Joon alternative: chore apps for kids and the whole family
An honest Joon alternative guide for 2026. Where the virtual-pet model wins, where it stops scaling past young kids, and which chore app grows with the whole household instead.
Joon is a clever app. Kids care for a virtual pet, a Doter, by completing real-life tasks and routines, and the pet grows and goes on adventures as they do. For younger children, especially those with ADHD, the loop is fast, visible, and genuinely motivating. It earns its place on a lot of family phones.
We build Tidywell, a household chore app with a Kids Mode, and the question we get asked most by parents is some version of "this works for my seven-year-old, but what about the eleven-year-old, the teenager, and frankly me?" This guide is for parents weighing up whether a kids-only app is the right shape, or whether one app for the whole house makes more sense.
What Joon does well
Joon's design is sound. A pet that needs care is a strong external motivator for a child who struggles with internal motivation, which describes most kids and nearly all kids with ADHD. Tasks are framed as quests. Rewards are immediate. Parents assign and review from their own view. For a single primary-school-age child, this is a well-built, well-judged app.
The questions worth asking before you commit are about age and reach, not quality.
Where the virtual-pet model stops scaling
1. Kids grow out of the pet
The pet that delights a seven-year-old can feel babyish to an eleven-year-old, and embarrassing to a teenager. Joon's whole motivational engine is the pet, so when a child ages past it, there is not a more grown-up mode to graduate into. The app has a natural shelf life per child.
2. It is one app, for one part of the family
Joon tracks the kids. It does not track the parents' chores, the shared spaces, or the load the adults carry. In practice, families end up running Joon for the children and something else entirely for themselves, which means two systems, two sets of nagging, and no single picture of who is doing what in the house.
3. Multiple kids, multiple ages
A household with a six-year-old and a thirteen-year-old needs two very different experiences. A pet-care loop for one and something with more autonomy for the other. A kids-only app pitched at the younger end struggles to serve both well from the same place.
Tidywell isn't live in the stores yet — we're rolling out to the waitlist first. Join the waitlist — we'll email you the moment the apps go live.
The best Joon alternatives in 2026
1. Tidywell. Best for the whole household, not just the kids.
We make Tidywell. It is a chore app for everyone in the home, with a dedicated mode for the youngest members rather than an app built only for them.
What you get:
- Kids Mode for under-twelves, with photo verification: a child marks a chore done and snaps a quick photo, instead of every task waiting in a parent's approval queue. The dopamine of finishing stays immediate, and parents keep oversight. The add-a-child guide walks through setup, and photos and privacy covers exactly where those photos live.
- A shared virtual home that the whole family builds together. Rooms move from "needs attention" to "clean", and over 100 pieces of furniture unlock as chores get done. A collective reward, not a per-child pet.
- A real seat for teens and adults, so the same app covers the eleven-year-old, the teenager, and you. Older kids get the grown-up experience instead of a pet they have outgrown. For the teen angle, see our chore app for teens with ADHD guide.
- Live family sprints at 15, 25, and 45 minutes, where everyone tidies together against the same timer. Tidy-up becomes a shared event rather than a solo punishment.
- Forgiving streaks that freeze for holidays and bad weeks, with no punishment for a missed day.
- Approvals when you want them, so a parent can confirm the bigger jobs without micromanaging every small one. See the approvals guide.
Free for small homes, premium £6.99 monthly or £39.99 yearly for larger households. For the wider family setup, the whole-family ADHD chore app guide is the best starting point.
2. Joon. Still the best pet-led app for young kids.
If you have one primary-school-age child and the pet is what makes it work, stay. Joon's loop is purpose-built for that age and that motivation style, and a whole-household app would be more than you need. Revisit the decision when the child gets older or a sibling needs tracking.
3. OurHome. Best free family organiser.
OurHome bundles chores, a points system, a shared shopping list, and a family calendar at no cost. The design is dated and the gamification is thin, but for a family that wants the basics covered for free across all ages, it does the job.
4. BusyKid. Best when money is the motivator.
BusyKid ties chores to real allowance, paid out to a kids' debit card, with options to save, spend, and give. If your family's lever is pocket money rather than points or pets, this is the most direct version of that idea. It is a finance app with chores attached, so the chore tracking itself is basic.
5. Greenlight. Best money-first, chores second.
Greenlight is primarily a kids' debit card and money-management app, with a chores feature bolted on. Strong if your priority is teaching money and you want light chore tracking alongside. Weak if chores are the main event.
At-a-glance comparison
| Feature | Tidywell | Joon | OurHome | BusyKid |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Works for young kids | Kids Mode | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Works for teens | Yes | Outgrown | Yes | Limited |
| Works for parents / adults | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| One app for the whole household | Yes | No | Yes | No |
| Photo verification of chores | Yes | No | No | No |
| Shared virtual home reward | Yes | Pet (per child) | No | No |
| Live co-cleaning sprints | Yes | No | No | No |
| Ties chores to real money | No | No | No | Yes |
| Free tier | Free for small homes | Trial | Yes | No |
A quick diagnostic
One young child, loves the pet, nothing else needed? Stay on Joon. It is built for exactly this.
A spread of ages, or a child who has outgrown the pet? You want Tidywell. The same app serves the little one, the teen, and you.
Pocket money is your motivator? You want BusyKid or Greenlight. The lever is money, not points.
Want it all free and do not mind dated design? OurHome covers the basics for every age at no cost.
Where to go next
If you are setting chores by age, the age-appropriate chores by age guide gives a room-by-room breakdown of what is realistic at each stage. For the teenager specifically, read the chore app for teens with ADHD piece, which explains why a pet-care model backfires once kids want autonomy. And for the bigger picture of running a household chore system that does not rely on nagging, start with the whole-family ADHD chore app guide.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best Joon alternative in 2026?
How is Tidywell different from Joon?
Is Joon good for kids with ADHD?
Does Tidywell have a kids mode?
Is Joon free?
Try Tidywell free
One chore app for the kids, the teens, and you
Kids Mode with photo verification for the little ones, a real seat for everyone else, and a shared virtual home the whole family grows together. No nagging, no second app, no punishment for a missed day.
