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Kibun vs Daylio: An Honest Comparison (2026)

Kibun6 min read

Quick answer

Daylio is the faster, more established micro-diary: two taps, activity icons, years of polish. Kibun keeps the fast logging but goes deeper on analysis: twelve named moods instead of a 5-level scale, habit × mood correlations, life-event impact, a resilience score, and AI weekly reports — with notes analyzed on-device. Pick Daylio for maximal simplicity; pick Kibun to understand *why* your mood moves.

The short version

Both apps solve the same first problem — logging how you feel without writing an essay — and they solve it the same way: tap, done, seconds. The difference is what happens after the tap. Daylio's center of gravity is the log itself (moods + activity icons, streaks, Year in Pixels). Kibun's center of gravity is the analysis layer: what your moods correlate with, how fast you bounce back, and what a given life event actually did to you.

We build Kibun, so read this knowing the bias — but the comparison below is factual, and we'll tell you plainly where Daylio is the better choice.

Feature comparison

KibunDaylio
Logging speed~10 seconds, tap-based~5 seconds, tap-based — the benchmark
Mood vocabulary12 named moods in 4 color families (+ custom with Pro)5-level mood scale (customizable labels/emojis)
Activities / habitsHabit tracking with boolean or 1–5 scaleActivity icons per entry — huge icon library
Habit × mood analysisAutomatic correlations with strength (Pro)Activity counts and averages per mood
Life eventsTagged events with impact analysis (Pro)Via activities/notes
Resilience metric0–100 bounce-back score (Pro)Not offered
AI reportsWeekly / monthly narratives; notes analyzed on-device (Pro)Not offered
Year at a glanceMood calendar heatmap (free), Year in Mood recap (Pro)Year in Pixels (a Daylio signature)
Account requirementNone — anonymous-firstNone — local storage with optional backups
PlatformsAndroid (iOS coming soon)Android and iOS
Free tierUnlimited check-ins, reminders, 7-day history, on-device sentimentGenerous free tier with ads-free premium upgrade

Where Daylio wins

Honesty first:

  • You want iOS today. Daylio has mature apps on both platforms; Kibun is Android-first with iOS on the roadmap.
  • Maximal simplicity. If a 5-point scale plus activity icons is all you want, Daylio is the most polished version of exactly that, refined over nearly a decade.
  • Activity icon breadth. Daylio's icon library for logging what you did is the largest in the category.
  • Years of your history already in it. Switching costs are real; if Daylio works for you, the data you've accumulated is worth a lot.

Where Kibun wins

  • Emotional precision. A 1–5 scale can't distinguish lonely from bored from melancholy — three states that call for completely different responses. Kibun's twelve named moods are built on the affect-labeling research: naming the feeling precisely is itself regulating.
  • Answers, not just records. Kibun computes habit × mood correlations — with strength, so you know if "exercise helps me" is a real signal. Our guide on habits that affect mood shows why this math is hard to eyeball.
  • The resilience score. How fast you recover from difficult moods, tracked over weeks. No other mainstream tracker offers an equivalent metric.
  • AI reports with a privacy floor. Weekly and monthly narrative reports are generated from anonymized signals only — raw note text never leaves your device; sentiment is computed locally by a bundled model.
  • Life-event impact. Tag the move, the breakup, the new job — and see its measured ripple across your moods, not just remember it.

Pricing

Both apps are free to use indefinitely for core logging. Both offer a premium subscription for the deeper features (Kibun Pro comes with a 7-day free trial; prices are localized by Google Play). Neither sells ads against your mood data.

Which one should you choose?

  • Choose Daylio if: you want the fastest possible micro-diary, you're on iOS, or activity-icon logging is your favorite part of tracking.
  • Choose Kibun if: you've logged moods before and wished the app would tell you something — which habits move you, what that event cost you, whether you're bouncing back slower this quarter.
  • Honestly fine either way: you're brand new to mood tracking. Start with either, focus on consistency (here's how to start), and re-evaluate in two months when you know what you want from your data.

Looking at more options? See our full rundown of Daylio alternatives.

Frequently asked questions

Is Kibun a Daylio alternative?
Yes — Kibun keeps Daylio-style fast tap logging but adds twelve named moods, habit × mood correlations, life-event impact analysis, a resilience score, and private AI reports. Daylio remains the better pick for iOS users today.
Can I import my Daylio data into Kibun?
Not yet — automated import is on the roadmap. Kibun Pro supports CSV export, so your Kibun data is always portable.
Are Kibun and Daylio both private?
Both are anonymous-first and work without accounts. Kibun additionally runs note sentiment analysis on-device and never uploads raw note text, even for AI reports, and uses no advertising trackers.

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