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The Best Journal Apps That Support Apple's Journaling Suggestions

Published on June 3, 2026

Apple's Journaling Suggestions is one of the most thoughtful features in iOS — it quietly watches for meaningful moments in your day and surfaces them as prompts when you open your journal. Photos you took, songs you played, workouts you finished, places you visited.

But not every journal app supports it. Here's a look at the ones that do, and what makes each worth considering.


What to Look for Beyond Journaling Suggestions

Journaling Suggestions gets you started — it solves the blank page problem. But once you've imported a suggestion, what happens next depends entirely on the app. The questions worth asking:


Apps That Support Journaling Suggestions

Day One

Best for: Power users who want a mature, feature-rich journal

Day One is the most established journal app on iOS, with a large feature set including multiple journals, tags, end-to-end encryption, and a long track record. It integrated Journaling Suggestions shortly after the API launched.

If you want a proven app with years of polish and don't mind a subscription, Day One is a solid choice.

Price: Free with subscription ($34.99/year)
Requires: iOS 18+

Everlog

Best for: Minimalists who want a fast, text-first daily journal

Everlog is an indie journal app with a clean, distraction-free writing experience built around Markdown, tags, and cross-device sync. It was one of the first third-party apps to adopt Journaling Suggestions, shipping support shortly after the API launched in iOS 17.2.

If you mostly write and want as little friction as possible between you and the page, Everlog keeps things simple.

Price: Free, with Premium as a subscription or one-time purchase
Requires: iOS 15.6+ (Journaling Suggestions need iOS 17.2+)

stoic.

Best for: Guided reflection and mental-health journaling

stoic is a journal built around mental health: guided prompts, mood check-ins, breathing exercises, and reflections drawn from Stoic philosophy. Its Journaling Suggestions integration turns your photos, places, and workouts into starting points for reflection rather than just entries.

If you journal to process how you feel more than to document what happened, stoic is worth a look.

Price: Free with subscription
Requires: iOS 17.0+

Picnic Moment

Best for: Apple ecosystem users who want rich, beautiful entries

Picnic Moment is built specifically for people who live in the Apple ecosystem. It supports Journaling Suggestions alongside a wide range of content types in a single entry: photos, Live Photos, music from Apple Music, handwriting, voice memos, mood, weather, location, steps, and fitness data.

The standout feature is its template system — multiple handcrafted layouts that turn your entries into something worth looking back on, not just a wall of text.

Price: Coming soon
Requires: iOS 17.2+

How to Enable Journaling Suggestions

If you haven't set this up yet, here's the quick version:

Settings → Privacy & Security → Journaling Suggestions

Toggle on the categories you want — workouts, photos, music, locations, contacts, podcasts, state of mind. Everything is processed on-device.

Then open your journal app and look for the Suggestions button when creating a new entry.

For a full walkthrough, see: How to Use Apple's Journaling Suggestions with Third-Party Apps


Which Should You Choose?

If you want a mature, battle-tested app with a large community and don't mind paying annually, Day One is the safe bet.

If you mostly write and want zero friction, Everlog keeps things minimal. And if you journal primarily to look after your head, stoic leans into guided reflection.

And if you're looking for a journal that feels native to iPhone and lets you capture more than just words — music, Live Photos, sketches, mood — Picnic Moment is worth trying.

All of them support Journaling Suggestions. The difference is what you do with the entry after the suggestion is imported.

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