Work tickets, the dentist appointment, and the fence that needs repainting are not three separate problems. They are one week you are trying to get through — and you deserve to see it on one page, without becoming a part-time project manager of your own life.

If you keep more than one kind of list, you already know the drill. Your work lives in a ticketing system somebody else picked. Your family's events live in a shared calendar. The honey-do list is on the fridge, or in your head, or in a Notes app that nobody else can see. The kids' soccer schedule is a PDF the coach emailed in August. The dog's heartworm pill is a reminder you keep snoozing.

The lists are everywhere. The week isn't anywhere.

TCKT was built on a simple belief: the stuff you have to remember doesn't care which category it belongs to. Sprint demo, parent-teacher night, replace the fridge filter, draft the birthday invite — they all live in the same seven days. They should live in the same app.

Boards, calendar, notes — same projects

Most tools pick a lane. Some are great at boards and bad at calendars. Some are great at calendars and have nowhere to put the meeting notes. Some try to do everything and end up feeling like software you have to manage instead of use.

TCKT treats boards, the calendar, and notes as three views of the same projects. A task with a due date shows up on the calendar without you syncing anything. A standing event — trash night, weekly soccer practice, the dog's meds at 7am — sits next to a one-off the same week it happens. Notes for a project live next to the tasks they belong to, instead of in some separate wiki you'll never open again.

It isn't a new idea. Having one place where all of it lives — work and home, the sprint and the school field trip — is what makes it useful.

Projects, not lists

A flat to-do list is fine until your life has more than one shape. TCKT is built around projects, each with its own icon, color, and board. A work sprint, a kitchen renovation, the kids' activities, a side project, the household. You can hide the ones that aren't today's problem and surface only the slice of life you need.

The point isn't to give you more places to put things. The point is that when you open the app on a Tuesday morning, you can look at exactly the slice of life you need to look at, and nothing else.

Recurring events that don't fight you

Repeating things are where most calendars start to feel hostile. TCKT lets events repeat daily or weekly on specific days, for a fixed number of occurrences, until a date, or forever. You can move or edit a single occurrence — the one week soccer is on Wednesday instead of Tuesday — without breaking the rest of the series.

This sounds small. It is the difference between a calendar you trust and a calendar you start working around.

The whole household, on the same page

A lot of "productivity" software assumes you are a knowledge worker organizing yourself. Real life has other people in it. TCKT supports families: a shared space where the kids' appointments, the household to-do list, and the trip you're planning all live together, separately from your work projects but on the same login.

You don't need to set up a team. You don't need to invite anyone to use it solo. But when you do want the rest of the house to see the school calendar, it's already there.

Pricing that isn't trying to be cute

$2.99 a month, or $19.99 for the whole year. Yearly works out to $1.67 a month — about five months free if you commit. Both plans are unlimited everything: projects, tasks, events, notes. There are no per-user fees, no paywalled features, no AI add-on tier, no "Pro" badge gating the export button.

We picked a price low enough that the question stops being "is this worth it" and starts being "do I want this." That's the only question worth asking.

Calm software

A lot of work happens in the small moments — the thirty seconds before a meeting, the minute between dropoff and pulling out of the parking lot, the five minutes after the kids go to bed. TCKT is built for those moments. Fast page loads. A first-class dark mode for late nights. Keyboard shortcuts where they help, and nowhere they don't. No notifications begging you to come back.

The goal isn't engagement. The goal is that you open it, do the thing, and close it.

Where this goes

TCKT is early. The shape is right — boards and calendar and notes, sharing the same projects, for one person or a whole household — and we're filling it in with the people using it. If you've been hunting for one calm place to put work and home and everything in between, this is it.

One page. Your week. That's the whole pitch.