Built by people who get it, for people whose days don't fit neat boxes.
We've spent years trying to track health. Spreadsheets that felt like homework. Apps with 30-second dropdown marathons. Journals we'd abandon after three days of guilt when we missed one.
The problem? They were all designed by people who'd never experienced what happens when tracking feels impossible.
We built Pixie Journey because we desperately needed it. When your brain is foggy, when your energy is gone, when opening an app feels like climbing a mountain — that's exactly when tracking matters most. And that's exactly when traditional apps fail.
Existing apps are built for people whose days fit into neat boxes. They're not built for chronic illness, disability, neurodivergence, or just being human on a rough week.
We needed something that understood life is messy. That some days you can barely function. That guilt-based "streaks" are actively harmful when you're struggling.
We track what you do, not just how you feel. That's our north star.
Instead of endless dropdown menus, we let you tap a sticker. Want to add context? Great. Too tired today? That's fine too.
No pressure. No streaks. No shame.
Just your life, tracked beautifully, so you can see patterns emerge over time.
We aim to support people managing chronic conditions who need to spot warning signs and understand their patterns.
But it's also for:
You don't need a diagnosis to deserve a tool that respects your energy levels.
Our team built this from both sides of chronic illness.
One team member lives with a chronic health condition and knows the frustration of apps that fail exactly when you need them most—when your brain is foggy, your energy is gone, and filling out forms feels impossible.
The other is a full-time carer who's watched tracking apps fail the person they love. Seen warning signs emerge too late because the tools couldn't capture what actually mattered.
Our team brings expertise in software development—one specializing in beautiful, intuitive design, the other in reliable backend architecture.
But more importantly, we understand what tracking tools get wrong. They're built for people whose brains cooperate, whose days fit neat boxes, who can handle guilt when they miss a day.
We built the tracker that works for real humans on their worst days.
We're launching the consumer app (Pixie Journey) in Q3 2026 for iOS in Australia. After that? The world. And eventually, clinical-grade features for people who need medical-quality reporting.
But first: pretty stickers, pixel calendars, and a tracking app that doesn't make you feel like garbage when you miss a day.
Because you deserve better than dropdown hell.