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Best Baby Tracker Apps UK (2026): Feeds, Sleep & Nappies Compared

Nathan
Best Baby Tracker Apps UK (2026): Feeds, Sleep & Nappies Compared

There are a lot of baby tracker apps, and from the store listings they all look much the same: log feeds, naps and nappies, see some charts. The real differences only show up at 3am — how fast you can log one-handed, whether your partner sees the same thing, what's behind a paywall, and whether it calms you down or buries you in options.

We've compared the apps UK parents actually use, with an honest take on who each one suits. We make one of them (CubTrack), and we've tried to be fair about where others do things better.

Editor's note: app pricing and ratings change often and can differ between the App Store and Google Play. The figures below were checked in May 2026 — always confirm the current price in the store before subscribing.

Quick comparison

AppBest forPlatformsFree versionPaid fromCubTrackCalm, shared tracking for the whole familyAndroid (iOS coming)Yes — feeds, sleep, nappies, 1 child£4.79/moHuckleberrySleep science & nap predictionsiOS, AndroidYes (limited)~£9.50/mo (check UK price)OnocoAll-in-one tracker + family organiseriOS, AndroidYes£7/moParentLoveOne-time purchase, no subscriptioniOS, AndroidYes£19.99One-time upgradeBaby Tracker (Nighp)Simple, no-login solo trackingiOS, AndroidYes£4.99Feed BabyDetailed breastfeeding logs & reportsiOS, AndroidYes£6.99

The apps, in detail

CubTrack — best for calm, shared family tracking

CubTrack focuses on doing the everyday basics really well: one-tap logging of feeds, sleep and nappies built for tired thumbs, on a single shared timeline that partners, grandparents and carers all see live. The design is deliberately uncluttered — it's the app for parents who want to know what's next without wading through options they don't need yet.

The free tier genuinely covers the basics (feeds, naps, nappies, one child, 30-day history, feed/sleep predictions, temperature, a home-screen widget). Pro at £4.79/month adds unlimited children and carers, full history and trends, WHO growth charts, a weaning checklist with allergy tracking, PDF export for health visitors, and a milk stash manager — and it's notably cheaper than the big-name sleep apps.

Best for: families sharing care who want a calm, affordable, no-clutter tracker. Watch-outs:

Huckleberry — best for sleep

Huckleberry is the heavyweight on sleep. Its SweetSpot predictions suggest ideal nap and bedtime windows from your baby's data, and higher tiers add sleep-expert input. If your main struggle is naps and night sleep, this is the one people reach for.

It has a free tier with basic logging and a 14-day trial of premium; the top tier runs around $11.99/month (confirm current UK pricing in-store). Best for: parents whose number-one problem is sleep and who want guided coaching. Watch-outs: the genuinely standout features are behind the priciest tier, so general tracking alone may not justify the cost.

Onoco — best all-in-one

Onoco bundles a baby tracker with a family organiser and development content, and is a long-standing favourite in UK "best app" roundups. You can track feeds, sleep and nappies, share with carers, and get activity/development suggestions alongside the basics. Best for: parents who want tracking plus a wider organiser and developmental nudges. Watch-outs: more features can mean more to navigate if you only want quick logging.

ParentLove — best for avoiding subscriptions

ParentLove leans into a one-time-purchase model rather than a monthly subscription, with a shared dashboard, breast/bottle logging with auto ml–oz conversion, pumping and stash tracking, and a night-friendly UI. Best for: anyone allergic to recurring fees who still wants caregiver sharing. Watch-outs: confirm exactly which features are free vs in the paid upgrade before relying on them.

Baby Tracker (Nighp) — best for simple solo tracking

A perennially popular, very simple tracker known for "no login required — just download and use," with quick feed, sleep and nappy logging and a nursing timer. Best for: a single parent who wants the fastest possible logging with no setup. Watch-outs: sharing/sync across carers is where simple solo apps tend to fall down — check this if more than one person needs the data.

Feed Baby — best for detailed feeding reports

Feed Baby is strong on feeding detail: timers, sides, bottle amounts, and colourful graphs and reports that are handy for appointments, extending into solids. Best for: parents who want granular feeding data and reporting. Watch-outs: the depth can feel like a lot if you only want the basics.

How to choose

Cut through it with three questions:

  1. Is more than one person caring for your baby? If yes, prioritise genuine real-time sharing (a shared live timeline, not just "export and send"). This is where many simple apps quietly fall short.

  2. What's your biggest pain — logging or sleep? If it's just keeping track day-to-day, a calm, fast tracker like CubTrack is plenty. If sleep is the war you're fighting, Huckleberry's predictions may be worth the premium.

  3. Subscription or one-off? Decide upfront. ParentLove suits the subscription-averse; most others (CubTrack included) use a low monthly Pro tier with a free version underneath.

Whatever you choose, the best app is the one you'll actually keep using at 3am — which usually means fast one-handed logging and a record everyone can see, not the longest feature list.

Try CubTrack free

If you want a calm, shared way to track feeds, sleep and nappies without spreadsheets or group-chat detective work, CubTrack is free to start on Android and iOS — single child profile, core tracking, and predictions included, with Pro there when you're ready for shared timelines and longer history.

Related reading

Frequently asked questions

What's the best baby tracker app in the UK?

It depends on your need. For calm, shared everyday tracking of feeds, sleep and nappies, CubTrack is a strong, affordable choice. If your priority is sleep coaching and nap predictions, Huckleberry leads. For an all-in-one tracker and organiser, Onoco is a long-standing favourite.

Is there a free baby tracker app?

Yes — most major apps, including CubTrack, Huckleberry, Onoco, ParentLove and Baby Tracker, have free versions. Free tiers usually cover basic feed, sleep and nappy logging, with extras like growth charts, longer history and multi-carer sharing reserved for paid plans.

Which baby tracker app is best for sharing between parents and carers?

Look for genuine real-time syncing across multiple people. CubTrack is built around a shared live timeline for partners, grandparents and carers; Huckleberry and Onoco also support multi-caregiver access. Very simple solo apps often have limited or no sharing.

Do I have to pay for a baby tracker app?

No — the free tiers are enough for many families, especially early on. You'd typically pay only for extras like unlimited carers, full history, growth charts or sleep predictions. CubTrack Pro is £4.79/month; some apps like ParentLove offer a one-time purchase instead of a subscription.

Which baby tracker works on Android?

All the apps above are on Android except where noted. CubTrack is currently Android-only with iOS coming soon; Huckleberry, Onoco, ParentLove, Baby Tracker and Feed Baby are on both Android and iOS.


Comparison compiled May 2026 for UK parents. Prices and ratings change frequently — confirm current details in the App Store or Google Play before subscribing. CubTrack is made by OakFox Limited; this article includes our own app alongside competitors.

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