The problem was never you. It was the app you had to remember to open. NagMeLater lives in WhatsApp, where your attention already is: text a thought the second you have it, and it nags you back at the exact moment, meds, bills, deadlines and all.
Try it free on WhatsAppA reminder app you forget to open is just another icon. The thought vanishes somewhere between step one and the notification you already swiped away.
Later means never. Without a nudge at the actual moment, "I will do it in a bit" quietly becomes tomorrow, then next week, then never.
Snoozed it five times? Missed the dose again? NagMeLater does not judge. It just keeps nagging, kindly, until the thing is actually done.
Reminders were just the door. Behind it: tasks, notes, briefings and more, all by plain texting. Every card links to a full demo.
The idea and the reminder are the same action: open WhatsApp, type it, done. No app to hunt for, no form, no date picker. "Remind me at 3pm to take my meds" is set the instant it crosses your mind, which for an ADHD brain is the only instant that counts.
Remind me at 3pm to take my medsDopamine loves a visible chain. Reply "done" each time and watch the streak grow: meds, tidying, water, whatever you are building. The number climbing is the reward that keeps an ADHD brain coming back, no willpower required.
habit: take my meds at 8am dailyMorning: what are your top 3 today? It turns them into tasks. Evening: honest checkmarks on what happened, and anything unfinished rolls to tomorrow. It is the external structure ADHD brains run best on, without a human you have to schedule.
daily accountability at 9am and 8pmOverwhelm freezes the ADHD brain: twelve things open, none of them moving. One word and the AI cuts through it, ranking your real top 3 with the reason each one matters right now, so you can just start on one.
prioritizeNo app to check, no calendar to decode. Every morning WhatsApp shows today's reminders, tasks due and streaks running in a single message, on the app you open first anyway. Object permanence, solved by text.
morning briefing at 8amTasks without a clock live on your list until they are done: "todo email the school back" sits there, resurfaces in your briefing, and checks off with "done 1". No separate app to forget about, because it is all the same chat.
todo email the school backEvery other reminder app asks your executive function to do the one thing it struggles with. Here is where they break, and how a WhatsApp nag sidesteps each one.
Object permanence is not an ADHD strength. A reminder app you never open cannot remind you of anything. NagMeLater lives in WhatsApp, already open on your screen fifty times a day.
Setting a reminder for "later" assumes you feel time passing. ADHD brains often do not. NagMeLater fires at the exact minute and buzzes WhatsApp, so the moment cannot quietly slip by.
Open app, tap new, pick a date, pick a time, save. The thought is gone by step two. With NagMeLater the thought and the reminder are a single sentence you already know how to type.
Most apps pile up red badges that make you feel worse, so you stop opening them. NagMeLater has no badges and no judgment. It just keeps nudging, gently, until the task is done.
Tap any of them, WhatsApp opens with the message already typed.
Never, and that is the whole point. NagMeLater keeps nagging on your terms: reply "snooze 30" to push it half an hour, as many times as you need. There is no streak to break and no guilt trip, just a nudge that comes back until the thing is genuinely done.
"Remind me every day at 7:30am to take my meds" repeats forever, and you can add as many doses as you like. Turn it into a habit with "habit: take my meds at 8am daily" and reply "done" to build a visible streak, which is often the difference between remembering and forgetting.
Because you never have to remember to open it. Your ADHD brain already checks WhatsApp all day, so the nag lands where your attention already is. There is no separate app to launch, no interface to navigate, and no thought lost between opening the app and typing it in.
The first 5 reminders are free with no card and no signup, and the to-do list is free and unlimited forever. After that it is $1.99 a month or a one-time $59 lifetime deal. You text it in plain English, Hindi or Hinglish and it replies in seconds.
Reminders, to-dos, notes, briefings and more. It takes ten seconds, the first five nags are free, and there is nothing to install or learn.
Nag me on WhatsApp