Create your own free printable reward chart in seconds

A simple way to bring a bit more structure into everyday family life.

This is a printable chore chart you can customize with your own tasks, your own kids, and your own rhythm. Nothing complicated. Just something that works.

You can use it as a kids chore chart, a family chore chart, or even a simple reward chart if that’s what fits your home better.

How it works

  1. Add your kids
  2. Add a few simple tasks
  3. Generate your chart
  4. Print it and put it somewhere visible

That’s it. Add the stickers or use a pen.

No setup. No accounts. Just a printable you can start using today.

A simple chore chart that fits your family

Most families don’t need a complicated system to get started. They just need something visible.

Something that makes it easier to answer:

  • “What needs to be done?”
  • “Who’s doing what?”
  • “Did we actually get there today?”

That’s what this is.

A clean, flexible chore list template you can print and put somewhere central. The fridge, the hallway, wherever life happens.

Why printable chore charts still work

There’s a reason people keep searching for things like “free printable chore chart” or “reward chart for kids”.

Because they do work. They make responsibilities visible. They reduce the need for constant reminders.

And they give kids a small sense of progress when something gets checked off. It’s simple. But that’s often the point.

Make it your own

You can use this as:

  • a kids chore chart for daily routines
  • a family chore chart with shared responsibilities
  • a reward chart to track progress over time
  • or just a simple weekly overview

There’s no one right way to use it.

A small step that can turn into something bigger

For some families, a printable chore chart is enough.

For others, it becomes clear after a while that they want:

  • progress that’s always visible
  • something kids can interact with directly
  • a way to connect chores to goals or rewards

That’s where digital tools can help.

We build Tasks ’n Chores, if you ever want to take that step. But you don’t have to start there.

Start simple

Print it. Try it. Adjust it.

That’s usually how the best systems begin.