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Daylogue Comes to Apple Watch. Your Wrist Now Knows What Your Mind Has Been Saying.

A 30-second check-in from your wrist, connected to months of patterns on your phone. The gap between body data and inner language just got smaller.

Daylogue PressLOS ANGELES, CA, March 4, 2027 · 3 min read

LOS ANGELES, CA, March 4, 2027 / PRNewswire / Apple Watch has tracked your heart rate, sleep, and steps for a decade. It has never asked how you feel about any of it.

Daylogue's Apple Watch integration, launching today, adds the one data point health wearables have always been missing: the words behind the numbers. A 30-second check-in from your wrist — mood, energy, what's sitting heaviest — connects automatically to the pattern history already living on your phone. The watch knows your resting heart rate spiked on Sunday. Now it can ask what was happening Sunday.

The integration is built around speed. Tap, answer three questions, done. The check-in takes less time than reading a notification. What it connects to is months of entries — the cumulative record of what a user has been thinking, feeling, and noticing — so even a 30-second wrist entry carries context.

"Your watch already knows your resting heart rate spiked on Sunday," said Brandon Bibbins, Founder and CEO of Daylogue. "Now it can ask you what was happening Sunday."

Daylogue does not interpret biometric data medically. The Apple Watch integration surfaces physical data alongside emotional check-ins so users can see correlations over time — sleep and mood, activity and energy, stress and body signals — and draw their own conclusions. The pattern is yours to read.

The integration is available today for all Daylogue users on watchOS 10 and later. Premium users get full pattern correlation between health data and emotional entries. The feature is available on the App Store.

"Your watch already knows your resting heart rate spiked on Sunday. Now it can ask you what was happening Sunday."

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What does Daylogue's Apple Watch app do?

It lets you log a quick mood and energy check-in from your wrist in about 30 seconds. That check-in syncs automatically to your Daylogue account and is treated as part of your full entry history on your phone.

Q: Does Daylogue access my health data from Apple Watch?

With permission, Daylogue can pull sleep, activity, and heart rate data from Apple Health to display alongside your emotional check-ins. Daylogue does not interpret this data medically — it shows you the numbers alongside your own words so you can notice correlations.

Q: Does the Apple Watch app require a Daylogue premium subscription?

The basic wrist check-in is available on the free tier. Full pattern correlation between health data and emotional entries requires a Daylogue premium subscription.

Q: Is the Apple Watch check-in private?

Yes. Check-ins logged on Apple Watch sync to your Daylogue account with the same privacy protections as all other entries. See daylogue.io/privacy for the complete privacy map.

Q: What watchOS version is required?

watchOS 10 or later. Paired with an iPhone running the current version of the Daylogue iOS app.

About Daylogue

Daylogue is a pattern journal that reads your past entries and detects the emotional patterns running through them. Instead of a stack of separate journal entries, you get a short, plain-language summary that updates over time: what topics keep coming back, when a pattern is repeating, what's shifted in the last few weeks. Daylogue is not therapy and is not a replacement for professional care. It is a private space on your phone for honest reflection, a companion to therapy, to hard conversations, and to the days when you want to know yourself a little better. Entries written inside the Daylogue app are end-to-end encrypted on your device before upload, so Daylogue cannot read them. (SMS and email check-ins, and AI-generated summaries, are handled on the server and are not end-to-end encrypted. See Daylogue's privacy page for the full map.) Founded by Brandon Bibbins, Daylogue is independent and available on iOS and web at daylogue.io.

Media Contact

Daylogue hello@daylogue.io daylogue.io

SOURCE Daylogue

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