A Reddit‑curated Notion habit‑tracker template synced with Trider lets you auto‑calculate streaks, freeze days, journal daily notes, and share progress with squads—all in a clean, three‑view board that turns habit‑hunting into a visual, accountable routine.
Redditors keep asking for a Notion habit tracker that actually sticks. The answer lives in a single page that blends a clean database with a dash of visual flair. Below is the exact setup I use daily, plus a few tricks that keep the system from turning into a spreadsheet nightmare.
Head over to r/Notion and look for the “Reddit‑Curated Habit Tracker” pinned post. Download the .zip, import the main page into your workspace, and rename it to something personal—maybe “My 2024 Growth Hub.” The template already includes a habit table, a streak column, and a habit‑type selector (check‑off vs. timer).
Instead of the generic “Health” or “Productivity,” create custom tags that reflect your life: “Morning coffee,” “Side‑project,” “Family time.” In the table, add a multi‑select property called Category and assign a distinct color to each. The visual cue alone makes you glance at the board and know which block to tackle first.
Not every habit needs a daily tick. In the Recurrence column, choose “Every day,” “Mon‑Fri,” or a custom rotation like “Push/Pull/Legs/Rest.” Notion’s formula field can calculate the next due date automatically, so you never have to scroll back to see if today’s a rest day.
Create a rollup that pulls the Completed checkbox from the past 30 entries, then use a simple formula: if(prop("Completed"), 1, 0). Sum the results, and you’ll see a live streak number right on the habit row. When the count drops, the cell turns red—instant feedback that nudges you back on track.
I keep a tiny “Freeze” checkbox next to each habit. When a day feels impossible, I tick it and the streak formula ignores that entry. It mirrors Trider’s freeze feature, which protects your streak without rewarding a missed habit. The habit stays in the flow, and the streak stays intact.
I run the same habit list in Trider’s Tracker tab. The app’s built‑in streak badge shows up on my phone, so I get a quick glance when I’m away from the laptop. When I finish a timer habit—like a 25‑minute reading session—Trider marks it done, and I manually check the corresponding row in Notion. The two systems reinforce each other, making the habit feel both digital and tangible.
The journal icon on the Tracker header opens a daily entry space. I write a one‑sentence note after each habit: “Did a 5‑minute stretch, felt sore,” or “Skipped coffee, energy dipped.” Those entries auto‑tag with keywords, so later I can search for “energy” and see patterns across weeks. It’s a low‑effort habit audit that keeps the data honest.
If you’ve got a friend or a study group, create a Squad in Trider’s Social tab. Share your Notion link in the squad chat. Everyone can glance at each other’s streaks, and the collective pressure makes you less likely to ghost a habit. The squad chat also doubles as a place to post quick wins, which I love copying into a “Wins” view in Notion for a morale boost.
Inside each habit’s settings, set a reminder time—8 am for meditation, 6 pm for reading. Notion itself can’t push alerts, but Trider’s push notifications will fire at those exact moments. I keep the reminder window narrow; a single ping is enough to pull me back from the browser rabbit hole.
Create three filtered views: Today, Streaks, and All Habits. The Today view shows only the habits due now, with a dark background to reduce visual clutter. The Streaks view sorts by the longest current streak, giving you a quick brag board. The All Habits view stays hidden unless you need to audit the whole list.
Every Sunday, I spend ten minutes scrolling through the past week’s journal entries, noting any recurring mood tags. If a habit’s streak has stalled for three days, I either adjust the recurrence or add a freeze. The habit tracker stays a living document, not a static checklist.
And that’s the core of the Notion‑Trider hybrid that keeps my habits from gathering dust. If you try it, expect a few tweaks along the way—nothing stays perfect forever.
Keywords: habit tracker, Notion template, Reddit, Trider, streaks, journal, squads, automation
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