Yuki
yuki

Compare · as of July 2026

Yuki vs TimeTree

TimeTree is a well-loved shared calendar for families, couples and groups. Yuki is a memory-and-coordination layer that fills a calendar for you from your inbox — and adds trips, expenses, tasks and sharing on top.

A Yuki shared household group with shared chores, a date night and a bill due
Share plans, chores and bills — everyone sees the same home.

TimeTree does one thing very well: it gives families, couples and groups a shared calendar everyone can see and comment on, with per-event chat, memos and a web version — all free. Yuki starts from a different place. Instead of asking you to type events in, it connects to Gmail or Outlook and turns the confirmations, receipts, bills and invites already sitting in your inbox into a live calendar, trip itineraries, tracked expenses and tasks — then shares them with the people you plan life with. The goal is less about being a calendar and more about cutting the mental load of remembering and coordinating everyday life. If you mostly want a clean, shared, manually-kept calendar with group chat, TimeTree is an excellent fit; if you want that calendar to fill itself and carry money, trips and to-dos too, that is where Yuki differs.

YukiTimeTree
Shared calendar for families, couples & groups
Auto-creates events from your inbox (Gmail/Outlook)
Writes two-way into Google CalendarImport/subscribe only
Per-event chat, comments & memos
Trip itineraries from booking emails
Expense & subscription tracking
Natural-language AI assistantAI flyer scan & event suggestions (not a chat assistant)
PlatformsiOS & AndroidiOS, Android & web

Choose Yuki if…

  • You want your calendar to fill itself from the confirmations, bills and invites already in your inbox, instead of typing every event by hand
  • You want trips, expenses, subscriptions, tasks and reminders living alongside your shared plans — not just a calendar
  • You want events written into your existing Google Calendar and a natural-language AI assistant to ask about your day

Choose TimeTree if…

  • You want a dedicated shared calendar with per-event chat, comments and memos so a whole group can coordinate around each event
  • You need to view and edit on the web from a computer — Yuki is a mobile app with no standalone web app
  • You mostly add events manually and don't need inbox automation, expenses or trip tracking
Accurate as of July 2026. Product capabilities change — check each app’s current site for the latest.

Stop keeping it all in your head. Yuki is free on iOS and Android.

Preguntas frecuentes

Does Yuki replace TimeTree?
It depends on what you use TimeTree for. If TimeTree is your shared calendar, Yuki can play that role while also building events automatically from your inbox and adding trips, expenses and tasks. But TimeTree's per-event chat, memos and web access are things Yuki doesn't offer, so some groups may prefer to keep it.
Can TimeTree create events from my email automatically?
Not from your inbox. TimeTree can scan a flyer or photo to pull out event details, and it suggests events with AI, but it doesn't connect to your Gmail or Outlook — you and your group still add events yourselves. Yuki's core difference is that it reads the confirmations, receipts and invites in your email and creates the events, trips and expenses for you.
Is Yuki free like TimeTree?
Yes, Yuki is free on iOS and Android. TimeTree is also free, with an optional premium tier. The bigger difference is scope: TimeTree focuses on the shared calendar, while Yuki covers calendar, trips, expenses, tasks and sharing together.