What this is.
Family Agreements is a tool for households to author, ratify, and live with agreements about technology — phones, screens, social platforms, gaming, AI assistants — and other domains where what you do and what your kids do shapes who you all become.
It is a tool. It is not coaching. It is not therapy. It is not a parental-control product. It is not a place where someone tells you what your rules should say.
What it does
It gives a household structure for a real conversation. Prompts that ask questions worth answering. Space to write down where you and the other people in your household actually stand. A way to land a written agreement that everyone has read, signed, and can point at when things drift — which they will.
The work is yours. The product is opinionated about how agreements get made; neutral about what they say. We can offer prompts and examples. We cannot decide.
What it does not do
- It does not score your kid.
- It does not surveil anyone.
- It does not send you panic notifications about your child.
- It does not sell your household data, or any data, to anyone.
- It does not run third-party analytics, retargeting pixels, or marketing trackers — not on this page, not on the signup surface, not anywhere.
- It does not have streaks, scores, badges, or any structure designed to keep you coming back.
- It does not tell you what your agreement should say.
Who it's for
Parents of kids old enough that technology is a real conversation — roughly nine and up. Both single-parent and two-parent households. Kids are first-class participants when they're ready and want to be, optional otherwise; the product works either way.
Households we're for
The product is complete for the household you actually have. Single-parent mode is the baseline; it asks you to invent nothing.
If there is a co-parent in your household, this product is still about your kid — and as a side effect it sometimes does real work on the conversation you keep not having with your partner. We don't pretend otherwise.
What it costs
$29 a month, or $290 a year (two months back if you commit). One subscription per household — covers a co-parent and any kid accounts your household uses. No free tier. No card-required trial. Cancel any time; the cancel button is a button, not a retention loop.