Templates

Atomic Habits Scorecard — Free Template & How to Use It

May 15, 2026Updated May 15, 20264 min read
SelfSpark Editorial Team
SelfSpark Editorial Team

Product and habit systems research

Use the Atomic Habits Scorecard to become aware of your daily habits. A free, printable template and a step-by-step guide to scoring your habits good, bad, or neutral.

Atomic Habits Scorecard — Free Template & How to Use It

The Atomic Habits Scorecard is a simple exercise from James Clear's Atomic Habits: you list your daily habits and mark each one + (good), – (bad), or = (neutral) based on whether it serves your long-term goals. The point isn't to judge yourself — it's to make automatic behaviours visible, because you can't change a habit you haven't noticed. Here's how to do it, with a free template.

How to make a habits scorecard

  1. List your daily habits in order. Walk through a normal day from waking to sleeping and write down every habit — wake up, check phone, make coffee, shower, commute, and so on. Aim for 15–30 lines.
  2. Score each one. Next to each habit write:
    • + if it's a good habit (helps your goals / future self)
    • if it's a bad habit (works against them)
    • = if it's neutral
  3. Score by outcome, not morality. "Eat toast for breakfast" might be = for one person and for another. Ask: does this help me become the type of person I want to be?
  4. Don't try to change anything yet. The first goal is pure awareness. Just notice.
  5. Pick one habit to act on. Choose one to shrink or one + to grow, and track it.

Get the free scorecard template

You can run the scorecard on any sheet of paper, but a ready grid makes it faster:

Why the scorecard works

Most of our daily behaviour is automatic, which is why bad habits hide in plain sight. The Habits Scorecard forces you to slow down and name each one. As Clear puts it, the process of behaviour change always starts with awareness. Once a habit is on the page with a next to it, you can decide to make it harder to do; once a + is visible, you can decide to make it easier and more frequent.

What to do after scoring

Awareness is step one. The harder part is acting on it consistently — and that's where most people stall. After you pick one habit to change:

  • Make good habits obvious and easy — shrink them to a version you can do on a bad day.
  • Make bad habits harder — add friction (log out, move the snack, leave the phone in another room).
  • Plan for the miss. Decide the smaller version in advance so a bad day doesn't end the habit.

SelfSpark turns that last step into a system: it's an adaptive habit tracker that suggests a smaller next step on low-energy days, keeps progress visible after a miss, and uses short notes to show why a habit slipped. Take the habit fit quiz to turn your scorecard into a routine that sticks. For more, see habits to track and habit tracker ideas.

FAQ

What is the Atomic Habits Scorecard?

It's an exercise from James Clear's Atomic Habits where you list your daily habits and mark each one good (+), bad (–), or neutral (=) to build awareness of your automatic behaviour before trying to change it.

How do you score a habit as good, bad, or neutral?

Score by long-term outcome, not morality: a habit is good if it moves you toward the person you want to become, bad if it works against that, and neutral if it has little effect. The same habit can be scored differently by different people.

What do you do after the habits scorecard?

Pick one habit to act on — shrink a bad one by adding friction or grow a good one by making it easier — and track it. Plan a smaller version for hard days so a single miss doesn't end it.

Is there a free Atomic Habits Scorecard template?

Yes. You can use the free printable habit tracker PDFs or copy the Google Sheets template and add a column for your +, –, = scores.

Bottom line

The Atomic Habits Scorecard makes invisible habits visible — list them, score them, and pick one to change. When you're ready to act on it with a tracker that adapts to real life, try SelfSpark.

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.

Start with the habit fit quiz