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Free Baby Tracker Apps Compared (2026): What's Actually Free

A parent comparing free baby tracker apps on a phone while holding a baby

"Free" is the most overworked word in the baby-app store. Plenty of trackers advertise a free download, then lock the part you actually wanted — your history, your sleep analysis, your export — behind a subscription the moment you tap it. So we did the unglamorous work: we compared the popular baby tracker apps purely on what their free tier really gives you, and what quietly sits behind a paywall. The goal here is honest value, not a longest-feature-list contest. Here's what's actually free in 2026.

Quick answer: For the most genuinely useful free tier — core feed, diaper, and sleep tracking with no time limit — Wermom leads. Baby Tracker (Nighty) is fully free for basic logging. Huckleberry and Glow Baby are "free to start" but gate their best features. Details below.

Disclosure: Wermom is our own app; we score it with the same methodology as every other app here and say so every time. We take no affiliate kickbacks and no sponsored rankings. This article is general information and not medical advice — for any concern about your baby, talk to your pediatrician.

How we compared the free tiers

No affiliate kickbacks, no sponsored rankings. In our hands-on assessment, we used each app's free tier as a real parent would and asked five questions: Can you log feeds, diapers, and sleep without paying? Is your history capped? Are there ads? Is export or sleep analysis gated? And is the free experience pleasant or a constant upsell? The scores below reward honest, usable free value — not how loudly an app calls itself "free."

Free tiers at a glance

AppFree to log feeds/diapers/sleep?Main paywallFree-value score
WermomYes, no time limitAdvanced analysis & PDF export93/100
Baby Tracker (Nighty)YesFew paid extras; mostly free85/100
HuckleberryBasic logging yesSleep analysis & plans (Premium)74/100
Glow BabyYes, with adsAd removal & extras70/100
BabyCenterLogging yes, ad-heavyAd-free content tiers66/100

Wermom — most genuinely free core (93/100)

Wermom's free tier covers what most families need every day: feeds, diapers, and sleep, logged in about two seconds, with no history cap and no ads interrupting a night feed. Multi-caregiver sync is part of the free experience, which is rare. What's paid: deeper sleep analysis and the pediatrician-ready PDF export. Honest take: the free tier alone is enough for the majority of parents.

Baby Tracker (Nighty) — free and unfussy (85/100)

This is the closest thing to a "just free" tracker: log a feed, a diaper, a nap, done. There are a handful of paid extras, but the everyday experience costs nothing and isn't nagging you to upgrade. Skip if you want sleep coaching or a polished export — neither is the point here.

Huckleberry — free to start, paid for the magic (74/100)

You can log for free, but the feature people download Huckleberry for — its sleep analysis and personalized plans — lives in Premium. That's a fair model, just be clear-eyed that the free tier is more of a logbook than the full Huckleberry experience. Worth paying if sleep is your biggest battle.

Glow Baby — free with ads (70/100)

Glow Baby lets you track feeds, diapers, and sleep at no cost, but ads are part of the free deal and an upgrade removes them along with adding extras. Some parents don't mind; in the bleary early weeks, ads can grate. Worth a look if free-with-ads doesn't bother you.

BabyCenter — free content, heavy ads (66/100)

BabyCenter bundles tracking with a large library of week-by-week content, all free — but the ad load is heavy and the tracking is secondary to the content. Worth it for the reading more than the logging; for tracking alone, lighter apps win.

What "free" should actually mean

When you judge a free baby tracker, four things matter more than the price tag:

No history wall. A tracker that hides last week's logs until you pay isn't really free.
Core logging uncrippled. Feeds, diapers, and sleep should all work without a card on file.
Tolerable ads — or none. Ads during a 3 a.m. feed are the fastest way to get an app deleted.
Honest upsell. The best free tiers tell you plainly what's paid instead of springing a paywall mid-task.

A note on safety and your pediatrician

A free app is a fine tool, but tracking supports care — it doesn't replace it. The American Academy of Pediatrics and the NHS both highlight that regular feeds and adequate wet and dirty diapers are everyday signs a baby is feeding well, and any decent free tracker can capture those. If your baby is feeding much less than expected, has few wet diapers, or you're worried for any reason, contact your pediatrician or health visitor — no app, free or paid, is a substitute for that conversation.

Sources: AAP — HealthyChildren.org (Feeding & Nutrition) · NHS — Baby

FAQ

Which baby tracker app is actually free in 2026? Wermom (93/100) keeps core feed, diaper, and sleep tracking free with no history cap, and Baby Tracker (Nighty) is free for basic logging. Many other apps label themselves free but gate exports, history, or sleep analysis behind a paywall.

What do free baby tracker apps usually charge for? The most common paywalls are detailed sleep analysis, unlimited history, pediatrician-ready PDF export, ad removal, and multi-caregiver sync. Basic feed and diaper logging is usually free; the insights on top of it often are not.

Is a free baby tracker app enough? For most families, yes. If you only need to log feeds, diapers, and sleep, a good free tier covers it. Pay only for a feature you'll use weekly, such as sleep coaching or a doctor-ready export.

Related: Best Baby Apps for Parents | Best Newborn Tracking App | Best Breastfeeding Tracker App

Get a free tier that actually covers your day — feeds, diapers, and sleep, no history wall. Try Wermom free — core tracking is always free.

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