Live sprints

Live Sprints, in plain English

A timed cleaning burst, alone or with everyone in your household. What the phases actually do, what happens when the clock runs out, and why doing it together makes starting easier.

The basics

A short timer, a shared list, a clear stop

A sprint is a fixed-length cleaning session. You pick a duration, you pick (or accept) a list of tasks, you start the clock, and you tick things off until it ends. That's the whole shape of it. The point isn't to finish the list. The point is to start, and to stop without guilt when the timer says so.

Duration is one of three options: 15, 25, or 45 minutes. Pick whatever feels survivable today. A bad day's 15 still beats a perfect plan you never started.

Body doubling, if you haven't heard the term

Body doubling is the ADHD-known trick of doing a hard task next to someone else who's also doing a task. They don't help you, they don't watch you, they're just there. For a lot of brains, this lowers the activation cost dramatically. Starting alone feels like climbing a wall. Starting next to a flatmate or partner feels like starting.

Household sprints are designed for this. Two people in two different rooms, same timer, same list, ticking things off in real time. You're not really cleaning together. You're cleaning at the same time, and that turns out to be enough.

The flow

Six phases, from setup to summary

A sprint moves through the same six phases every time. If you're solo, two of them get skipped. If you're with your household, you'll see all six.

  1. 01

    Config

    Pick the duration, the kind (solo or household), and which tasks to include. The default list is your highest-priority chores.

  2. 02

    Lobby (household only)

    You get an invite code. Anyone in your household can join by typing it in. The lobby waits until you tap Start.

  3. 03

    3, 2, 1

    A short countdown so everyone hits Go at the same instant. Useful when two people are in two rooms.

  4. 04

    Active

    The clock runs. You tick tasks off. In a household sprint, the list updates live for everyone.

  5. 05

    TIME'S UP

    A short coral flash and a bell sound. The timer stops. Whatever you did is done, whatever you didn't is still there.

  6. 06

    Summary

    How many tasks finished, how long it took, and (in household mode) the leaderboard. Then back to your normal Today list.

Solo sprints skip the lobby and the leaderboard. The flow is config, countdown, active, summary. No invite, no waiting room, no sign-in needed.

Picking a kind

Solo or household

When you start a sprint, the first choice is whether it's a solo run or a household one. They behave differently and they're priced differently. Solo is in every account. Household is on the Premium plan.

Solo sprint

Free
  • No lobby, no waiting. Tap start, the countdown runs, you're in.
  • No sign-in required. Works on a fresh anonymous account.
  • Personal stats on the summary screen. Tasks finished, time spent, that's it.
  • Good for a quiet 15 before bed, or a 45 on a Saturday morning.

Household sprint

Premium
  • Lobby with an invite code so other members can join.
  • Shared task list that updates live as people tick things off.
  • Anyone can add a custom task mid-sprint and it appears for everyone.
  • Live leaderboard during the sprint, final standings on the summary.

Why household sprints need an account

An anonymous device can't be a member of a household. If you tap household sprint without an account, Tidywell will ask you to sign in or make one rather than silently turning it into a solo sprint. That way you don't end up in an empty lobby wondering where everyone is.
Together

How a household sprint actually works

Once you start a household sprint, a few specific things happen that solo doesn't have. Worth knowing them upfront so the first one isn't confusing.

The invite code

Six characters, letters and numbers, no zeros or capital O so nobody mistypes them. Read it out loud, send it in a text, doesn't matter. Other members open Tidywell, tap Join sprint, and type it in. Each code is single-use and only works for that one sprint.

Joining once it's already running

If your partner started a 15-minute sprint five minutes ago and you join now, your timer shows 10 minutes left, not a fresh 15. Everyone's clock stays in sync. You haven't missed it, but you also don't get extra time.

The list updates live

When someone ticks a task off, it disappears from everyone else's list straight away. No two people accidentally do the same chore. Same when someone adds a custom task: it appears for everyone within a second or two.

Mid-sprint custom tasks

Anyone can type in a one-off task during the sprint. "Take out the recycling", "Wipe the highchair". Tidywell adds them to your household's task list as one-off tasks for today, so they're shared with everyone in the sprint and ticked off the same way as your regular tasks. They don't become recurring chores, but they do remain in your task history once the sprint ends.
The stop

What happens when the clock hits zero

A lot of people brace for something dramatic when the timer ends. Tasks getting auto-completed, the list getting wiped, anything not done becoming a black mark. None of that happens. The behaviour is much gentler than people expect.

TIME'S UP doesn't auto-complete or delete anything

The timer just stops. Whatever you finished is finished. Whatever you didn't is still there, exactly where it was, in the same state, on your normal Today list.

An incomplete sprint isn't a fail. You did 4 things instead of 7, and 4 things is 4 things. The other 3 are still on tomorrow's list waiting calmly, no penalty, no streak hit, no scolding.

The bell sound

A soft bell plays so you don't have to stare at the screen. It plays at a low volume on purpose. If your phone is on silent, the bell respects that. There isn't a configurable end-sound yet, it's the same bell every time.

Then the summary

After a 1.5 second coral flash, you're on the summary screen. Tasks finished, time spent, and the final leaderboard if it was a household sprint. Tap done and you're back in your normal Today flow.
Standings

The leaderboard, and why it's gentler than it looks

In a household sprint, the active screen shows a small live leaderboard. It ranks members by how many tasks they've completed in this sprint. The numbers update as people tick things off, and the final order is shown again on the summary screen.

The vibe

It's a thermometer, not a scoreboard

Tidywell ranks by tasks completed, not minutes worked or effort weighting. So the person who knocks out five small wipes will sit above the person who's halfway through a deep oven clean. That's deliberate. The leaderboard is meant to nudge momentum, not crown a winner. The teenager doing a flurry of tiny things is doing exactly the right thing.

Solo sprints don't have one

Going solo, you don't see a leaderboard at any point. The summary just shows your own count and time. There's nobody to compare against, and inventing a ghost competitor for one person to race didn't feel like Tidywell.
FAQ

Common questions

Can I join a sprint that's already running?
Yes. Type the invite code into Join sprint and you're in. Your timer auto-syncs to the time left, so if you join 5 minutes into a 15-minute sprint, you'll see 10 minutes on your clock. Late joiners can absolutely still tick things off and end up on the leaderboard.
What happens to tasks I didn't finish in time?
Nothing. They stay exactly as they were before the sprint, in the same priority order, on your normal Today list. The sprint doesn't auto-complete them, doesn't auto-defer them, doesn't penalise you. The timer ending is not a failure event, it's just an ending.
What about the custom tasks I added during the sprint? Do they live on?
They become regular one-off tasks in your household's task list, dated to today, ticked off the same way as anything else. They aren't sprint-only, and they aren't auto-deleted when the timer ends. If you'd like a custom task to recur in future, you can edit it after the sprint to set a recurrence pattern.
Can I mute the bell at the end?
Not yet. The bell is fixed at a low volume. If your phone is on silent, the bell respects that. A configurable end-sound is on the list but isn't there today.
Why do I need an account for a household sprint?
Anonymous devices can't be members of a household, so there'd be nobody to share the list with. Rather than silently downgrading to a solo sprint and confusing you, Tidywell asks you to sign in first. Solo sprints work without any account.
Can a kid start or join a sprint?
Yes. Kids in your household can join an in-progress sprint with the invite code, just like anyone else. They tick off their own tasks, they appear on the leaderboard, the same as adult members. It's a nice way to make a 15-minute tidy feel like a team thing rather than a chore for one person.