Guides · Comparison
Best Baby Tracker App 2026: 12 Apps Compared, Including Ours
If you searched for the best baby tracker app in 2026, you've probably already found a very similar-looking article — ranking eleven apps, written by one of those apps, with itself in first place. We're not going to pretend that's a coincidence, and we're not going to do the same thing to you. This is a comparison of the same competitive field, with Bebblo — the app we make — added as a twelfth, clearly disclosed entry. Real pricing, real strengths, and real weaknesses on every single one, ours included.
Researched July 2026 · 12 apps comparedHow we built this list
The article currently ranking first for this exact search is published by Pebbi — one of the apps it reviews — and, unsurprisingly, it ranks Pebbi first. That's not really a criticism; a lot of comparison content works this way, including, arguably, some of ours. But you should know it before trusting any "best of" list, including this one.
Here's what we actually did: we took the same eleven apps covered in that article, cross-checked them against three more independent roundups — SlashGear, Betteroo, and SayKiri (two of which also turned out to be published by one of the apps they cover) — and then verified what we could directly against each app's own App Store or Google Play listing. Where sources disagreed on a price or a claim, including a couple of cases where an app's own two store listings disagreed with each other, we say so below instead of quietly picking whichever number sounds best. Then we added Bebblo, clearly marked, as the twelfth entry.
Full disclosure: we make Bebblo. Read our own entry near the bottom with that in mind, and hold it to the same bar as everyone else's.
All 12 apps at a glance
| App | Best known for | Free tier |
|---|---|---|
| Huckleberry | Sleep predictions (SweetSpot) | Yes, limited |
| Glow Baby | Breastfeeding & community | Yes, ad-supported |
| Baby Connect | Medical-grade detail | Trial only |
| Baby Tracker (Nighp) | Long-established, free-first | Yes, ad-supported |
| Pebbi | Shared care & co-parenting | Yes, full offline |
| Nara Baby | Fully free tracking | Yes, no ads found |
| Baby Daybook | Deep logging, ~40 languages | Yes, limited |
| Napper | Sleep sounds & monitor | Yes, ad-supported |
| Wonder Weeks | Developmental leaps (not a tracker) | No |
| Talli Baby | Physical tracking buttons | App free with hardware |
| ParentLove | Breastfeeding + shared care | Yes, generous |
| Bebblo | Offline-first, 14 languages | Yes, 7-day history |
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Download free →The 12 apps, one by one
Strengths
- SweetSpot nap/sleep-window predictions — the single most-praised feature across every source we checked
- Detailed breastfeeding timer (side, duration)
- Clean, well-reviewed interface
Weaknesses
- Sleep is the focus; feeding, diapers and growth are secondary
- Requires an account and internet connection — no full offline mode
- Limited language support outside English
Verdict: if sleep prediction is the one feature you actually want, Huckleberry earns its reputation. You're paying a premium subscription for that one thing.
Strengths
- Detailed nursing and pumping logs, including milk storage
- Active in-app community with dozens of interest groups
- Growth-percentile tracking, syncs with Glow's pregnancy app
Weaknesses
- Uses US CDC growth charts, not the WHO international standard
- Ads on the free tier; no offline mode
- Community features mean more activity is visible to others than a private journal
Verdict: strong if breastfeeding detail and a peer community matter to you. Weaker on privacy and growth-chart choice for anyone outside the US.
Strengths
- Genuinely comprehensive: medications and dose timing, symptoms, temperatures, growth percentiles to the millilitre
- Custom fields and PDF export built for a pediatrician visit; also available as a web app, unlike most on this list
- Established since around 2009; built-in twins/multiples support
Weaknesses
- Interface reads as dense and dated next to newer apps
- Pricing is confusing enough that we'd want an answer from support before subscribing
Verdict: the closest thing here to a medical chart rather than a journal. Worth it if you need that level of detail — just get the actual current price in writing first.
Strengths
- One of the longest-running apps in this category — 227K+ App Store ratings at 4.8 stars
- WHO-standard growth charts; home-screen widgets for fast logging
- Broad sleep, feeding, diaper and growth coverage, even on the free tier
Weaknesses
- Ads interrupt logging on the free tier
- Multi-device sync via iCloud/Dropbox — some users report sync issues after several weeks of use
- App Store lists "14 languages" without naming the other 13, so Romanian support is unconfirmed either way
Verdict: a reasonable, well-reviewed free starting point if ads don't bother you.
Strengths
- Genuinely full offline mode
- Each caregiver gets an independent account rather than a shared login
- No ads and, by its own stated policy, no data resale
Weaknesses
- No community or forum features (a stated privacy tradeoff)
- Sleep predictions are pattern-based, not the deeper analysis Huckleberry offers, by its own admission
- Its own "best baby tracker apps" article ranks itself first and doesn't mention Bebblo — which is why this page exists
Verdict: a solid, privacy-conscious app for co-parenting specifically. Worth reading its own comparison content with the same skepticism you're reading ours.
Strengths
- Strong medication-dose tracking with reminders, useful with multiple caregivers
- Symptom diary with photo documentation; built-in twins/triplets support
- Includes a postpartum health profile for the parent, not just the baby
Weaknesses
- English only — no Romanian or other localized interface
- Feature set outside medication tracking is narrower than comprehensive apps like Baby Connect
- Affiliated with a baby-formula brand — worth knowing if that matters to you
Verdict: hard to beat on price — genuinely free — and good at the one thing it focuses on most: medication.
Strengths
- Unusually broad localization — around 40 languages including Romanian, the only other app on this list where we could confirm that
- WHO-standard growth charts; over 20 trackable activity types
- PDF export, Siri Shortcuts, widgets, real-time family sync; 2M+ users by its own count
Weaknesses
- Analytics and insights are thinner than apps built around a dedicated sleep forecast
- No sleep prediction or coaching
- Full history and feature set require the paid tier
Verdict: genuinely strong on both logging depth and localization — the app on this list closest to Bebblo on language coverage.
Strengths
- Ambient sleep sounds and a sound monitor built into the app
- Similar wake-window guidance
Weaknesses
- Sleep-only — no feeding, diaper or growth logging, so you'll likely need a second app alongside it
- Ads on the free tier; most useful features sit behind the paywall
Verdict: makes sense if you specifically want Huckleberry-style sleep guidance and don't mind running two apps.
Strengths
- Long-standing framework for the "mental leaps" behind fussy phases in the first 20 months
- Useful as a companion to an actual tracker, not a replacement for one; available in 16 languages
Weaknesses
- Not a tracker at all — no sleep, feeding, diaper, or growth-chart logging
- The underlying leap theory is explicitly debated among pediatricians — both SlashGear and Pebbi's own review raise this
- Real risk of becoming a self-fulfilling expectation of fussiness
Verdict: included because every roundup we checked includes it, but it's solving a different problem than the other eleven apps here — and isn't directly comparable to them.
Strengths
- One-press physical logging without touching your phone
- Voice logging through Alexa integration
Weaknesses
- Added upfront hardware cost
- Buttons only track what they're configured for, and stay at home
- Some vendor lock-in once you've bought the hardware
Verdict: a clever answer to a real problem — phone-free logging — for the parent willing to pay for a physical gadget.
Strengths
- Designed with input from an IBCLC-certified lactation consultant
- Dedicated Pump Log and frozen-milk-inventory feature
- States clearly it doesn't sell user data; encryption in transit and at rest; no subscription trap since add-ons are one-time
Weaknesses
- English only — no Romanian or other localized interface confirmed
- Smaller, newer community than Huckleberry or Baby Connect
- À la carte pricing can add up fast if you want several modules
Verdict: one of the more thoughtfully built apps here for breastfeeding families who also need multi-caregiver sharing — just newer and less proven than the bigger names.
Strengths
- Full offline mode, no account required to start — local-first, not "works offline sometimes"
- 14 languages including Romanian — a rarity in this category; of the eleven apps above, only Baby Daybook also confirmed Romanian support in our research
- Optional cloud backup on EU servers under GDPR with client-side encryption
- WHO international growth charts; built-in regressions tracker and sleep forecast
Weaknesses, honestly
- Smaller and newer than Huckleberry or Glow Baby
- No years of SweetSpot-style prediction data or Huckleberry's brand recognition for sleep specifically
- No community features, by design — some parents will miss that
- Android support is newer than iOS, with a shorter track record
Verdict: we built Bebblo because we wanted a journal that worked fully offline, in our own language, without our child's data leaving Europe. If that matches your priorities, Bebblo may fit that use case. For dedicated sleep coaching or an active parent community, compare Huckleberry or Glow Baby's current offerings before choosing.
Other names you'll see mentioned
A few more apps come up across these roundups and our own research that didn't make our twelve but are worth knowing about. The CDC's own Milestone Tracker is free and tracks developmental milestones only, not daily logging — a supplement, not a replacement. What To Expect's Pregnancy & Baby Tracker bundles tracking into a much broader pregnancy-and-parenting app. Cubtale wraps logging in an illustrated, character-driven interface and also sells companion hardware. Robin Baby & Newborn Tracker is a newer entrant built around an AI assistant on top of standard logging, currently in English, French and German only. And a further category — AI-driven sleep-coaching apps like Betteroo and Kiri — position themselves less as loggers and more as guided coaching programs. If daily logging is what you actually need, they're solving an adjacent problem.
How to actually choose
There's no single best baby tracker app — the right one depends on what you're optimizing for.
- If sleep prediction is the one feature that matters most, Huckleberry has the strongest reputation for it, and you'll pay a premium subscription for the privilege.
- If you're sharing care with a partner, co-parent, or nanny and want everyone on their own login rather than one shared account, look at Pebbi, ParentLove, or Bebblo.
- If you want the most comprehensive medical record to hand a pediatrician, Baby Connect goes deeper than anything else here — just confirm the real price first.
- If price is the deciding factor, Nara Baby is genuinely free with no catch we could find, and Bebblo's core journal is free with a 7-day rolling history.
- If offline reliability and where your data lives matter — hospital Wi-Fi, spotty signal, or just not wanting a US company holding your child's health records — Pebbi and Bebblo are the two apps here with clearly documented offline modes; Bebblo is the only one that also stores optional cloud backups on EU servers.
- If you want the interface in Romanian specifically, your options are narrow: Baby Daybook and Bebblo are the only two we could confirm. Most of the rest are English-only.
Our honest advice regardless of which app you pick: try it for three or four days before assuming it's the one. Every parent's actual workflow at 3am is a little different from what looked good in the App Store screenshots.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best baby tracker app in 2026?
It depends on what you need most. Huckleberry leads on sleep prediction, Baby Connect on medical detail, Nara Baby on price, and Pebbi and Bebblo on full offline privacy. We make Bebblo, for what that's worth — but the honest answer is that "best" depends on your specific situation.
Is there a truly free baby tracker app?
Yes, more than one. Nara Baby is free with no premium tier or ads that we could find. Bebblo's core daily journal — sleep, feeding, diapers, health, growth and milestones — is also free, with a 7-day rolling history; unlocking unlimited history and WHO growth charts requires Bebblo Plus.
Which baby tracker apps work fully offline?
Of the twelve apps in this comparison, Pebbi and Bebblo both advertise full offline mode with no account required. Most of the others, including Huckleberry and Glow Baby, require an account and an internet connection to sync.
Which app has the best sleep predictions?
Huckleberry's SweetSpot feature has the strongest reputation for sleep-window prediction across every source we checked, typically after about two weeks of consistent logging. It's a paid feature.
Which baby tracker apps support Romanian?
Of the eleven other apps compared here, we could only confirm Romanian support for Baby Daybook, which lists around 40 languages. Most of the rest are English-only or cover a small set of Western European languages. Bebblo supports 14 languages including Romanian.
Does this list include Bebblo because Bebblo makes it?
Yes, and we're upfront about that. Bebblo is one of the twelve apps compared here, clearly marked, with honest strengths and weaknesses like every other entry. We built this comparison because the article currently ranking first for this search doesn't mention Bebblo at all, despite covering eleven other apps in the same category.
Are the prices in this comparison exact?
Where we found consistent pricing across multiple sources, we've stated it directly. Where sources disagreed, including cases where an app's own App Store and Google Play listings gave different numbers, we've said so rather than picking one. Always check an app's current store listing before subscribing.
Related guides
Head-to-head comparisons:
Try the app we're honest about
Bebblo's core journal is free, works fully offline, and comes in 14 languages. No account required to start.
Core tracking is free. No account required.
This comparison reflects publicly available information gathered from each app's official App Store and Google Play listings, official websites, and independently published roundups (SlashGear, Betteroo, SayKiri, and Pebbi's own comparison content), current as of July 2026. Pricing and features change, and in a few cases even a single app's own store listings disagreed with each other — always confirm on the app's current listing before subscribing. App names are trademarks of their respective owners. Bebblo is made by FainTech Solutions. This is not medical advice.