BabyLog vs Baby Daybook: Mainstream Tracker vs Low-Effort Australian-First
A fair side-by-side comparison of BabyLog and Baby Daybook — daily logging effort, reviewing the day, caregiver sharing, offline use, data export and multilingual support — for Australian parents picking between them.

Baby Daybook is a long-running mainstream baby tracker with a familiar native-app feel. BabyLog is an Australian-first tracker built around typeless, low-effort daily logging and a generous free tier. The right answer depends on what your household actually needs day to day.
This is a fair overview, not a takedown. Where we couldn't verify a Baby Daybook claim with confidence, we've left it out or softened the wording.
At a glance
| Baby Daybook | BabyLog | |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Mainstream general baby tracking | Australian-first, low-effort everyday logging |
| Daily logging style | Mature broad tracker; mainstream native-app feel | Routine logs often save in two taps; sensible defaults handle time and amount |
| Reviewing the day | Statistics and summaries (some on paid tier) | Colour-coded timeline, calendar with type filters, summaries and compare views |
| Sharing | Caregiver sharing supported | Owner / Editor / Viewer roles, locale-aware caregiver invite links |
| Offline use | Limited / depends on version | Local-first — logs save on device, sync when connected |
| Data export | Available, often on paid tier | Free CSV import and export |
| Languages | Multiple languages, primarily English-led | Six languages; RTL-aware layout for Arabic in supported areas |
| Australian feel | Global product | Australian-first wording, pricing and positioning |
What Baby Daybook is best for
Baby Daybook is a solid, established baby tracker. The interface is cleaner than some older trackers, the feature set is broad, and it's a familiar choice for parents who want a mainstream native app.
If you want a tried-and-tested general tracker and you're comfortable with the price/feature split, it's a reasonable shortlist option.
What BabyLog is best for
BabyLog's edge is more specific: lower-effort daily logging and scannable review, paired with an Australian-first free tier and stronger data ownership messaging.
Routine logs often save in two taps because the app starts with sensible defaults — current time, a recent typical amount, optional notes — and only asks for changes when reality is different. Fast by default, adjustable when needed. Each activity has its own colour, so feeds, sleep, nappies and solids are easy to scan in the timeline and calendar without reading every entry.
Daily logging effort
- Baby Daybook: mainstream and capable; statistics often live in a separate area from daily logging.
- BabyLog: all 11 everyday log types start from sensible defaults; left-hand and right-hand modes keep controls close to your thumb for one-handed logging.
Reviewing the day
- Baby Daybook: statistics available, with deeper reports often on a paid tier.
- BabyLog: colour-coded timeline groups logs by day and activity; calendar view filters to one type (sleep only) or a few (feed + sleep) to see the rhythm without spreadsheets. Daily/weekly summaries and a compare page sit beside the logs.
Sharing with partners and caregivers
Both apps support sharing with caregivers.
BabyLog uses three roles — Owner, Editor, Viewer — and you can send a locale-aware caregiver invite link so a Mandarin-, Vietnamese-, Hindi- or Arabic-speaking grandparent can use the whole app in their language. See sharing baby tracking with your partner for the day-to-day flow.
Offline use and data ownership
- Baby Daybook: offline behaviour and export availability depend on the version and plan.
- BabyLog: local-first — logs save on device first and sync when connected. Full CSV import and export is part of the free product, so families can keep ownership of their log history.
Multilingual support
BabyLog is available in English, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, Vietnamese, Hindi and Arabic, with RTL-aware layout for Arabic in supported areas. In a multicultural Australian household, that often decides whether everyone actually keeps logging.
Pricing and plans
- Baby Daybook: free tier with optional subscription for advanced features; check current pricing.
- BabyLog: free tier covers all 11 everyday log types, caregiver sharing, offline-capable logging, summaries, growth charts (WHO percentiles), CSV import/export and Ask AI context sharing. Pro is A$8/month or A$64/year and adds full-history summaries and calendar, milestones, period comparisons, push reminders, multiple editable babies and future premium features.
Who should pick which?
- Pick Baby Daybook if you want a familiar mainstream tracker and you're happy with its current free/paid split.
- Pick BabyLog if you want lower-effort daily logging, colour-coded scanning, free CSV export, caregiver sharing with role control, offline-capable use, multilingual support and Australian-first positioning. Start with BabyLog or check the pricing page.
A note on safety
Baby tracking apps can help families record routines and notice patterns, but they do not replace advice from a GP, child and family health nurse, paediatrician, lactation consultant, or emergency service. If you are worried about your baby's health, seek professional care. In Australia, for emergencies call triple zero (000).
A note on bias
We built BabyLog, so we are not impartial. We've tried to be fair to Baby Daybook: where we couldn't verify a claim with confidence, we've left it out or softened the wording. If Baby Daybook suits your family better, use it.
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Ready to start tracking?
BabyLog works on any device — iPhone, Android, tablet, or desktop. Set up takes two minutes.