Turn Todoist into a habit tracker by creating a “Habits” project, using natural‑language recurrences, labels, and custom filters for daily views, adding reminders, and syncing with Trider for visual streaks—keeping the system simple, flexible, and always in sight.
Open Todoist and add a new project called Habits. Keep it at the top of your list so it’s the first thing you see each morning. Inside, add a task for every habit you want to build—drink water, read 20 minutes, stretch before work. Treat each line like a tiny promise to yourself.
Todoist’s natural‑language parser makes repetition painless. Type “every day” for daily habits, “every Mon, Wed, Fri” for a workout schedule, or “every 2nd day” for a habit you only need a break in between. The app will automatically push the next due date forward once you check the box. No need to edit the date manually every night.
If you juggle health, learning, and finance habits, give each a label: @health, @learning, @finance. Labels let you filter the view in seconds. Want to see only your morning routine? Click the filter that shows @health & today. The same trick works for weekly reviews: @learning & overdue.
Create a filter called Today’s Habits with the query #Habits & today. Pin it to the sidebar. When you open Todoist in the morning, the filter shows exactly what you need to do, no extra tasks cluttering the screen. The same filter can be duplicated for “Tomorrow” or “This week” to plan ahead without losing momentum.
For habits that slip easily—like taking a 5‑minute meditation—tap the alarm icon and set a push notification. Choose a time that matches your routine, e.g., 9 am after you sit at your desk. The reminder nudges you without feeling like a bossy alarm.
Todoist doesn’t have a built‑in streak counter, but you can simulate one. After you complete a habit, add a quick comment with a checkmark emoji. Over time, the comment count becomes a visual streak. If you’re already watching Todoist Karma, notice the boost each time you hit a habit streak; it’s a subtle dopamine hit that keeps the chain alive.
I also keep a Trider habit board running in the background. While Todoist handles the scheduling, Trider shows streak graphics, lets me freeze a day when life gets chaotic, and offers habit templates like “Morning Routine” that I import with a tap. The two tools complement each other: Todoist is my daily task hub, Trider is my habit‑streak dashboard.
When you’re on the go, use Todoist’s Quick Add (q shortcut) to log a habit without opening the app. Type “water +1” and assign it to the @health label. The shortcut creates a new task instantly, which you can check off later. It’s a fast way to capture a habit you just finished, especially when you’re in the middle of a workout.
At the end of each week, run a filter like #Habits & completed after: -7d. Export the list to CSV if you like numbers, or just glance at the tasks to see which habits slipped. Pair this review with Trider’s analytics tab for a visual heat map of consistency. The combination gives you both raw data and a quick visual cue of where you’re strong.
If a habit feels too heavy, edit its recurrence pattern directly in the task. Change “every day” to “every other day” or add a specific day off with the “skip” option. The flexibility prevents burnout and keeps the habit chain from breaking.
Don’t overload the Habits project with sub‑tasks or extra notes. Each habit stays a single line; extra details belong in the comment section or a separate note app. Simplicity means you’ll open Todoist, see the list, and act—no decision fatigue.
And when you notice a habit consistently missed, consider a freeze day in Trider instead of forcing a check‑off in Todoist. The pause protects your streak while you reset your motivation.
By treating Todoist as a habit scheduler and letting Trider handle streak visuals, you get the best of both worlds: precise timing, instant reminders, and a motivating streak display that keeps you honest. No more vague “I’ll try tomorrow”—just a clear, repeatable system that lives in the tools you already use.
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