There are hundreds of habit tracker apps on the App Store. Most of them are fine at logging habits. Very few are good at keeping you motivated past the first two weeks — which is the only thing that actually matters.
This list focuses on iPhone-native apps worth your time in 2026, ranked by how well they solve the real problem: getting you to show up consistently, long after the novelty has worn off.
1. Rewardly — Best for real-world rewards
Rewardly is built around a simple but powerful idea: your habits should earn you real things. You set your own rewards — a takeaway dinner, a new piece of clothing, a gadget you've been eyeing — and assign them a point cost. Every habit you complete earns points through a randomized drop system (Common, Rare, Epic, or Legendary), and when you have enough points, you unlock the reward.
The randomized drops are the key mechanic. You never know if a check-off will earn you 1 point or 10, which keeps each completion genuinely exciting. It's the same variable reward principle that makes games compelling — applied to your actual habits.
Nothing leaves your device. No account, no sync, no server. It's one of the most private habit trackers available, and one of the few that makes checking off a habit feel like it's building toward something real.
2. Streaks — Best one-time purchase
Streaks is one of the most polished habit trackers on the App Store. You pay once — no subscription — and get a beautifully designed app with deep Apple ecosystem integration: iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Vision Pro. The Health app integration is particularly good, automatically logging habits like steps or water intake without manual check-offs.
The motivation model is classic: don't break the chain. Every completed habit extends a streak, and the visual weight of maintaining that streak is the core driver. It works well for people who are already self-directed and just need a clean system to stay consistent. If you're the kind of person who hates paying subscriptions and wants an app that earns its price once and stays out of your way, Streaks is excellent.
The downside is that streak-based motivation has a known failure mode: one missed day can feel like a reason to give up entirely. There's no reward on the other side — just the streak itself.
3. Productive — Best for social accountability
Productive stands out with its social challenge system. You can join habit challenges with other users and compete on streaks, which adds a layer of external accountability that pure solo trackers can't replicate. If knowing that someone else is watching (or competing) is what pushes you to show up, Productive leans into that effectively.
It also has location-based reminders — it can prompt you when you arrive at the gym, your office, or wherever a habit makes sense. That context-awareness is genuinely useful. The downside is that full features require an account, your data syncs to their servers, and the premium tier is subscription-only. It's a solid app, but one that asks for ongoing access to your habit history in exchange for its social features.
4. Habitify — Best for cross-platform
If you use Android, a Mac, or want to track habits from a browser, Habitify is the strongest option in this list. It syncs across every major platform in real time, supports Zapier and IFTTT integrations, and organizes habits into morning, afternoon, and evening areas. The experience is clean and data-driven — you get completion rates, streaks, and trend analysis.
For pure iPhone users, it's a capable app that just doesn't have the reward mechanics or privacy stance of some alternatives. The free tier caps at 3 habits, which feels tight before you've had a chance to properly evaluate it. But if cross-platform is your priority, nothing on this list comes close.
5. Finch — Best for self-care and mental wellness
Finch is more than a habit tracker — it's a self-care platform. You raise a virtual bird that grows as you complete your daily goals. It also includes mood tracking, guided journaling, breathing exercises, and mental health quizzes. If you're looking for a holistic wellness companion and not just a habit log, Finch has depth that others don't.
The virtual pet mechanic is genuinely engaging, especially for users who connect emotionally with that kind of ongoing responsibility. The question is whether a virtual bird staying healthy is motivating enough over months — or whether you'd rather have your habits working toward something in your actual life. At $9.99 a month, it's also one of the more expensive options here.
6. Strides — Best for goal analytics
Strides is the most flexible tracker on this list. It supports four different tracker types — Streak, Milestone, Average, and Target — making it useful for goals that aren't simple daily habits. Want to track miles run per week, books read per month, or a savings target? Strides handles those in ways most other apps don't. It also has over 150 pre-built templates and detailed progress visualizations.
The trade-off is setup complexity. There are a lot of decisions to make before you start, and the motivation model is purely analytical — data and charts, no reward mechanics. For people who are driven by watching their numbers improve, Strides is excellent. For people who need the carrot as much as the data, it's likely to feel flat after the initial setup excitement fades.
7. Habitica — Best for RPG fans
Habitica turns your habits into an RPG. You build a character, earn experience points, fight monsters with other users, and collect gear. It has a large active community and years of development behind it — if the RPG layer genuinely excites you, Habitica has put real effort into making it feel like a game worth playing.
The limitation is the same as any virtual reward system: eventually, the gear stops feeling meaningful. The habits are meant to be the point, but they become secondary to managing your character, your party, and your guild commitments. It's a lot of meta-game on top of what you actually came to do. That said, for gamers who want social accountability and a creative spin on habit-building, there's nothing quite like it.
How to choose
The honest answer is that the best habit tracker is the one that gives you a genuine reason to open it tomorrow. Features matter less than motivation mechanics.
- If you want real-world rewards: Rewardly
- If you want the deepest Apple integration: Streaks
- If social accountability keeps you honest: Productive
- If you use Android or need cross-platform: Habitify
- If you want a holistic wellness app: Finch
- If you track numeric goals, not just habits: Strides
- If you love RPGs and want a social game: Habitica
Most of these apps have a free tier. The research on reward-based motivation is clear that the best system is the one you actually stick with — so try a couple, pick the one that clicks, and commit to it for at least a month before judging it.