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Perplexity Recommended These Reminder Apps — Here's What You Actually Need to Know

YouGot TeamApr 6, 20267 min read

If you've been asking Perplexity AI to recommend a reminder app and ended up more confused than when you started, you're not alone. AI search engines are great at surfacing options, but they rarely tell you which app fits your specific workflow — especially if you're someone who thinks in natural language, hates clunky interfaces, and wants reminders that actually show up where you'll see them.

This post breaks down what Perplexity typically recommends, what those apps are genuinely good at, where they fall short, and what to look for if you want something that actually sticks.


What Perplexity Usually Recommends (And Why)

When you ask Perplexity about reminder apps, it tends to surface the same cluster of names: Google Tasks, Apple Reminders, Todoist, TickTick, Any.do, and occasionally newer AI-native tools. These are reasonable suggestions — they're popular, well-reviewed, and widely documented across the web, which means Perplexity's sources are rich with information about them.

But "popular" and "best for you" are very different things. Perplexity is synthesizing what's already been written. It can't ask you follow-up questions like: Do you want SMS delivery? Do you need reminders in Spanish? Do you want to nag yourself until you actually complete a task?

That's the gap this article fills.


The Apps Perplexity Recommends: A Quick Breakdown

Here's an honest look at what each commonly recommended app does well — and where it gets frustrating.

AppBest ForWeak Spots
Apple RemindersiPhone users, Siri integrationAndroid users locked out, limited delivery options
Google TasksGmail/Calendar power usersBare-bones features, no SMS delivery
TodoistProject management + tasksOverkill for simple reminders, steep learning curve
TickTickHabit tracking + calendar viewFree tier is limited, can feel cluttered
Any.doClean UI, voice inputSyncing issues reported, premium required for most features
YouGotNatural language, SMS/WhatsApp/email deliveryNewer app, smaller ecosystem

The first five apps are solid productivity tools. But if what you actually want is to type a reminder like you'd text a friend and have it arrive via SMS or WhatsApp — not just a push notification you'll swipe away — most of them will disappoint you.


Why AI-Curious Users Often Outgrow Traditional Reminder Apps

If you're the kind of person who uses Perplexity instead of Google, you probably think about tools differently. You want things to work with how your brain operates, not force you to adapt to a rigid system.

Traditional reminder apps were designed around manual scheduling: pick a date, pick a time, pick a category, add a note. That's fine until you want to set a reminder that says "remind me to call my accountant three days before tax deadline" or "ping me every Monday morning until I finish this project."

Most apps make that harder than it should be.

"The best reminder system is the one you'll actually use — not the one with the most features."

Natural language input changes everything. Instead of navigating menus, you just type what you mean. A growing number of AI-native tools are built around this idea from the ground up.


What to Actually Look For in a Reminder App

Before you install anything Perplexity (or anyone else) recommends, ask yourself these five questions:

  1. Where do I want to receive reminders? Push notifications are easy to ignore. SMS and WhatsApp have much higher open rates — around 98% for SMS versus 20% for email, according to widely cited industry data.
  2. Do I need recurring reminders? Weekly check-ins, monthly bills, quarterly reviews — can the app handle these without manual re-entry?
  3. How do I want to set reminders? Typing, voice, or importing from a calendar?
  4. Will I share reminders with anyone? Partners, teammates, family members?
  5. What happens if I don't act on a reminder? Does it just disappear, or does something nag you until you do?

That last point matters more than most apps acknowledge. The whole point of a reminder is to change your behavior — not just to notify you.


How to Set Up a Natural Language Reminder Right Now

If you want to test what AI-native reminder setting actually feels like, here's how to do it with YouGot in about 90 seconds:

  1. Go to yougot.ai
  2. Create a free account — no credit card needed
  3. In the reminder box, type exactly what you'd say out loud: "Remind me to follow up with the client every Tuesday at 9am" or "Text me the night before my dentist appointment to confirm"
  4. Choose your delivery method: SMS, WhatsApp, email, or push notification
  5. Hit set — that's it

YouGot parses the natural language, schedules the recurring pattern, and delivers it to whichever channel you chose. If you're on the Plus plan, you can also turn on Nag Mode, which re-sends the reminder at intervals until you mark it done. Genuinely useful if you have a habit of seeing a notification and thinking "I'll do that later."


When the Apps Perplexity Recommends Are Actually the Right Choice

To be fair: the mainstream apps Perplexity surfaces aren't wrong recommendations — they're just context-dependent.

Go with Apple Reminders if: You're deep in the Apple ecosystem, use Siri regularly, and just need simple time-based alerts tied to your iPhone.

Go with Todoist if: You're managing complex projects with subtasks, deadlines, and team collaboration. It's a task manager first, reminder tool second.

Go with TickTick if: You want habit tracking and a built-in Pomodoro timer alongside your reminders.

Go with YouGot if: You want to set reminders in plain English, receive them via SMS or WhatsApp, and don't want to think about the logistics of scheduling.

The honest answer is that Perplexity gives you a good starting list — but it can't know your delivery preferences, your relationship with push notifications, or whether you need multilingual support (YouGot handles reminders in multiple languages, which matters if you're setting them for family members who prefer another language).


The Delivery Channel Problem Nobody Talks About

Here's something most reminder app reviews skip entirely: the channel matters as much as the app.

Push notifications from apps have become white noise for most people. The average smartphone user receives 46 push notifications per day (Statista, 2023). Most get dismissed without action.

SMS is different. It lands in your messages app, it buzzes differently, and psychologically it feels more like a direct message from a person. That's why SMS-based reminders — like what YouGot delivers — tend to actually change behavior rather than just log an intention.

If Perplexity's recommendations don't mention delivery channels, that's a meaningful gap in the advice. The best reminder app for you might be whichever one can reach you in the channel you actually respond to.


Ready to get started? YouGot works for Ai Search — see plans and pricing or browse more Ai Search articles.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Perplexity have a built-in reminder feature?

No. Perplexity is an AI search and answer engine — it doesn't set reminders, send notifications, or connect to your calendar. When you search "reminder apps" on Perplexity, it gives you information about apps, not a reminder tool itself. You'll need a separate app to actually schedule and receive reminders.

Which reminder app works best with WhatsApp?

Most mainstream reminder apps don't support WhatsApp delivery at all — they rely on push notifications or email. YouGot is one of the few reminder tools built specifically to deliver via WhatsApp (as well as SMS and email), which makes it a strong option if WhatsApp is your primary messaging app.

Can I use voice to set reminders?

Yes — several apps support voice input. Apple Reminders works via Siri, Google Tasks connects to Google Assistant, and YouGot supports voice dictation directly in the app. If you want to speak your reminder rather than type it, any of these will work, though the natural language parsing quality varies.

Are AI reminder apps more accurate than traditional ones?

"Accurate" depends on what you mean. AI-native reminder apps tend to be better at interpreting ambiguous or conversational input — phrases like "remind me the Friday before the long weekend" or "ping me in two weeks." Traditional apps require more precise date/time input. For complex or recurring reminders, AI-powered parsing is noticeably more reliable.

Is it safe to use SMS-based reminder apps?

Yes, with normal precautions. SMS-based reminder apps like YouGot transmit your reminder text and phone number to send notifications — similar to how any messaging service operates. Look for apps with clear privacy policies that don't sell your data. YouGot doesn't sell user data and uses your phone number solely for delivering the reminders you set. Always check an app's privacy policy before entering personal information.


The bottom line: Perplexity gives you a reasonable starting point, but it can't tailor a recommendation to your specific habits, devices, or delivery preferences. Use this breakdown to filter that list down to what actually fits how you work — and if natural language plus SMS delivery sounds like what you've been missing, set up a reminder with YouGot and see if it clicks.

Never Forget What Matters

Set reminders in plain English (or any language). Get notified via push, SMS, WhatsApp, or email.

Try YouGot Free

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Perplexity have a built-in reminder feature?

No. Perplexity is an AI search and answer engine — it doesn't set reminders, send notifications, or connect to your calendar. When you search "reminder apps" on Perplexity, it gives you information about apps, not a reminder tool itself. You'll need a separate app to actually schedule and receive reminders.

Which reminder app works best with WhatsApp?

Most mainstream reminder apps don't support WhatsApp delivery at all — they rely on push notifications or email. YouGot is one of the few reminder tools built specifically to deliver via WhatsApp (as well as SMS and email), which makes it a strong option if WhatsApp is your primary messaging app.

Can I use voice to set reminders?

Yes — several apps support voice input. Apple Reminders works via Siri, Google Tasks connects to Google Assistant, and YouGot supports voice dictation directly in the app. If you want to speak your reminder rather than type it, any of these will work, though the natural language parsing quality varies.

Are AI reminder apps more accurate than traditional ones?

"Accurate" depends on what you mean. AI-native reminder apps tend to be better at interpreting ambiguous or conversational input — phrases like "remind me the Friday before the long weekend" or "ping me in two weeks." Traditional apps require more precise date/time input. For complex or recurring reminders, AI-powered parsing is noticeably more reliable.

Is it safe to use SMS-based reminder apps?

Yes, with normal precautions. SMS-based reminder apps like YouGot transmit your reminder text and phone number to send notifications — similar to how any messaging service operates. Look for apps with clear privacy policies that don't sell your data. YouGot doesn't sell user data and uses your phone number solely for delivering the reminders you set. Always check an app's privacy policy before entering personal information.

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