Updated
Updated · The Verge · Jun 5
Skylight Buddy Gets Kids to Finish Chores for $139.99 Despite Limited Free Features
Updated
Updated · The Verge · Jun 5

Skylight Buddy Gets Kids to Finish Chores for $139.99 Despite Limited Free Features

3 articles · Updated · The Verge · Jun 5

Summary

  • $139.99 Skylight Buddy worked as a routine tracker in one household, getting a preschooler to clean up toys, brush teeth and follow morning and evening tasks without paid rewards.
  • Big emoji-labeled cards and an end-of-day onscreen celebration were enough motivation for a child under six, even though the reviewer skipped the optional $39-a-year Buddy Plus subscription.
  • The device is built for one child per tablet and includes basics like a night light and alarm, but reminders, rewards and visual timers sit behind the subscription paywall.
  • App limits undercut the appeal: tasks cannot easily be moved to different days, routines cannot yet be reordered in the app, and the Buddy itself does not show a calendar view.
  • Skylight says task reordering is coming this month, but for now the review sees the Buddy as a useful if pricey digital checklist, especially for families already using Skylight calendars.

Insights

Does a $140 chore tablet build real responsibility or just teach kids to work for a screen's approval?
In a market of free apps and no-fee rivals, can this premium chore tablet with a subscription survive?
Can a digital checklist truly help neurodivergent kids, or is it just another overhyped parenting gadget?