self-care - Better if you want support features too 6. **Stoic** — best for structured self-reflection - Clean design, journaling prompts, mood tracking, and routines - Good for daily emotional awareness **Best pick by need:** - **Simplest:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best insights:** Moodfit - **Best journaling:** Reflectly If you want, I can narrow it down to **free apps only**, **iPhone vs Android**, or **the best app for anxiety/depression**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best emotion tracking apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Super quick mood logging, great stats, habits + mood correlation. - **Bearable** — Best for connecting mood with sleep, meds, pain, energy, and symptoms. - **Moodflow** — Best simple daily mood tracker with clean design and reminders. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling + emotion reflection, more guided and self-care focused. - **How We Feel** — Best free option for labeling emotions in more detail. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar/depression mood tracking and sharing reports with a clinician. - **iMoodJournal** — Good for customizable mood charts and notes. **My quick picks:** - **Most people:** Daylio - **Mental health/symptoms:** Bearable - **Free and detailed emotions:** How We Feel If you want, I can also narrow these down by **iPhone/Android**, **free vs paid**, or **privacy-focused**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best emotion tracking apps: 1. **Daylio** — best overall - Super fast mood logging - Great charts and habit tracking - Easy to use daily 2. **Moodflow** — best for detailed mood insights - Tracks moods, activities, triggers, sleep - Clean interface - Good for spotting patterns 3. **Bearable** — best for health + mood connection - Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, pain - Very customizable - Great if you want to link emotions with health factors 4. **MindDoc** — best for mental health support - Mood tracking plus self-checks and exercises - More therapy-oriented - Good if you want a structured approach 5. **eMoods** — best for bipolar mood tracking - Designed for tracking mood swings - Useful for sharing with a doctor - Simple and focused 6. **Stoic** — best for journaling + emotion tracking - Mood tracking, reflection prompts, journaling - Nice design - Good for self-awareness 7. **Reflectly** — best for guided journaling - Uses prompts to help you reflect on emotions - Attractive interface - Better for journaling than pure tracking If you want the simplest pick: **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed: **Bearable**. If you want, I can also recommend the **best free apps** or **best apps for iPhone/Android** specifically.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best emotion tracking apps right now: ### Best overall - **Daylio** — super easy mood tracking with quick tap entries, charts, and habit tracking. - **Bearable** — great if you want to connect mood with sleep, symptoms, meds, food, and activities. ### Best for journaling + emotion tracking - **Reflectly** — AI-guided journaling with mood check-ins and prompts. - **Journey** — polished journal app with mood tags and strong cross-platform support. ### Best for mental health insights - **Moodfit** — tracks mood, habits, sleep, exercise, and gives useful patterns. - **Wysa** — more of a mental wellness coach, with mood tracking plus guided support. ### Best simple/free option - **eMoods** — very straightforward mood tracker, especially popular for bipolar disorder tracking. - **MindDoc** — clean symptom and mood tracking with helpful mental health insights. ### Best for Apple users - **Apple Health / State of Mind** — built into iPhone/iPad/watch ecosystem, good for basic tracking. ### Best for Android users - **Daylio** and **Bearable** — both work very well on Android. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best free apps**, 2. **best for anxiety/depression**, or 3. **best for iPhone vs Android**.
What are the best mood log apps?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood log apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood tracking Fast tap-based logging, habits, notes, and clean charts. Great if you want low effort. - **Moodnotes** — Best for reflection + CBT-style journaling Helps you notice patterns in thoughts and moods. Good if you want more insight, not just tracking. - **Bearable** — Best for tracking symptoms, sleep, meds, and mood together Very detailed and flexible. Great if your mood is affected by health, medication, or lifestyle. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar mood tracking Designed for tracking mood swings, sleep, meds, and symptoms in a structured way. - **Stoic** — Best for journaling and self-reflection Strong prompts, mood tracking, and mental wellness tools in one app. - **MindDoc** — Best for guided mental health check-ins Good questionnaires and trends over time; more clinical-feeling than most. If you want the easiest one: **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed: **Bearable**. If you want reflective journaling: **Moodnotes** or **Stoic**. If you want, I can also give you the **best free mood log apps** or the **best ones for iPhone/Android**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood log apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Super easy mood tracking with tags, habits, stats, and exportable reports. - **Bearable** — Best for detailed tracking. Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, pain, and lifestyle factors. - **Moodfit** — Best for mental health tools. Mood logging plus CBT exercises, gratitude, goals, and reminders. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar tracking. Strong for mood episodes, sleep, meds, and cycle tracking. - **Moodnotes** — Best for journaling + reflection. Good for identifying thought patterns and improving mood awareness. - **Stoic** — Best for journaling and mindfulness. Clean interface, mood check-ins, and guided reflection. If you want, I can also narrow this down to: - **best free apps** - **best for iPhone** - **best for Android** - **best for bipolar/anxiety/depression**
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood log apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Super easy daily mood tracking, habits, stats, and very low-friction logging. Great if you want something you’ll actually use. - **Bearable** — Best for detailed tracking. Lets you log mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, pain, food, and triggers. Strong for spotting patterns. - **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-style reflection. Good if you want to track moods and challenge negative thoughts. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar / depression tracking. Simple, structured, and designed for mental health symptom tracking. - **Sanvello** — Best all-in-one mental wellness app. Includes mood tracking plus coping tools, meditation, and journaling. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling + mood logging. More reflective and guided, with a polished interface. If you want the simplest pick, go with **Daylio**. If you want the most insight into triggers and symptoms, go with **Bearable**. If you want, I can also rank the best **free** mood apps or the best ones for **iPhone vs Android**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood log apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Very easy to use, great for quick mood + activity tracking, strong charts and insights. - **Bearable** — Best for spotting triggers. Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, habits, and correlations really well. - **Moodflow** — Best simple journal-style mood tracker. Clean design, quick entries, solid privacy focus. - **Reflectly** — Best for guided journaling. Good if you want prompts plus mood logging. - **eMoods** — Best for mental health tracking, especially bipolar/depression monitoring. More clinical and detailed. - **MindDoc** — Best for structured mental health check-ins. Useful if you want more assessment-style logging. - **Journey** — Best all-around journal with mood tracking built in. Strong for writing + logging together. - **Stoic** — Best for reflective mood journaling with wellness prompts and routines. If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Simple and fast:** Daylio - **Best for patterns/triggers:** Bearable - **Best for journaling:** Journey or Reflectly If you want, I can also give you the **best free ones**, **best iPhone apps**, or **best Android apps**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood log apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall Very fast mood logging, great charts, habits, and reminders. Simple and polished. **iOS / Android** - **Bearable** — Best for tracking mood + symptoms Excellent if you want to correlate mood with sleep, medication, pain, energy, etc. **iOS / Android** - **Moodnotes** — Best for journaling + CBT-style reflection Good for spotting thought patterns and improving emotional awareness. **iOS** - **Reflectly** — Best for guided daily journaling Nice design, prompts, and lightweight mood tracking. **iOS / Android** - **eMoods** — Best for mental health tracking Popular for tracking mood swings, anxiety, sleep, and medication. **iOS / Android** - **Moodflow** — Best free/simple option Clean interface, easy mood check-ins, and decent stats. **iOS / Android** If you want the shortest recommendation: - **Daylio** for most people - **Bearable** if you want deeper tracking - **Moodnotes** if journaling is the main goal If you want, I can also give you the **best free mood log apps** or **best apps for iPhone/Android specifically**.
What are the best mood diary apps? 90/mo
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood diary apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall for quick mood tracking. Super easy, visual stats, habits/journaling, great if you want low effort. - **Bearable** — Best for tracking mood + symptoms + sleep + triggers. Very good if you want to spot patterns. - **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-style mood journaling. Helpful prompts for thought reframing. - **Reflectly** — Best for guided journaling with a polished interface. Good if you like daily prompts. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health self-check-ins and tracking over time. More structured and clinical. - **Journey** — Best full-featured journal with mood tracking. Good if you want a traditional diary too. - **Youper** — Best AI-guided emotional check-ins. Good for conversational mood logging. **If you want the simplest pick:** **Daylio**. **If you want deeper pattern tracking:** **Bearable**. **If you want journaling + mood prompts:** **Reflectly** or **Moodnotes**. If you want, I can also give you the **best free mood diary apps** or the **best for iPhone/Android**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood diary apps: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Super easy mood tracking with goals, habits, and good charts. - **Bearable** — Best for connecting mood with sleep, symptoms, meds, and lifestyle factors. Very detailed. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health check-ins and structured mood tracking. More clinical feel. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar / mood pattern tracking. Built for symptom + medication logs. - **Moodflow** — Good minimalist option with journaling, mood stats, and reminders. - **Reflectly** — Best if you want a more journal-like, reflective experience with prompts. **My quick picks:** - **Simple daily mood logging:** Daylio - **Deep tracking and analysis:** Bearable - **Mental health-focused check-ins:** MindDoc - **Bipolar-specific tracking:** eMoods If you want, I can also recommend the **best free mood diary apps** or the **best iPhone vs Android options**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood diary apps: 1. **Daylio** — Best overall - Super easy mood tracking with no typing required - Great charts, stats, and habit tracking - iOS and Android 2. **Moodfit** — Best for mental health insights - Tracks mood, sleep, exercise, gratitude, and more - Good for spotting patterns - iOS and Android 3. **Bearable** — Best for symptom + mood tracking - Excellent if you want to track mood alongside anxiety, pain, meds, or energy - Very customizable - iOS and Android 4. **Reflectly** — Best journaling-style mood diary - More guided and reflective - Good if you like prompts and journaling - iOS and Android 5. **Stoic** — Best for mindfulness + mood journaling - Combines mood tracking with CBT-style prompts, gratitude, and reflection - Clean design - iOS and Android 6. **Apple Journal** — Best simple option for iPhone users - Built into iPhone ecosystem - Good if you want a lightweight private journal - iPhone only If you want, I can also narrow it down to: - **best free apps** - **best for anxiety/depression** - **best for iPhone** - **best for Android**
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood diary apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Super fast mood logging, no typing required, great charts and habit tracking. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar / mood tracking. Simple, detailed, and good for symptom pattern tracking. - **Bearable** — Best for deeper insights. Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers very well. - **Journey** — Best journal-style app. Good if you want mood tracking plus full journaling and privacy. - **Reflectly** — Best for guided reflection. More diary-like, with prompts and a polished interface. - **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-style mood journaling. Helpful for identifying thought patterns. - **Stoic** — Best for mental wellness journaling. Strong prompts, moods, and reflection tools. - **Track & Share** — Good if you want to share mood data with a therapist or clinician. **My quick picks:** - **Easiest to use:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best for bipolar tracking:** eMoods - **Best for reflective journaling:** Journey If you want, I can also narrow it down to **free apps only**, **iPhone**, **Android**, or **apps best for anxiety/depression**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood diary apps, depending on what you want: - **Daylio** — Best overall. Super easy mood tracking, journal entries, stats, goals, and reminders. Great if you want something low-effort. - **Bearable** — Best for finding mood patterns. Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, exercise, and more, with strong analytics. - **Moodnotes** — Best for guided reflection. Good if you want CBT-style prompts to understand your thoughts and moods. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling. Polished design, daily prompts, and a more “personal diary” feel. - **Journey** — Best full-featured journal. Mood tracking plus long-form journaling, photos, and cloud sync. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health tracking. Strong mood questionnaires and patterns over time. If you want the simplest choice, start with **Daylio**. If you want deeper pattern tracking, pick **Bearable**. If you want, I can also narrow this down by **iPhone/Android**, **free apps only**, or **apps with Apple Health/Google Fit sync**.
Which apps are good for tracking moods over time?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Good mood-tracking apps: - **Daylio** — very popular, fast daily check-ins, charts/trends, easy to use. - **Moodnotes** — good if you want mood tracking plus CBT-style reflection. - **Bearable** — great for tracking moods alongside sleep, meds, symptoms, and habits. - **MindDoc** — more mental-health focused, with mood tracking and guided exercises. - **eMoods** — especially good for bipolar mood tracking and detailed symptom logs. - **Reflectly** — journaling-focused, with mood insights over time. If you want the **simplest** pick: **Daylio**. If you want **more health detail**: **Bearable**. If you want **therapy-style reflection**: **Moodnotes**. If you want, I can also recommend the best free ones or the best for iPhone/Android.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
A few solid mood-tracking apps: - **Daylio** — very popular, quick to log moods, habits, and activities; great charts over time. - **Bearable** — deeper tracking for mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers; good if you want patterns. - **Moodnotes** — more reflection-focused, good for identifying thinking patterns. - **MindDoc** — useful for mood journaling and mental health check-ins, with reports. - **eMoods** — especially good for bipolar mood tracking and symptom tracking. - **Reflectly** — nice journaling-style app with mood check-ins. If you want the **best all-around**: **Daylio**. If you want **more detailed health pattern tracking**: **Bearable**. If you want, I can also recommend the best one for **iPhone vs Android** or **free vs paid**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
A few solid mood-tracking apps: - **Daylio** — very popular, fast daily logging, good charts and habit tracking. - **Bearable** — best if you want to track mood plus sleep, pain, meds, diet, and symptoms. - **Moodnotes** — good for mood + thought journaling, especially if you want CBT-style reflection. - **eMoods** — great for bipolar/depression tracking, with simple charts and symptom logs. - **Reflectly** — more journal-focused, with mood tracking built in. If you want the simplest option, start with **Daylio**. If you want deeper health tracking, go with **Bearable**. If you want, I can also recommend the best one for **iPhone**, **Android**, or **free-only** use.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Good options for mood tracking over time: - **Daylio** — very popular, quick tap-based mood logging, strong charts and habits correlation. - **Bearable** — best if you want to track mood plus sleep, symptoms, meds, food, etc. - **Moodnotes** — good for CBT-style reflection and spotting patterns in thoughts. - **eMoods** — especially useful for bipolar mood tracking and symptom tracking. - **Reflectly** — more journaling-focused with mood prompts and analytics. - **MindDoc** — structured mental health tracking with mood trends and questionnaires. If you want the simplest one, start with **Daylio**. If you want the most detailed health-style tracking, try **Bearable**. If you want, I can also suggest the best one for **iPhone**, **Android**, or **free only**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
A few solid mood-tracking apps: - **Daylio** — great all-around choice; fast daily check-ins, charts, habits, notes. - **Bearable** — best if you want to track mood plus sleep, meds, symptoms, pain, and triggers. - **eMoods** — good for bipolar / mood-disorder tracking, very symptom-focused. - **Moodnotes** — useful if you want mood tracking with CBT-style reflection. - **Reflectly** — more journaling-focused, with mood check-ins and prompts. If you want the simplest: - **Daylio** If you want the most detailed: - **Bearable** If you want a bipolar-specific app: - **eMoods** If you tell me iPhone or Android and whether you want free or paid, I can narrow it down.
What are the best mood tracking apps for mental health?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for mental health: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood tracking. Fast, low-friction daily check-ins, great charts, goals, and habit/mood correlations. - **Bearable** — Best for spotting patterns. Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, exercise, and triggers in more depth than most apps. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar tracking. Designed for mood episodes, meds, sleep, and clinician-friendly reports. - **Moodfit** — Best all-in-one mental wellness app. Mood tracking plus CBT tools, gratitude, goals, breathing, and sleep tracking. - **Sanvello** — Best for anxiety/stress support. Mood tracking plus guided programs, coping tools, and community features. - **Reflectly** — Best for journaling-style mood tracking. More reflective and journal-focused, with mood prompts and insights. If you want the **simplest and most popular**, start with **Daylio**. If you want **deeper insights**, choose **Bearable**. If you’re tracking **bipolar symptoms**, choose **eMoods**. If you want, I can also rank them for **iPhone**, **Android**, **free options**, or **privacy**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for mental health: 1. **Daylio** — simple, fast mood logging with customizable activities and charts. Great if you want low-friction tracking. 2. **Bearable** — very detailed tracking for mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and habits. Best if you want patterns and triggers. 3. **Moodfit** — combines mood tracking with CBT-style tools, goals, and wellness tracking. Good all-around option. 4. **eMoods** — especially useful for bipolar disorder or tracking mood cycles and symptoms in detail. 5. **Reflectly** — more journal-style, with prompts and a polished design. Good if you like reflective check-ins. 6. **Sanvello** — mood tracking plus coping tools, guided exercises, and community features. 7. **MindDoc** — strong mental health check-ins and assessments, with tracking that can help you spot trends. **Best picks by need:** - **Easiest to use:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best overall wellness + mood:** Moodfit - **Best for bipolar tracking:** eMoods If you want, I can also recommend the **best free apps**, **best iPhone apps**, or **best apps for anxiety/depression specifically**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for mental health: 1. **Daylio** - Best for: quick, low-effort mood logging - Why it’s good: super simple interface, great charts, custom activities, reminders 2. **Moodfit** - Best for: more structured mental health tracking - Why it’s good: tracks mood, sleep, habits, goals, and offers CBT-style tools 3. **Bearable** - Best for: spotting patterns between mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, and habits - Why it’s good: very detailed tracking and strong analytics 4. **MindDoc** - Best for: guided mood tracking with mental health check-ins - Why it’s good: clinically oriented, useful questionnaires, mood trends over time 5. **eMoods** - Best for: bipolar disorder or mood disorder tracking - Why it’s good: designed for tracking depression/mania symptoms and sharing reports with clinicians 6. **Reflectly** - Best for: journaling + mood tracking - Why it’s good: polished design, reflective prompts, easier if you like writing **Best overall for most people:** **Daylio** **Best for deeper insights:** **Bearable** **Best for clinical-style tracking:** **MindDoc** If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your goal: anxiety, depression, bipolar tracking, or just daily mood journaling.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for mental health: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple, fast mood logging. Easy to use, great charts, habits/activity tracking. - **Moodfit** — Best for a more complete mental health toolkit. Tracks mood, sleep, exercise, gratitude, and offers CBT-style tools. - **Bearable** — Best for spotting patterns. Great if you want to track symptoms, meds, sleep, pain, stress, and mood together. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar disorder. Built specifically for tracking mood swings, sleep, and triggers. - **MindDoc** — Best for guided mental health check-ins. Combines mood tracking with self-reflection and mental health assessments. - **Sanvello** — Best for anxiety and stress support. Includes mood tracking plus coping tools and exercises. **Quick pick:** - Want **simple and easy** → **Daylio** - Want **deep tracking and insights** → **Bearable** - Want **bipolar-specific tracking** → **eMoods** - Want **extra self-help tools** → **Moodfit** or **MindDoc** If you want, I can also narrow this down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free vs paid**, or **privacy-focused apps**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for mental health: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood tracking. Fast check-ins, habit tracking, charts, and easy journaling. - **Bearable** — Best for tracking mood + symptoms + sleep + meds. Great if you want to spot patterns and triggers. - **Moodfit** — Best all-around mental wellness app. Tracks mood, sleep, exercise, gratitude, and offers CBT-style tools. - **eMoods** — Best for bipolar disorder tracking. Built specifically for mood episodes, meds, sleep, and symptoms. - **Moodnotes** — Best for journaling and thought reframing. More CBT-focused, good for reflecting on mood shifts. - **Sanvello** — Best for guided support. Includes mood tracking plus anxiety/stress tools and coping exercises. - **Reflectly** — Best for reflective journaling. Nice design, easy mood logging, more diary-like than clinical. **My top picks:** - **Simple daily check-ins:** Daylio - **Deep pattern tracking:** Bearable - **Bipolar-specific needs:** eMoods If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or the **best app for iPhone vs Android**.
What are the best mood tracking apps for anxiety?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for anxiety: 1. **Daylio** - Best for quick, low-effort tracking - Lets you log mood in seconds and spot patterns over time - Great if journaling feels like too much 2. **MindShift CBT** - Best for anxiety-specific tools - Includes mood tracking plus CBT-based coping exercises, breathing, and thought reframing - Good if you want more than just tracking 3. **Moodfit** - Best overall for detailed tracking - Tracks mood, sleep, exercise, habits, and triggers - Strong charts and insights for seeing what affects anxiety 4. **Bearable** - Best for tracking symptoms and triggers - Very customizable, especially if your anxiety comes with sleep, stress, or physical symptoms - Good for building a fuller picture of what’s going on 5. **Sanvello** - Best for guided anxiety support - Combines mood tracking with CBT tools, meditation, and coping plans - Solid if you want structure and support 6. **Reflectly** - Best for journaling-focused users - Nice interface and guided prompts to help you reflect on anxious days - Better for writing-based tracking **My top picks:** - **Daylio** if you want the simplest tracker - **Moodfit** if you want the most insight - **MindShift CBT** if anxiety management is the main goal If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or **best apps for iPhone vs Android**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for anxiety: 1. **Daylio** - Best overall for simple mood + activity tracking - Very quick to log, great charts, easy to spot anxiety triggers - Good if you want low-effort tracking 2. **Bearable** - Best for detailed symptom tracking - Tracks mood, anxiety, sleep, meds, stress, and possible triggers - Great if you want more insight into patterns 3. **Moodfit** - Best for mental wellness tools + tracking - Includes mood logs, breathing exercises, journaling, and habit tracking - Good if you want coping tools built in 4. **Sanvello** - Best for anxiety-specific support - Offers mood tracking plus CBT-based tools and guided exercises - Strong choice if you want a more structured mental health app 5. **Reflectly** - Best for journaling-focused mood tracking - Nice design, mood check-ins, and reflection prompts - Good if you like writing things out 6. **MindDoc** - Best for clinically oriented symptom tracking - Tracks anxiety and depression symptoms over time with reports - Useful if you want something more mental-health focused **My quick pick:** - **Daylio** for the easiest daily use - **Bearable** for the most detailed anxiety tracking - **Sanvello** for built-in anxiety help If you want, I can also give you the **best free mood tracking apps** or the **best ones for iPhone vs Android**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for anxiety: - **Daylio** — Best overall for simple mood + habit tracking. Fast to use, great charts, easy to spot anxiety triggers. - **Bearable** — Best for detailed tracking. Lets you track mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, stress, and habits all in one place. - **MindDoc** — Best for mental health-focused tracking. Strong for anxiety and depression patterns, with guided check-ins. - **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-style reflection. Helps you notice thinking patterns that may be fueling anxiety. - **Sanvello** — Best all-in-one option. Combines mood tracking with coping tools, mindfulness, and anxiety support. - **Reflectly** — Best if you prefer journaling. More reflective and visual, good for daily emotional check-ins. **Quick picks:** - Simple and effective: **Daylio** - Most detailed: **Bearable** - Best for anxiety insights: **MindDoc** - Best for CBT tools: **Moodnotes** If you want, I can also give you the **best free apps** or the **best iPhone/Android options**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps for anxiety: 1. **Daylio** — best all-around - Super fast mood logging - Great charts/trends over time - Easy to spot anxiety triggers 2. **Bearable** — best for symptom + mood tracking - Tracks mood, anxiety symptoms, sleep, meds, and habits - Very customizable - Good if you want to connect patterns 3. **MindDoc** — best for mental health check-ins - Built around emotional tracking and guided questionnaires - Good for noticing anxiety patterns - More “mental health focused” than a basic mood diary 4. **Moodfit** — best for anxiety management tools - Mood tracking plus breathing, gratitude, and habits - Helpful if you want tracking + coping tools in one app 5. **Reflectly** — best journaling-style mood tracker - Feels more like a guided journal - Good for people who like reflection and prompts 6. **Sanvello** — best if you want support tools too - Mood tracking, coping exercises, and anxiety support - More of an all-in-one wellness app **Best pick for most people:** **Daylio** or **Bearable**. If you want, I can also recommend: - the **best free apps** - the **best iPhone apps** - the **best Android apps** - or the **best app for severe anxiety/panic tracking**
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for anxiety: - **Daylio** — Best overall for quick daily check-ins. Very easy to log mood, sleep, activities, and triggers with minimal effort. - **MindDoc** — Best for anxiety-focused tracking. Includes symptom check-ins and patterns that can help you spot anxiety triggers over time. - **Bearable** — Best for detailed tracking. Great if you want to track mood plus sleep, meds, caffeine, exercise, and symptoms. - **eMoods** — Good if your anxiety is tied to mood swings or you want simple charts and reminders. - **Stoic** — Best if you want mood tracking plus guided journaling and reflection exercises. - **Moodnotes** — Good for identifying anxious thought patterns and cognitive distortions. If you want the simplest option, start with **Daylio**. If you want more anxiety-specific insights, try **MindDoc** or **Bearable**. If you want, I can also rank these by **free vs paid**, **best for iPhone/Android**, or **best for journaling vs charts**.
What are the best mood tracking apps for depression?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for depression: 1. **Daylio** — Best overall - Very easy daily mood logging - Tracks habits, sleep, activities, and triggers - Clean, simple, low-effort 2. **Bearable** — Best for detailed symptom tracking - Tracks mood, sleep, pain, meds, energy, anxiety, and more - Great for spotting patterns - More powerful, but a bit more complex 3. **Moodfit** — Best for mental health tools - Mood tracking plus CBT-style exercises, gratitude, breathing, and goals - Good if you want more than just logging 4. **eMoods** — Best for depression/bipolar tracking - Strong for tracking mood swings, medications, sleep, and cycles - Simple and focused 5. **Moodnotes** — Best for CBT-based reflection - Helps identify thinking patterns and reframe thoughts - Good if you want to work through negative thought loops 6. **Sanvello** — Best all-in-one wellness app - Mood tracking, guided coping tools, meditation, and peer support - More of a full mental health app than a pure tracker **My pick:** - **Daylio** if you want the easiest, most consistent tracking - **Bearable** if you want the most insight into depression patterns If you want, I can also recommend the **best free options** or the **best app for iPhone vs Android**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for depression: 1. **Daylio** - Simple, fast mood logging - Great charts/trends over time - Good if you want low-effort tracking 2. **Moodfit** - More robust mental health tracking - Tracks mood, sleep, exercise, gratitude, etc. - Good for spotting patterns and triggers 3. **Bearable** - Very detailed symptom and habit tracking - Lets you link mood with sleep, meds, pain, stress, and more - Best if you want a deeper data view 4. **MindDoc** - Designed for mental health symptom tracking - Includes check-ins and self-reflection tools - Strong for depression/anxiety monitoring 5. **eMoods** - Best known for mood and symptom tracking - Especially useful if mood swings are part of the picture - Very straightforward 6. **Reflectly** - More journaling-focused - Good for people who like guided reflection - Less data-heavy than Daylio or Bearable **Best overall for depression tracking:** **Daylio** **Best for detailed tracking:** **Bearable** **Best for mental-health-focused check-ins:** **MindDoc** If you want, I can also narrow this down by **free apps only**, **iPhone vs Android**, or **apps with reminders and charts**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for depression: 1. **Daylio** — Best overall - Very easy to use, fast daily check-ins - Tracks mood, activities, habits, and patterns - Great if you want low effort and good insights 2. **Bearable** — Best for tracking symptoms + triggers - Tracks mood, sleep, energy, pain, meds, and habits - Helpful if depression is tied to physical symptoms or routines - Strong charts and correlation insights 3. **Moodfit** — Best for mental health tools - Mood tracking plus CBT-style exercises, gratitude, breathing - Good if you want tracking and coping tools in one app 4. **eMoods** — Best for bipolar/depression pattern tracking - Simple and structured - Often used for mood disorder monitoring, especially with a clinician 5. **MindDoc** — Best for guided self-checks - Tracks mood and symptoms with mental health assessments - More therapy-oriented than some others **Best free option:** Daylio **Best for detailed tracking:** Bearable **Best all-in-one self-help:** Moodfit If you want, I can also give you: - the **best free apps only** - the **best iPhone apps** - the **best apps with privacy-friendly settings**
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for depression: 1. **Daylio** Best overall for simple mood logging. - Fast, low-friction check-ins - Great charts/trends - Can track activities, sleep, and habits - Very popular and easy to stick with 2. **Bearable** Best for spotting patterns. - Tracks mood, symptoms, sleep, meds, pain, and triggers - Strong correlation insights - Good if you want more detail than Daylio 3. **eMoods** Best for depression/bipolar-specific tracking. - Designed for mood disorders - Tracks mood, sleep, irritability, meds - Simple and clinician-friendly reports 4. **Moodfit** Best all-in-one mental health tracker. - Mood tracking plus CBT tools, gratitude, breathing, goals - Good dashboards and reminders - More feature-rich than basic trackers 5. **MindDoc** Best for guided self-assessment. - Mood tracking with mental health check-ins - Exercises and wellbeing tools - Useful if you want structure, not just logging **My quick pick:** - **Simplest:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Most therapy-like:** Moodfit or MindDoc If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or the **best apps for iPhone/Android specifically**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for depression: 1. **Daylio** - Best all-around mood tracker - Very easy to use, quick daily check-ins, charts/patterns over time - Good if you want something simple and low-effort 2. **Bearable** - Best for tracking mood plus symptoms, sleep, meds, and triggers - Great if you want to spot links between depression, habits, and physical symptoms 3. **Moodfit** - Best for mental-health tools beyond tracking - Includes mood logs, CBT-style exercises, gratitude, sleep tracking, and goals 4. **Sanvello** - Best for guided support and coping tools - Offers mood tracking plus mindfulness, coaching-style exercises, and community features 5. **eMoods** - Best for more detailed mood tracking - Especially useful if you want to track depression, anxiety, sleep, and medication patterns closely 6. **Reflectly** - Best for journaling-style mood tracking - More reflective and diary-like, good if writing helps you process feelings ### My quick picks - **Simplest:** Daylio - **Most detailed:** Bearable - **Best overall mental health toolkit:** Moodfit If your depression is getting worse, or you’re having thoughts of self-harm, please seek immediate help from a local crisis line or emergency services. If you want, I can also recommend the best **free** mood tracking apps or the best ones for **iPhone vs Android**.
What are the best mood tracking apps for personal wellness?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps for personal wellness: 1. **Daylio** - Best overall for easy daily mood tracking - Quick tap-based logging, habits, notes, and simple charts - Great if you want something low-friction 2. **Bearable** - Best for spotting mood triggers - Tracks mood, sleep, energy, symptoms, meds, and routines - Very good for mental health + wellness pattern analysis 3. **Moodnotes** - Best for reflection and CBT-style journaling - Helps you notice thinking patterns and reframe them - Strong choice if you want mood tracking plus self-awareness 4. **Reflectly** - Best for guided journaling - Uses prompts to help you process your day and emotions - Good for people who like a more conversational feel 5. **MindDoc** - Best for mental health monitoring - Offers mood tracking, assessments, and exercises - Useful if you want a more structured wellness app 6. **eMoods** - Best for bipolar mood tracking - Built for tracking depression, mania, sleep, meds, and cycles - Simple and practical **My quick picks:** - **Easiest:** Daylio - **Best for insights:** Bearable - **Best for journaling:** Moodnotes - **Best for structured mental health tracking:** MindDoc If you want, I can also rank them by **privacy**, **free features**, or **iPhone vs Android**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps for personal wellness: 1. **Daylio** - Best all-around mood tracker - Very easy to use: log mood in seconds - Great stats, habit tracking, and mood patterns 2. **Moodfit** - Best for mental wellness tools beyond mood tracking - Includes gratitude, breathing, journaling, and CBT-style exercises - Good if you want a more structured self-care app 3. **Reflectly** - Best for journaling and emotional reflection - AI-assisted prompts help you process your day - Clean, calming interface 4. **Bearable** - Best for tracking mood plus symptoms, sleep, stress, and triggers - Especially useful if you want to spot patterns over time - Very detailed and customizable 5. **Stoic** - Best for mindfulness + mood journaling - Combines mood tracking with reflection prompts and mental wellness exercises - Good for building a daily routine 6. **How We Feel** - Best free option - Simple, thoughtful mood check-ins with emotion labeling - Strong for emotional awareness **Quick picks:** - **Simplest:** Daylio - **Most complete wellness tools:** Moodfit - **Best journaling:** Reflectly - **Best for detailed pattern tracking:** Bearable If you want, I can also recommend the **best free mood tracker**, **best iPhone app**, or **best Android app**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps for personal wellness: 1. **Daylio** - Best for: Simple, quick mood logging - Why it stands out: Very easy to use, strong stats and patterns, no need to write full journal entries 2. **Bearable** - Best for: Connecting mood with symptoms, sleep, habits, and triggers - Why it stands out: Excellent for people who want deeper insight into what affects their mood 3. **Moodflow** - Best for: Clean design and daily mood reflection - Why it stands out: Good mix of mood tracking, journaling, and habit tracking 4. **Sanvello** - Best for: Mental wellness support alongside mood tracking - Why it stands out: Includes coping tools, guided exercises, and progress tracking 5. **MindDoc** - Best for: Structured mental health check-ins - Why it stands out: Great for tracking symptoms over time and spotting trends 6. **eMoods** - Best for: Bipolar mood tracking - Why it stands out: Designed specifically for monitoring mood swings, sleep, and meds **Best overall for most people:** **Daylio** **Best for detailed wellness insights:** **Bearable** If you want, I can also narrow these down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free vs paid**, or **best for anxiety/depression/bipolar tracking**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best mood-tracking apps for personal wellness: 1. **Daylio** - Best all-around for quick daily check-ins - Lets you track mood, activities, habits, and patterns - Clean, easy interface; strong charts and insights 2. **Moodflow** - Best for detailed mood journaling - Combines mood tracking, notes, symptoms, and triggers - Good if you want to understand emotional patterns over time 3. **Bearable** - Best for tracking mood alongside health factors - Tracks sleep, energy, pain, stress, meds, and symptoms - Great for spotting links between lifestyle and mood 4. **Stoic** - Best for journaling + mindfulness - Includes mood tracking, guided prompts, and reflection tools - Good if you want a more wellness-focused experience 5. **eMoods** - Best for mental health condition tracking - Especially useful for bipolar disorder or clinical mood monitoring - Simple and focused, with exportable reports 6. **Moodnotes** - Best for CBT-style mood awareness - Helps identify thinking patterns and reframe negative thoughts - Strong if you want a therapeutic journaling approach **Quick pick:** - **Simple daily tracking:** Daylio - **Best health/mood data combo:** Bearable - **Best reflective journaling:** Stoic If you want, I can also narrow this down by **iPhone vs Android**, **free vs paid**, or **privacy-focused options**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best mood tracking apps for personal wellness: 1. **Daylio** — Best overall - Fast, visual mood logging with habits, goals, and stats - Great if you want something simple and low-friction 2. **Bearable** — Best for spotting triggers - Tracks mood alongside sleep, symptoms, energy, meds, and activities - Good if you want to understand patterns over time 3. **Moodfit** — Best for mental wellness tools - Mood tracking plus breathing, gratitude, journaling, and CBT-style exercises - Strong all-in-one option 4. **How We Feel** — Best free option - Very clean interface, emotion-based tracking, and reflection prompts - Nonprofit-backed and easy to use 5. **eMoods** — Best for detailed tracking - Great for tracking mood swings, sleep, meds, and symptoms - Popular for more structured daily tracking 6. **Reflectly** — Best for journaling - AI-guided journaling with mood check-ins - Nice if you prefer reflection over data-heavy tracking **My quick picks:** - **Most people:** Daylio - **Best insights:** Bearable - **Best free:** How We Feel If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on whether you prefer **simple tracking, journaling, or mental health insights**.

All 72 prompts run for Moodnotes

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Moodnotes known for?
  • 2 What are Moodnotes's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Moodnotes? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Moodnotes compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Moodnotes?
  • 6 What is a typical mood tracking app known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best mood tracking apps for anxiety symptoms? discovery
  • 2 Which mood tracking apps are good for depression tracking? discovery
  • 3 What are the best mood tracking apps for bipolar disorder? discovery
  • 4 What mood tracking app is best for therapy clients? discovery
  • 5 What are the best mood tracking apps for teens? discovery
  • 6 What are the best mood tracking apps for parents? discovery
  • 7 Which mood tracking apps let you track triggers and habits? discovery
  • 8 What are the best mood tracking apps with medication logs? discovery
  • 9 What are the best mood tracking apps with symptom tracking? discovery
  • 10 Which mood tracking apps are easy to use every day? discovery
  • 11 What are the best simple mood tracker apps? discovery
  • 12 Which mood tracking apps have reminders and notifications? discovery
  • 13 What are the best mood tracking apps for journaling? discovery
  • 14 What are the best mood tracking apps with charts and insights? discovery
  • 15 What are the best mood tracking apps for couples? discovery
  • 16 What are the best mood tracking apps for caregivers? discovery
  • 17 Which mood tracking apps work well on iPhone? discovery
  • 18 Which mood tracking apps work well on Android? discovery
  • 19 What are the best mood tracking apps with exportable reports? discovery
  • 20 What are the best mood tracking apps for managing stress? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to the most popular mood tracking app? comparison
  • 22 How do the top mood tracking apps compare for symptom logging? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to a simple mood diary app? comparison
  • 24 Which mood tracking apps are better than basic journal apps? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to free mood tracker apps? comparison
  • 26 How do mood tracking apps compare with paper mood journals? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to therapy note apps for mood tracking? comparison
  • 28 Which mood tracking apps are better for clinical use? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to a basic emotion tracker? comparison
  • 30 How do mood tracking apps compare for privacy and data sharing? comparison
  • 31 How do I track my mood every day without forgetting? problem
  • 32 How can I keep a mood log that actually helps me? problem
  • 33 How do I track emotions and triggers in one place? problem
  • 34 How do I monitor mood swings over time? problem
  • 35 How can I track symptoms for my therapist? problem
  • 36 How do I remember to log medication and side effects? problem
  • 37 How do I identify patterns in my mood changes? problem
  • 38 How can I track anxiety triggers throughout the day? problem
  • 39 How do I prepare a mood summary for my doctor? problem
  • 40 How do I make mood tracking easier to stick with? problem
  • 41 Are mood tracking apps free? transactional
  • 42 What is the cheapest mood tracking app with premium features? transactional
  • 43 Which mood tracking apps have a free plan? transactional
  • 44 How much do mood tracking apps cost? transactional
  • 45 What are the best value mood tracking apps? transactional
  • 46 Which mood tracking apps are worth paying for? transactional
  • 47 Do mood tracking apps offer monthly subscriptions? transactional
  • 48 Are there mood tracking apps without ads? transactional
  • 49 Which mood tracking apps have a free trial? transactional
  • 50 What are the best budget mood tracker apps? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best mood tracking apps? 90/mo
  • 2 What are the top mood tracking app options?
  • 3 Which mood tracking apps are most recommended?
  • 4 What are the most popular mood tracking apps?
  • 5 What are the best apps for tracking moods and emotions? 90/mo
  • 6 Which mood tracking app should I use?
  • 7 What are the best mental health mood tracker apps? 30/mo
  • 8 What are the best emotion tracking apps?
  • 9 What are the best mood log apps?
  • 10 What are the best mood diary apps? 90/mo
  • 11 Which apps are good for tracking moods over time?
  • 12 What are the best mood tracking apps for mental health?
  • 13 What are the best mood tracking apps for anxiety?
  • 14 What are the best mood tracking apps for depression?
  • 15 What are the best mood tracking apps for personal wellness?