Best Self Care Apps

Reflectly Review: 2026 Overview

3.7/5 our score 4.6 App Store 4.3 Google Play

The verdict

3.7/ 5   A friendly, prompt-led journaling app that turns reflection into a quick daily ritual.

Reflectly makes journaling feel easy: it asks you questions, you answer, and you leave with a small sense of order. We score it 3.7 out of 5. It's a genuinely pleasant way to build a reflection habit, but it's narrow and pricey for what it does, which is why it sits below broader self care apps like our top pick, Liven.

See our #1 pick: Liven Full ranking

Some people sit down to journal and immediately go blank. Reflectly is built for exactly that moment. Instead of an empty page, you get a friendly question, a few mood options and a gentle nudge to say a little more. For a lot of people, that small scaffolding is the difference between writing something and writing nothing.

We tested Reflectly the way we test every app on Best Self Care Apps: daily, over real weeks, looking for whether one short session actually leaves you feeling a bit better. It does, more often than not. But journaling is most of what it offers, and at its price that narrow focus is the main thing to weigh up.

The pitch behind Reflectly

Reflectly is an AI-flavoured journaling app from Danish developer Reflectly ApS. The core loop is simple: it prompts you with a question, you tap a mood, and you write a short reflection. Over time it surfaces a little mood history so you can glance back at how your weeks have gone.

Calling it AI is generous — in practice this is smart, well-sequenced prompting rather than a back-and-forth companion. That's not a criticism so much as a clarification. If you want a tool that asks good questions and gets out of your way, Reflectly does that with real charm. If you want something that responds and adapts to what you write, this isn't quite that.

Who tends to love it

Reflectly suits people who want to reflect but find unstructured journaling intimidating. The prompts do the heavy lifting, and the soft, illustrated interface makes the whole thing feel approachable rather than clinical. It earns a 4 out of 5 on our single-session lift index, which matches our experience: a two-minute entry usually leaves you a touch lighter. It also scores 4 on low-pressure design — no nagging, no guilt-trips if you skip a day.

Where it shines

The interface is the standout. It's friendly without being twee, and the daily flow is quick enough to survive a busy week. The prompts are varied and gently positive, which keeps the habit from going stale. As a way to start journaling and actually keep it up, Reflectly is one of the easiest on-ramps we've used. Light mood logging sits alongside the writing, so you get a basic emotional picture without extra effort.

The honest limitations

The scope is the catch. Reflectly does journaling and a bit of mood tracking, and that's largely it — no courses, no meditations, no habit builder, no real AI companion you can talk to. Its evidence sub-score (3.2) and value sub-score (3.3) are among the lower ones in our table, and reviews flag a trial that converts to a paid plan quickly. If you want more than guided reflection, you'll be reaching for other apps to fill the gaps.

Cost and what you actually get

There's a no-cost tier, but most prompts, stats and themes require Premium, which runs about $59.99/year (approximate, June 2026 — verify on the store). For a single-purpose journaling app, that's not cheap, and it's the main reason value drags the overall score down. The trial reportedly converts fast, so set a reminder and check the renewal date before it bills you. You cancel through your app-store subscription.

Reflectly versus the broader field

Against dedicated journals, Reflectly trades depth for friendliness — something like Day One offers a more powerful, exportable journal, while Rosebud leans harder into AI-guided dialogue. Against our number-one pick, the gap is about breadth. Liven folds journaling into a wider, guided program with mood tracking, courses, habits and an AI companion, so reflection becomes one part of a plan rather than the whole app. To be fair to Reflectly, Liven leads neither of our two original indices, and it isn't the gentlest option here — Reflectly's lighter, prompt-led approach genuinely wins on simplicity for people who only want to write a few lines a day.

The bottom line

Reflectly is a charming, low-friction way to build a reflection habit, and for prompt-loving beginners it's an easy recommendation at 3.7 out of 5. Just go in knowing it does one thing. If journaling is all you're after and the friendly design will keep you coming back, it earns its place among self care apps worth trying. If you want one place that covers more of your week, look higher up our list. Either way, remember these are everyday wellbeing tools, not professional care — if things feel like more than a low mood, reaching out to a clinician matters, and in a crisis you can call 988 (free, 24/7) in the US and Canada.

Maker: Reflectly ApS · Platforms: iOS, Android · Approach: Self-guided · Methods: journaling, positive psychology

Reflectly plans & pricing

Free tier: Limited no-cost; most features behind a subscription.
Trial: No-cost trial that converts to a subscription.

Premium yearly
~$59.99/year
trial converts

Prices approximate, as of June 2026 — verify on the App Store / Google Play. Most prompts, stats and themes require Premium.

Cancellation: Cancel through your app-store subscription. Reviews note the trial converts quickly, so check the renewal date.

Feature checklist

Reflectly pros & cons

What's good

  • Warm, welcoming interface that lowers the barrier to writing
  • Prompts mean you never face an empty page
  • Quick daily mood and reflection logging
  • Calming, low-pressure feel with no streak-shaming
  • Genuinely good at turning journaling into a small, repeatable ritual

What to weigh up

  • Narrow scope — journaling and light mood tracking, little else
  • Most prompts, stats and themes sit behind Premium
  • Reviews note the trial converts quickly to a paid plan

Support

Help is handled in-app and by email through the developer, Reflectly ApS. There's no live chat or phone line, so expect asynchronous replies.

Method & credibility

Reflectly draws on journaling and positive-psychology ideas, and its earned a 3.2 on our evidence sub-score — it's a reflective habit tool, not therapy, and not a substitute for professional care.

Privacy & data

Your entries are personal, so read Reflectly's current privacy policy before you start and check what is stored and synced. The app does not list data export among its features, which is worth knowing if you like to keep your own copies.

Third-party ratings

We report independent ratings with their source and date and never invent them. Figures here are approximate and pending verification before launch.

Our data: Reflectly

Two numbers we measure ourselves, on the same 1–5 scale for every app — the things most roundups never score (see all 20 on the compare page):

Single-session lift: 4/5 (does one short session leave you feeling a bit better?) Low-pressure design: 4/5 (how gentle and guilt-free it is to live with)

Reflectly FAQ

Is Reflectly actually an AI app?

It uses guided, adaptive prompts rather than a true conversational companion. Think of it as a smart questionnaire that helps you reflect, not a chatbot you talk back and forth with.

Can I use Reflectly without paying?

There's a no-cost tier, but most prompts, themes and stats are gated behind Premium. The no-cost experience is enough to try the daily flow, though many people hit the paywall fairly soon.

Is Reflectly a replacement for therapy?

No. It's a self-care journaling tool, not a substitute for professional care. If you're struggling, consider speaking to a clinician, and in a crisis call 988 (free, 24/7) in the US and Canada.

A note on these apps: This site is for general information and everyday self-care. None of the apps here are a substitute for professional medical or mental-health care, and nothing on this page is intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition. If you're struggling, please speak with a qualified healthcare professional.
In crisis? If you're in crisis or thinking about harming yourself, contact your local emergency services now. In the US and Canada you can call or text 988 to reach a trained counsellor, free and 24/7. You are not alone, and help is available.
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Editor & lead app tester · Reviewed by Caleb Frost, Wellbeing writer & second reviewer

Nadia runs the testing desk here. She lives inside self-care apps for weeks before she will score one — installing them, finishing onboarding, then using them on ordinary days and bad ones. She owns the scorecard and edits every page on the site for accuracy.

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