Hand the job to a person, not a void
The problem with a personal to-do list is that a family celebration isn't a personal project. Tasks lets you assign each job to a specific person — a member of your workspace, or a free-text name like "Mama" for the relatives who aren't in the app — with a due date attached. "Book the dhol players by March" or "Confirm the pandit for the havan" now belongs to someone, has a deadline, and can be nudged with a reminder email when it's getting close. No more assuming someone else has it.
Shared, with roles that make sense
Invite your partner, both sets of parents, your siblings and your planner into the workspace, each with the right level of access — an editor who can change things, or a viewer who can only follow along. Everyone sees the same list, ticks off what they've done, and stays in sync. The days of "I thought you were doing that" are over.
A gentle nudge, not a nag
When a task is assigned to a teammate, they get an in-app notification — and you can send a friendly reminder email in a tap when a deadline's approaching. It's the polite way to chase your father-in-law about the cars without an awkward phone call, and it means the important jobs don't quietly slip because everyone assumed someone else was on it.
What's inside
Built to handle the full job.
Assign to anyone
A workspace member, or a free-text name like "Mama" for family not in the app.
Due dates
Every task can carry a deadline, with overdue flags when it slips.
Email reminders
Nudge the assignee with one tap when a deadline's close.
In-app notifications
Assignees are notified the moment a job lands on them.
Shared workspace
Partner, parents, siblings and planner, all on the same list.
Roles & permissions
Editors change things; viewers follow along. You control who does what.
In real weddings
How couples are using it.
Splitting the load across the family
At a wedding the bride's side handles the Anand Karaj and langar while the groom's side runs the baraat and reception; at a parent's 60th the siblings split the pooja, the catering and the entertainment. You assign tasks to each coordinator with clear deadlines, and everyone can see the whole picture without treading on each other.
Keeping the planner and the parents in sync
Your wedding planner is an editor; your parents are viewers. The planner assigns and updates tasks; the parents follow progress without accidentally changing anything.
Chasing the relative who never checks email
Uncle's on the wedding-cars job but hasn't confirmed. A week before the deadline you tap "remind" and he gets a friendly nudge — no awkward call required.
Frequently asked