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Loggd vs Streaks: Honest 2026 Comparison

10 min read
Loggd vs Streaks comparison hero with both real app logos, titled "Cross-platform vs Apple-only": Loggd as a web and iOS all-in-one tracker with a free tier, Streaks as an Apple-only one-time-purchase habit tracker

TL;DR. Streaks is a beautifully made, Apple-only habit tracker you buy once for $5.99, with the best Apple Watch and Apple Health integration in the category. Loggd works on web and iOS (with home-screen widgets and Android in development), has a real free tier, and bundles habits with tasks, a focus timer, goals, and a bucket list in one gamified app. If you live entirely in Apple's ecosystem and want a one-time purchase, Streaks is excellent. If you want a web app alongside your phone, or you want one tool for your whole system instead of just habits, Loggd is the better fit.

The short version: this is the cleanest contrast in the habit-tracker space. Streaks is Apple-only, one-time price, focused on habits. Loggd is cross-platform, subscription with a free tier, and built to replace a stack of apps. Both are well-made. They are solving different problems.

Here is the honest head-to-head, with live-verified pricing.

Loggd vs Streaks comparison hero with both real app logos, titled "Cross-platform vs Apple-only": Loggd as a web and iOS all-in-one tracker with a free tier, Streaks as an Apple-only one-time-purchase habit tracker

Loggd vs Streaks at a glance

Loggd Streaks
Price Free tier; €7/mo or €48/yr; €89 lifetime $5.99 one-time
Free tier 3 habits, 2 goals, 30 tasks, 4 tags None (paid app, no free version)
Paid capacity Unlimited habits Up to 24 tasks total
Platforms Web, iOS (+ home-screen widgets); Android in development iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Vision Pro
Web app Yes No
Apple Watch app No Yes (best-in-class)
Apple Health integration No (API + webhooks only) Yes (auto-complete)
Main tracking model Forgiving contribution grid (streaks available) Streaks (the name says it)
Scope All-in-one: habits, tasks, focus timer, goals, bucket list Habit tracking (focused)
Gamification Levels, XP, badges, avatars, leaderboards Minimal

The short read: Streaks wins on the Apple ecosystem and one-time pricing. Loggd wins on platform reach, free tier, and scope. Pick by the row that matters most to you.

The biggest difference: Apple-only vs cross-platform

This is the question that decides it for most people, and it has nothing to do with features.

Streaks runs on iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Apple Vision Pro. That is it. No Android. No web app. No browser version. If your phone is an iPhone and your laptop is a Mac, Streaks fits like a glove. If any device in your daily life is not Apple, Streaks does not exist for you there.

Loggd runs on the web and on iOS, with home-screen widgets, and an Android app in development. The web app means you can log a habit from a work computer, a borrowed laptop, a Chromebook, or a Linux desktop. You are not locked into one ecosystem.

So:

  • Pick Streaks if you only use Apple devices and want the best native experience on them.
  • Pick Loggd if you want to check off habits from your browser at work, or if Android matters to you now or later.

If "Streaks but on Android" is what brought you to this article, the honest answer is that Streaks will not get there. Loggd and HabitNow are the closest fits.

Pricing: one-time $5.99 vs subscription

Pricing is where Streaks wins outright over a long time horizon, and you should know that going in.

Streaks (verified live on the App Store, June 2026):

  • $5.99 one-time. No subscription, no in-app purchases for habit slots, no annual renewal. The price covers iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro under the same Apple ID.
  • No free tier. You pay, you own it.

Loggd:

  • Free: 3 habits, 2 goals, 30 tasks, 4 tags, plus the focus timer, daily reflections, streaks, the contribution grid, and iOS home-screen widgets. No credit card.
  • Pro: €7/month or €48/year. Removes the limits and adds advanced analytics, data export, and focus patterns.
  • Lifetime: €89, limited availability.

The honest math: at €48/year, Loggd in year one costs roughly eight times more than Streaks. Over five years, Streaks is still $5.99 and Loggd Pro is around €240. If price per year is what matters most, Streaks wins this category. Full stop.

The counter is that Loggd's free tier is genuinely usable on its own, and that the price covers a bigger tool: habits, tasks, focus, goals, and a bucket list, plus active development and web sync. Streaks is a polished, stable, one-purpose app you buy once. Loggd is a subscription that comes with a roadmap.

If you only want to track habits and you live in Apple's ecosystem, Streaks is the better-value pick. If you want one app for your whole system, the subscription buys you more than habits.

Where Streaks wins: Apple Watch and Apple Health

Credit where it is due. Streaks is the best Apple Watch habit tracker on the App Store, and it is not close. This is the category where Loggd cannot compete today.

  • Apple Watch app. Streaks ships with watchOS complications, widgets, and the ability to log directly from the wrist. Loggd does not have an Apple Watch app today.
  • Apple Health auto-complete. Streaks reads from Apple Health and automatically checks off habits like steps, water, caffeine, mindful minutes, and certain workouts. You walk 10,000 steps and the habit completes itself. Loggd does not yet integrate with Apple Health, so those habits have to be checked off manually.
  • Apple Design Award. Streaks won one, which tells you something about how seriously the team treats the native experience.

If your typical day is "glance at the watch, tap once, move on," Streaks is the right choice. Loggd's iOS app with home-screen widgets is good, but it is not a wrist-first experience.

Where Loggd wins: cross-platform, free tier, and scope

If Streaks is the focused Apple specialist, Loggd is the all-in-one platform that runs anywhere you have a browser. There are three places it pulls ahead.

A web app, not just mobile. Loggd runs in any browser, which means you can log a habit from your work computer at lunch without picking up your phone. For people who spend their day at a desk, this single difference is the reason they switch.

A real free tier. Loggd is free for 3 habits, 2 goals, 30 tasks, 4 tags, the focus timer, daily reflections, and the forgiving contribution grid. No credit card. Streaks has no free tier at all; you pay $5.99 to even try it. Both are fair models, but if you want to commit before paying, Loggd lets you and Streaks does not.

It is a whole system, not just habits. This is the real argument. Inside the same Loggd app you also get:

  • Tasks with natural-language input ("call dentist tomorrow at 3pm" just works).
  • A built-in focus timer that feeds your progress instead of living in a separate app.
  • Goals and a bucket list that connect to your daily habits so a big ambition breaks down into something you actually track.
  • The forgiving contribution grid as the default view: a missed day is a lighter square in a year of darker ones, not a streak reset back to zero.

To match what Loggd does in a single app, you would need Streaks plus a separate to-do app plus a separate focus timer plus a separate goals tool, and none of them would talk to each other.

Gamification that makes you keep showing up

This is the quieter difference. Streaks is intentionally minimal: a clean grid of icons, a streak counter, that is the whole interface. Loggd is gamified by design:

  • Levels and XP. Habits, tasks, focus sessions, and reflections earn points and level you up, so the boring middle of building a habit has visible progress.
  • Badges. Consistency and milestones unlock badges.
  • Avatars and leaderboards. Opt-in friendly competition with other Loggd users.

Streaks rewards consistency with a number going up. Loggd rewards consistency with a progression system you can see. Some people prefer minimal; some people need the dopamine. Both are valid; just know which one you are.

A note on streaks themselves

Streaks is named after the model: a running count of consecutive days that resets to zero when you miss one. That reset is famously where habits die for a lot of people, especially on bad weeks. Loggd offers a streak number too if you want one, but the main view is the contribution grid, which treats a missed day as a lighter square in a year of darker ones, not a failure. That philosophical difference is worth more than any feature on either app once you have actually missed a day.

Who should pick which

Pick Streaks if:

  • You only use Apple devices and that will not change.
  • Apple Watch tracking is essential. You want to tap from your wrist.
  • Apple Health auto-complete (steps, water, workouts) is non-negotiable.
  • You want a one-time purchase and never want to think about renewals.
  • You only want a habit tracker and nothing else.

Pick Loggd if:

  • You want a web app you can use from any computer.
  • Android matters to you now or you want the option later.
  • You want one app for habits, tasks, focus, goals, and a bucket list.
  • A free tier that lets you commit before paying is important.
  • Streak resets have made you quit before, and the forgiving contribution grid sounds right.
  • Gamification (levels, XP, badges) is what actually keeps you going.

There is no universal winner here. Streaks is excellent at what it does. Loggd is a different scope of tool. Pick by the rows that matter most.

Frequently asked questions

Is Streaks available on Android?

No. Streaks is Apple-only (iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, Vision Pro). There is no Android version and no web app. If you are on Android, Loggd, HabitNow, and Habitify are the realistic alternatives.

How much does Streaks cost?

$5.99 one-time, covering iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro under the same Apple ID. No subscription, no free tier.

Does Loggd work on iPhone?

Yes. Native iOS app with home-screen widgets, plus a web app. Android is in development with no committed date.

Is a one-time purchase better than a subscription?

For Streaks specifically, yes, if you stay in Apple's ecosystem and just want a habit tracker. Over five years, $5.99 beats any €48/year plan. Subscriptions buy ongoing development, web sync, and a free tier. Loggd is a subscription with a real free tier; Streaks is a stable app you buy once.

Does Streaks have a web app?

No. Tracking happens only on Apple devices. If you want to log from your work computer's browser, you need Loggd or another cross-platform option.

Which is better for Apple Watch?

Streaks, clearly. Complications, watchOS widgets, and Apple Health auto-complete. Loggd does not have an Apple Watch app today.

Does Loggd have Apple Health integration?

Not yet. Loggd has an API and webhooks but no native Apple Health sync. If automatic Health-based check-ins matter most, Streaks is the honest pick.


About the author

I'm Eusebiu, the solo founder building Loggd. I've been a dev contractor for about five years and I am now going full time on Loggd, building it in public and sharing the journey with a growing audience on Threads. I have used Streaks for years and I think it is one of the most beautifully designed apps in the App Store; it is the reason a lot of people fall in love with habit tracking in the first place. I built Loggd because I wanted a web app, a free tier, and one place for habits, tasks, focus, and goals. This comparison tries to be fair to a category I genuinely respect.

Last updated: June 2026.


Try Loggd free

Streaks is the right pick if you live in Apple's ecosystem and want a one-time purchase. If you want a web app alongside your iPhone, a real free tier, or one app for habits, tasks, focus, and goals, start with Loggd, 3 habits, no card.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Streaks available on Android?

No. Streaks is Apple-only and runs on iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Apple Vision Pro. There is no Android version and no web app. If you are on Android, Streaks is not an option and you need a cross-platform tracker like Loggd or HabitNow.

How much does Streaks cost?

Streaks is a one-time $5.99 purchase on the App Store. There is no subscription, no free tier, and no in-app purchases for habit slots. The price covers iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro under the same Apple ID. For Apple users who keep an app for years, the lifetime cost is genuinely lower than most subscriptions.

Does Loggd work on iPhone?

Yes. Loggd has a native iOS app with home-screen widgets, alongside the web app. An Android app is in development with no committed launch date. So Loggd is a real option for iPhone users today, and the only option that gives you the same tracker on your computer.

Is a one-time purchase better than a subscription?

It depends how long you use the app. Streaks at $5.99 once breaks even against a $5/month subscription in about six weeks, so if you stick with one tracker for years, one-time wins on cost. Subscriptions usually buy ongoing development, web access, sync infrastructure, and a free tier you can try before paying. Loggd is a subscription with a real free tier and an actively developed roadmap; Streaks is a polished, stable app you buy once and own.

Does Streaks have a web app?

No. Streaks does not have a web app or a desktop browser version. Tracking happens only on Apple devices through the native app. If you work at a computer most of the day and want to check off habits without picking up your phone, this is a real limitation, and one of the main reasons people switch to a cross-platform tracker like Loggd.

Which is better for Apple Watch?

Streaks, clearly, and it is not close. Streaks has one of the most polished Apple Watch experiences in the habit-tracker category, with complications, watchOS widgets, and automatic completion through Apple Health for habits like water, steps, and workouts. Loggd does not have an Apple Watch app today. If Apple Watch tracking is the main thing you want, Streaks is the honest pick.

Does Loggd have Apple Health integration?

Not yet. Loggd does not auto-complete habits from Apple Health like Streaks does, so things like steps or workouts have to be checked off manually. Loggd does offer a REST API and webhooks for building your own integrations. Native Apple Health support is on the roadmap, but for now Streaks is the better pick if automatic Health sync is critical to you.
habit tracker comparison streaks loggd apple habit tracker habit tracking app comparison

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Eusebiu Balan, founder of Loggd

Eusebiu Balan

Founder, Loggd

Solo founder of Loggd, a habit and life tracking SaaS. Senior developer. Building publicly on Threads, where I share what I track and what I'm learning from my own data.

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