Journaling tools, apps & supplies
The Best Free Journaling Apps That Don't Trap You Behind a Paywall
Half the apps marketed as "free" are free until the moment you care — your second device, your export button, your hundredth entry. Here's where the wall actually sits in each one, so you can choose before you've invested a year of your life.
The short version
- Genuinely free, no asterisk: Apple Notes, Google Keep, Diarium (Android), and Obsidian. No entry caps, no ads in the writing space, free export.
- Free but watch the wall: Day One, Journey, Daylio, and Stoic all give you a real free tier, then gate devices, export, or AI behind a subscription.
- The catch is almost always one of four: device limits, ads, locked export, or AI upsells. Find it on the pricing page before you commit.
- Privacy is not free by default. Favor local-first or end-to-end-encrypted apps; scrutinize anything ad-supported.
- Pick an app with free export so your journal stays portable and you're never held hostage by a price change.
On this page
- Truly free vs. "free to start"
- The four catches to watch for
- The best free journaling apps, compared
- App-by-app: where each wall sits
- Are free journaling apps private?
- Why free export is the feature that matters most
- Best free pick on iPhone vs. Android
- How to choose, in under a minute
- Frequently asked questions
The best free journaling apps that are actually free — no subscription, no asterisk — are Apple Notes, Google Keep, Diarium on Android, and Obsidian. Each lets you write unlimited entries, keeps no ads in the writing space, and lets you export your words for nothing. Everything else commonly listed as "free" — Day One, Journey, Daylio, Stoic — is freemium: real on the free tier, then walled off the moment you want a second device, a clean export, or the AI features.
That distinction is the entire point of this guide. A free journaling app with no subscription is easy to find; a free one that still works the way you need it to a year from now is rarer. So instead of a glossy roundup, this is a map of exactly where each app stops being free — because the worst time to discover the wall is after you've poured three hundred entries through it.
Truly free vs. "free to start"
"Free" in the app stores means two very different things, and the gap between them is where people get burned. The honest way to read any journaling app is to ask one question: what happens on the day I want more?
Truly free
A truly free journal lets you do the core thing — write daily, on the device you own, for as long as you like — without ever hitting a "to continue, upgrade" wall. You might pay for a nicety (a theme, a sync service you already use), but the journaling itself is never rationed. Apple Notes, Google Keep, Diarium on Android, and Obsidian all clear this bar.
Free to start (freemium)
A freemium journal is generous on purpose. It hands you a beautiful experience, lets you build a habit and a stack of entries, and then — once leaving would mean abandoning months of writing — introduces the subscription. This isn't villainous; it's how good software gets funded. But you deserve to know the deal going in, which is why every pick below names the wall plainly.
A free trial is not a free tier. "Free for 7 days," "free for your first 10 entries," or "free until you sync a second device" are trials wearing the word free. A free tier never expires and never caps the core act of writing. Check which one you're actually being offered.
The four catches to watch for
Across dozens of apps, the freemium catch is almost always one of four moves. Learn to spot them and you can read any pricing page in thirty seconds.
- The device limit. Write free on one phone — but sync to your iPad or laptop and you hit the paywall. This is the most common wall, and the easiest to miss until you switch devices.
- Ads in the sanctuary. A banner ad between you and your most private thoughts is the price of some "free" diary apps. Beyond the irritation, ad-supported usually means a data-hungry business model.
- The locked export. You can write all you want, but the PDF or backup button is greyed out until you pay. This quietly turns your own words into leverage against you.
- The AI upsell. The free tier journals fine; the reflective prompts, summaries, and "insights" sit behind a subscription. Fine if you only wanted a blank page — frustrating if the AI is why you downloaded it. (If AI reflection is the goal, our guide to journaling with AI covers what's worth paying for and what isn't.)
None of these make an app bad. They just make "free" conditional — and the condition is usually the exact thing you'll want six months in. If you're weighing apps against pen and paper too, our honest picks across every kind of writer sets the digital options next to their analog rivals.
The best free journaling apps, compared
Here's the whole field at a glance. "Truly free" means the core writing experience is never rationed; the "where the wall sits" column is the thing the marketing won't tell you up front.
| App | Platforms | Truly free? | Where the wall sits | Free export? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apple Notes | iPhone, iPad, Mac | Yes | None for journaling; iCloud sync uses your storage | Yes (share / copy out) |
| Google Keep | Android, iOS, web | Yes | None; light on features by design | Yes (Google Takeout) |
| Diarium | Android, Windows (iOS paid) | Yes on Android | iOS version is a one-time purchase | Yes (PDF, HTML, more) |
| Obsidian | iOS, Android, desktop | Yes | Optional paid sync & publish; local use is free | Yes (plain Markdown files) |
| Day One | iOS, Mac (Android limited) | Free tier | One journal, basic features; multi-journal, unlimited media & sync are paid | Export is a paid-tier feature |
| Journey | iOS, Android, web | Free tier | Cloud sync, multiple journals & coach features are paid | Limited free; full export paid |
| Daylio | iOS, Android | Free tier | Mood-first; more moods, backups & stats are paid | Backup/export gated |
| Stoic | iOS, Android | Free tier | Most prompts, insights & themes are paid | Partial free |
The marketing tells you what's free. The pricing page tells you what's free forever.
App-by-app: where each wall sits
Apple Notes — the free private journal app already on your iPhone
If you want a free private journal app on iPhone and you're done shopping, stop here. Apple Notes is free, syncs across your Apple devices through iCloud, and — crucially — lets you lock individual notes with Face ID or a password, which makes it a credible free diary app with a password built in. It has no journaling "features" to speak of, and that's the appeal: a blank, fast, private page with zero friction. The only soft wall is iCloud storage, which your other photos and files already share.
Google Keep — the no-fuss free journaling app on Android
Keep is Apple Notes' counterpart for the rest of us: a free journaling app for Android (and iOS, and the web) with no ads, no entry caps, and instant sync to any device you sign into. It's deliberately minimal — notes, labels, the odd checklist — so it won't satisfy anyone who wants mood graphs or prompts. But for "open phone, type a paragraph, never think about it again," it's hard to beat, and Google Takeout exports everything for free.
Diarium — the most full-featured genuinely free option
Diarium is the surprise of any free roundup: on Android and Windows it's free and remarkably complete — daily entries, photos, location, weather, mood, even auto-imported activity, plus free export to PDF and HTML. The honest asterisk is platform: the iOS version is a paid (one-time, not subscription) app. If you live on Android, this is arguably the best truly free journal app going.
Obsidian — free forever if you don't mind it being a notebook, not a journal
Obsidian stores everything as plain Markdown files on your own device, free for personal use with no entry limits and no ads. Your journal is literally a folder of text files you own outright — the gold standard for portability and privacy. The trade-off is that it's a power-user notes tool, not a purpose-built journal, so a daily-entry habit takes a little setup. The optional paid sync and publish add-ons are exactly that: optional.
Before you commit to any app, make one test entry and immediately try to export it. If the export button is greyed out or asks you to upgrade on day one, you've found the wall — decide now whether you can live with it, not in a year.
Day One — beautiful, generous, and the most likely to make you pay
Day One has the loveliest writing experience on this list, and a real free tier: one journal, basic entries, on a single device. The wall arrives when you want multiple journals, unlimited photos, sync across devices, or export — all of which sit in the paid plan. It's a fair deal for a polished app, but it's freemium, not free, so go in knowing you'll likely upgrade if you fall for it.
Journey — cross-platform, with the cloud behind the wall
Journey is the strongest free journaling app that runs everywhere — iOS, Android, and the web — which is rare. You can write for free, but cloud sync, multiple journals, and the coaching features are the paid tier, and full export is limited on free. If you need one journal across an iPhone and a Windows PC and don't mind a subscription for sync, it's a standout; if "free" is non-negotiable, treat the free tier as a trial of the paid one.
Daylio & Stoic — great free tiers if you want structure over a blank page
Daylio is a mood-and-micro-journal app: tap how you felt, add a line, watch patterns emerge. The free tier is genuinely usable; more moods, backups, and detailed stats are paid. Stoic wraps journaling in daily prompts, reflections, and gentle insights — lovely on the free tier, though most of the prompt library and themes are paid. Both are excellent on-ramps if a blank page intimidates you; if it does, our field guide to the types of journaling methods and the master list of journal prompts will get you unstuck for free in any app.
Are free journaling apps private?
A journal is the most private thing most people will ever write, so "is this free app reading my diary?" is the right question to ask first. The answer varies, and free apps deserve extra scrutiny because some of them monetize attention or data rather than subscriptions.
Three things to check before you trust any free journaling app:
- Where do entries live? Local-first apps (Obsidian, locked Apple Notes) keep your words on your device by default — the strongest privacy posture. If entries sync to a cloud, look for end-to-end encryption, which means even the company can't read them.
- What's the business model? If an app is free and ad-supported, ads are the product and your attention (sometimes your data) is the payment. That's not automatically disqualifying, but it's a reason to read the privacy policy line by line.
- Can you lock it? A free diary app with a password or biometric lock keeps a casual snooper out even if your phone is unlocked. Apple Notes and most dedicated journal apps offer this; bare notes apps may not.
Why free export is the feature that matters most
If you remember one thing from this guide, make it this: choose an app that lets you export your entries for free. Everything else — themes, prompts, mood graphs — is replaceable. Your years of entries are not. The single most painful freemium trap is the one where you've written faithfully for a year, then discover that getting your own words out as a PDF or text file requires a subscription you don't want.
Free, portable export (to plain text, Markdown, or PDF) is your escape hatch. It means you can leave any app the moment it raises prices, gets acquired, or shuts down, and carry every day with you. Obsidian wins this outright (your journal is portable text files); Apple Notes, Google Keep, and Diarium on Android all export for free. Among the freemium picks, export usually sits behind the wall — which is precisely why it belongs in your decision, not your regret.
This is also why some people keep a free digital app for daily speed and a paper notebook for the entries they most want to keep. If you're torn between screen and page, our roundup of the best journals and notebooks covers the analog side, and the best pens for journaling rounds out a setup you'll actually want to reach for.
Best free pick on iPhone vs. Android
The single best free journaling app genuinely depends on the phone in your pocket.
- Best free journal app for iPhone: Apple Notes for most people — it's free, syncs across your Apple devices, and locks individual notes with Face ID, so it doubles as a free private journal app with a password. Want prompts and structure on the free tier? Try Stoic or Day One's free plan, knowing the wall is there.
- Best free journaling app for Android: Diarium, which is free and fully featured on Android with free export. If you want something dead simple, Google Keep is already on your phone and costs nothing.
- Best free pick on any platform: Obsidian, if you're comfortable with a slightly techy setup, because your entries become plain files you own forever.
Whatever you choose, the app is the smaller half of the equation — the habit is the bigger one. If a free app gets you writing today, it has already done its job. For making it stick past week three, how to be consistent with journaling is the companion piece to this one, and a tiny nightly ritual like the end-of-day reflection gives even the most barebones free app something to hold.
How to choose, in under a minute
You don't need to test eight apps. Run this quick triage:
- Want zero decisions and total privacy? Use the locked notes app already on your phone — Apple Notes or Google Keep. Free, private, done.
- Want a real journaling app, fully free, on Android? Diarium.
- Want to own your entries forever as portable files? Obsidian.
- Want beauty or structure and you're okay paying eventually? Day One, Journey, Daylio, or Stoic — start on the free tier, just know where the wall is.
- Don't want to type at all? Talk instead — see the next note.
The honest truth is that the best free journaling app is the one you'll actually open tomorrow. Every option here is good enough; the differences only matter once you've built the habit, which means the real first step is to just start journaling in whatever's nearest.
One more option worth naming, because it sidesteps the typing entirely: journaling by voice. If the blank page (or the tiny phone keyboard) is what stops you, speaking a few sentences about your day is the lowest-friction way in — which is the whole idea behind Fond, the voice journal we're building. It's launching soon, and its core voice capture is free to start: you tap once, say a moment aloud, and it transcribes the entry and quietly keeps the people, places, and days you mention. We mention it plainly, not as a hard sell — if talking is easier than typing for you, it's worth a look, and voice-to-text journaling explains the approach in full.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a completely free journaling app?
Yes — a few are genuinely free for life, not just free trials. Diarium on Android and Obsidian are free with no entry caps, and Apple Notes and Google Keep cost nothing and ship on your phone already. Most other apps you'll see called free are actually freemium: free to start, then paywalled once you want more devices, export, or AI. The trick is to separate truly free apps from freemium ones before you invest months of entries.
What's the catch with free journaling apps?
Usually one of four catches: a device or entry limit that pushes you to pay, ads in the writing space, an export button locked behind the paid tier, or AI features dangled then gated. Spot the catch by checking the pricing page for where the word free stops and the upgrade prompt starts — and favor apps that let you export your entries for free, so you're never locked in.
Are free journaling apps private?
Some are, some aren't. Local-first apps that keep entries on your device, and apps with end-to-end encryption, are the safest. Free apps that run on ads are the ones to scrutinize, because the business model can rely on your data. Before trusting any free app, read its privacy policy for whether entries are encrypted, whether they leave your device, and whether anything is shared with advertisers. A journal is private by nature, so the app should treat it that way.
Can I export my entries if I use a free app?
Not always — and this is the catch that hurts most later. Several popular apps let you write for free but lock PDF, plain-text, or backup export behind the paid tier, so your own words become hostage to a subscription. Choose an app that offers free export to plain text, Markdown, or PDF from day one. Portable entries mean you can leave any app without losing a single day.