If you’ve stood in front of the planner shelf (or scrolled a shop page) wondering whether you need a daily layout or a weekly one, you’re not alone. Here’s how to decide, without overthinking it.
Choose daily if your days are unpredictable
A daily layout gives every day its own page, with room to break the day into hours or blocks. It suits people whose schedule changes constantly, who juggle meetings, appointments and to-dos across the same day, or who like to journal a line or two before bed. The tradeoff is bulk: a full daily planner is a bigger book, and you’ll be flipping pages more often to look ahead.
Choose weekly if you think in bigger chunks
A weekly layout puts the whole week on one or two pages. It’s the better fit if you plan more in themes than hours, for example “Tuesday is admin day” rather than “10am call, 11am email.” It’s slimmer, lighter to carry, and easier to glance at when you’re mapping out a week ahead rather than living hour to hour.
Can’t decide? Get both
Our combo layout gives you a weekly overview up front and daily pages behind it, so you’re not choosing between the big picture and the details. It’s the most popular option for anyone who wasn’t sure which camp they were in.
