Comparisons
HabitBull Alternative — Apps Like HabitBull (2026)
Founder of SelfSpark · 15 years exploring self-help & personal growth
Looking for a HabitBull alternative? I used HabitBull until the streak broke and I quit. Here are the best alternatives — including adaptive ones built for missed days.
HabitBull was, for a while, the most impressive number on my phone: a 40-something-day streak I was quietly, ridiculously proud of. Then I traveled, missed two days, watched the counter reset to zero, and — I'm not exaggerating — just stopped opening the app. One broken streak ended weeks of real progress, not because the habit died but because the scoreboard did. If you've felt that specific deflation, you're in the right place.
The short version: HabitBull is a solid classic tracker; the best alternative for most people is one that doesn't punish a missed day. Here's the comparison.
What is HabitBull?
HabitBull is a long-running, straightforward habit tracker for iOS and Android. You track daily habits, build streaks, see calendars and graphs, and there's a motivational-quotes community. It's free with a cap on habits and a paid upgrade to remove it.
Why look for a HabitBull alternative?
- A broken streak wipes your motivation (the reset-to-zero problem).
- You've hit the free habit limit.
- You want adaptive targets and recovery, not just a counter.
- You'd like a fresher interface and journaling.
A streak counter measures the wrong thing
Streaks are motivating right up until they aren't. Here's the reframe that finally helped me: a 2009 study by Phillippa Lally at University College London found habits take a median of 66 days to become automatic, with people ranging from 18 to 254 days. On that timescale, a streak that resets to zero after one trip is measuring the wrong thing entirely. What matters is whether you came back — not whether the chain stayed unbroken.
Best HabitBull alternative for missed days: SelfSpark
SelfSpark is built for exactly the moment HabitBull lost me. It's an adaptive habit tracker that keeps your overall progress visible after a miss (no soul-crushing reset), suggests a smaller version of the habit on hard days, and uses a quick note to show why you slipped. Available on Android and web. Best for: anyone who's ever quit over a broken streak. Take the habit fit quiz.
Other apps like HabitBull
- Loop Habit Tracker — free, open-source, with a smarter streak score (Android). See Loop alternatives.
- HabitKit — visual tile-grid progress. See HabitKit alternatives.
- Goalify — goals, habits, and challenges. See Goalify alternatives.
For the wider field, see the best habit tracker apps.
FAQ
What is the best alternative to HabitBull?
For recovery after missed days, SelfSpark; for free and open-source on Android, Loop; for visual progress, HabitKit. Choose based on whether broken streaks tend to make you quit.
Is there a HabitBull alternative without a habit limit?
Yes. Loop is free and unlimited on Android, and apps like SelfSpark offer free tiers with different trade-offs from HabitBull's capped free plan.
What habit tracker is best if a broken streak makes me quit?
An adaptive tracker like SelfSpark, which keeps progress visible after a miss and lets a smaller effort still count, rather than resetting a streak to zero.
Bottom line
HabitBull is a perfectly good counter, and if a streak fires you up, keep it. But if you've ever let weeks of progress evaporate because a number hit zero, switch to a tracker that values your return. Start with the habit fit quiz.
How to turn this guide into a habit plan
Read the article once for the idea, then choose one action small enough to do on a busy day. SelfSpark works best when a habit has a full version, a reduced version, and a recovery version. The full version is what you do on a normal day. The reduced version is the smallest useful action when energy is low. The recovery version is what gets you moving again after a missed day without treating the miss as failure.
If this article compares tools, use it to decide what support you need before you pick an app. If it explains a template or habit method, write down the exact trigger, the minimum action, and how you will restart after an interruption. A good habit system should make the next step obvious when you are tired, distracted, traveling, or already behind.
SelfSpark is designed around that kind of recovery-friendly tracking. The quiz helps you choose a first plan, the tracker keeps progress visible, and short journal notes help you learn why a habit slipped so the next plan can adapt instead of becoming another rigid streak.
For the next seven days, treat the habit as an experiment. Keep the target small, write down what made it easier or harder, and adjust the plan based on what actually happened. That feedback loop is usually more useful than a perfect schedule you only follow once.