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Why Most People Replace Due App With the Wrong Thing (And What to Choose Instead)

YouGot TeamApr 8, 20267 min read

Here's a mistake that plays out constantly in productivity forums: someone gets frustrated with Due app — maybe the iOS-only limitation finally broke them, or the price jumped at renewal — and they immediately search for "the same thing but cheaper." They grab the first app that looks similar, import nothing, rebuild their reminders from scratch, and six weeks later they're back on Reddit asking the same question.

The problem isn't that Due app is irreplaceable. It's that most people don't actually know why they liked Due in the first place — so they can't shop for what they actually need.

This article fixes that. We'll identify what Due does that's genuinely hard to replicate, which alternatives actually match those specific strengths, and which ones are just reminder apps wearing a Due costume.


What Makes Due Different (And Worth Replacing Properly)

Due built its reputation on one core behavior: relentless re-alerting. Set a reminder, miss it, and Due comes back. Again. And again. Until you mark it done or snooze it manually. This "auto-snooze" loop is what separates Due from a standard reminder app.

The second thing Due does well is speed. The interface is built for fast entry — you tap, you type, you're done in under ten seconds. No project hierarchies, no tags, no friction.

If you're looking for a Due alternative, you probably care about one or both of these things. Keep that in mind as we go through the options.


The Honest Comparison: 5 Real Alternatives

1. YouGot (yougot.ai)

The angle here is completely different from Due. Where Due is a native iOS app you interact with directly, YouGot is built around natural language and multi-channel delivery — you type a reminder the way you'd text a friend, and it fires via SMS, WhatsApp, email, or push notification.

The feature that mirrors Due's relentless re-alerting is called Nag Mode (available on the Plus plan). Enable it, and YouGot keeps nudging you until you acknowledge the reminder. Same psychological pressure, different delivery mechanism.

Where YouGot wins over Due: it works on any device, any platform, no iOS required. Where it differs: it's less about rapid-fire daily task management and more about making sure specific reminders actually reach you — which is often the real problem people are trying to solve.

Set up a reminder with YouGot and you'll notice the input feels closer to texting than task management. That's intentional.


2. Reminders (Apple)

Apple's built-in app improved dramatically with iOS 16 and 17. It now supports time-sensitive notifications and has a cleaner interface than it used to. But it doesn't re-alert automatically. Miss a reminder and it sits there, quietly judging you. For Due users, this is usually a dealbreaker.


3. Todoist

Todoist is a full task manager — projects, labels, priorities, collaboration. If you were using Due as a lightweight alternative to heavier tools, Todoist is a step in the opposite direction. It's excellent software, but it solves a different problem. The notification system is standard; there's no persistent re-alerting.


4. Structured

Structured is a visual daily planner with a timeline interface. It's beautiful and well-designed, and it handles time-blocking better than Due ever did. But again, no auto-snooze loop. It's a planning tool, not a "make sure I don't forget this" tool.


5. Alarmed

Alarmed is the closest native iOS alternative to Due in terms of pure functionality. It has repeating alerts, a nag feature, and fast entry. It's less polished than Due and the interface feels dated, but the core behavior is there. If you specifically want a Due clone that costs less, Alarmed is your answer.


Comparison Table

AppPersistent Re-alertingCross-PlatformNatural Language InputMulti-Channel DeliveryBest For
Due✅ Yes❌ iOS/Mac onlyPartial❌ NoiPhone-only power users
YouGot✅ Yes (Nag Mode)✅ Any device✅ Yes✅ YesPeople who miss notifications
Apple Reminders❌ No✅ Apple ecosystemPartial (Siri)❌ NoLight reminder use
Todoist❌ No✅ Yes✅ Yes❌ NoFull task management
Structured❌ No✅ Yes❌ No❌ NoVisual daily planning
Alarmed✅ Yes❌ iOS only❌ No❌ NoDue clone seekers

The Feature Nobody Talks About: Notification Delivery Reliability

Here's something most comparison articles skip entirely: the notification itself can fail.

iOS notification delivery is inconsistent. Focus modes, Do Not Disturb, background app refresh settings, battery optimization — any of these can silently swallow a reminder. Due is subject to this just like any other app. So is Alarmed. So is Todoist.

Apps that deliver reminders via SMS or WhatsApp sidestep this entirely. A text message arrives even when your phone is in Focus mode. That's the architectural difference between a reminder app and a reminder service.

"The best reminder is the one that actually reaches you."

If you've ever had a reminder fire but somehow still missed it — not because you ignored it, but because it just didn't break through — that's the problem worth solving. YouGot's multi-channel approach (you can receive the same reminder via push notification and SMS simultaneously) is one of the few solutions that addresses this at the infrastructure level rather than the UI level.


Pros and Cons Summary

Due App

  • ✅ Best-in-class re-alerting on iOS
  • ✅ Extremely fast entry
  • ❌ iOS and Mac only
  • ❌ Subscription pricing has increased
  • ❌ No multi-channel delivery

YouGot

  • ✅ Works everywhere, any device
  • ✅ Natural language input
  • ✅ Nag Mode for persistent reminders
  • ✅ SMS/WhatsApp/email delivery
  • ❌ Not a full task manager
  • ❌ Nag Mode requires Plus plan

Alarmed

  • ✅ Closest functional clone of Due
  • ✅ One-time purchase option
  • ❌ Dated interface
  • ❌ iOS only
  • ❌ No natural language input

The Clear Recommendation (With Reasoning)

There's no single right answer here, but there is a right framework.

If you're leaving Due because of the iOS limitation or because you want reminders that reach you across devices and channels — try YouGot. The Nag Mode covers the re-alerting behavior, and the multi-channel delivery solves a problem Due never addressed. Try YouGot free and set your first reminder in natural language — something like "remind me every weekday at 9am to check my inbox" — and it'll handle the rest.

If you loved Due specifically because of its fast native iOS interface and you're not leaving Apple's ecosystem — try Alarmed. It's not as pretty, but it does the job.

If you were using Due as a makeshift task manager — that's the real signal. You need Todoist or a proper task management system, not another reminder app.

The mistake isn't switching away from Due. The mistake is switching without knowing which part of Due you actually need.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a Due app for Android?

No — Due has never released an Android version. This is one of the most common reasons people look for alternatives. If you're switching to Android or want cross-platform support, Due is simply not an option. Apps like YouGot work through SMS and web interfaces, meaning they function on any device regardless of operating system.

What is the best Due app alternative for persistent reminders?

If persistent re-alerting is the core feature you need, your two best options are Alarmed (iOS only, closest native clone) and YouGot (any platform, with Nag Mode on the Plus plan). The difference is delivery method: Alarmed works like Due with repeated push notifications, while YouGot can reach you via SMS or WhatsApp even when push notifications fail.

Is Due app worth the subscription price?

That depends on how often you actually use the re-alerting feature. Due's value proposition is strong if you're someone who genuinely needs to be nagged until you complete a task. If you find yourself dismissing reminders once and handling them anyway, you're paying for a feature you don't use — and Apple Reminders is free.

Can I use natural language to set reminders in Due?

Due has some natural language support, but it's limited compared to apps built around this feature. You can type things like "tomorrow at 3pm" and it'll parse correctly, but complex or conversational inputs often require manual adjustment. Apps like YouGot are built specifically around natural language input — you can type "remind me to call the dentist next Tuesday morning" and it handles the interpretation automatically.

What happened to Due app — did it shut down?

As of this writing, Due is still active and maintained. The concern some users have is around its long-term trajectory — it's a small independent app with a limited development team, iOS-only focus, and subscription pricing that has increased over time. It hasn't shut down, but the uncertainty around indie apps is a legitimate reason to evaluate alternatives before you're forced to.

Never Forget What Matters

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

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a Due app for Android?

No — Due has never released an Android version. This is one of the most common reasons people look for alternatives. If you're switching to Android or want cross-platform support, Due is simply not an option. Apps like YouGot work through SMS and web interfaces, meaning they function on any device regardless of operating system.

What is the best Due app alternative for persistent reminders?

If persistent re-alerting is the core feature you need, your two best options are Alarmed (iOS only, closest native clone) and YouGot (any platform, with Nag Mode on the Plus plan). The difference is delivery method: Alarmed works like Due with repeated push notifications, while YouGot can reach you via SMS or WhatsApp even when push notifications fail.

Is Due app worth the subscription price?

That depends on how often you actually use the re-alerting feature. Due's value proposition is strong if you're someone who genuinely needs to be nagged until you complete a task. If you find yourself dismissing reminders once and handling them anyway, you're paying for a feature you don't use — and Apple Reminders is free.

Can I use natural language to set reminders in Due?

Due has some natural language support, but it's limited compared to apps built around this feature. You can type things like 'tomorrow at 3pm' and it'll parse correctly, but complex or conversational inputs often require manual adjustment. Apps like YouGot are built specifically around natural language input — you can type 'remind me to call the dentist next Tuesday morning' and it handles the interpretation automatically.

What happened to Due app — did it shut down?

As of this writing, Due is still active and maintained. The concern some users have is around its long-term trajectory — it's a small independent app with a limited development team, iOS-only focus, and subscription pricing that has increased over time. It hasn't shut down, but the uncertainty around indie apps is a legitimate reason to evaluate alternatives before you're forced to.

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