About
Calm tech for the days you need it most.
Tralo started with a simple frustration: most health-tracking apps are built for the days you feel great. They reward streaks, push notifications, and treat your worst week as a lapse instead of a fact of life. We thought there should be something gentler.
What we're building
Tralo is a private, calm space to log symptoms, medications, mood, and the patterns that connect them. It's designed for people living with chronic conditions, anyone managing day-to-day wellness, and the family members and caregivers walking alongside them.
We try to do a few things differently:
- No shame for missed days. Tracking should be useful, not punishing. Skip a week and Tralo welcomes you back without comment.
- Trauma-informed by default. Red is reserved for genuine urgency. Language is plain, never clinical or alarmist. Color, motion, and copy are tuned for hard days.
- Your data is yours. No ads, no data sales, no surprise sharing. Sensitive entries are encrypted at rest. Export or delete everything any time.
- Useful before pretty. If a feature doesn't help you on your worst day, it doesn't ship.
Why we exist
Living with a chronic condition is a long conversation between you, your body, and a rotating cast of clinicians. The more honest data you can bring to that conversation, the better it goes. But the data only helps if logging it doesn't cost you energy you don't have.
We built Tralo to take less than ten seconds on a hard day, and to give you back something genuinely useful, patterns you'd never spot on your own, a clean record to share with your care team, and a quiet sense that someone, somewhere, is keeping track with you.
Who we are
Tralo is a small, independent team. We're not selling your data, we're not building for an exit, and we're not racing anyone. We're building the tool we wished existed for ourselves and the people we love.
A short, honest disclaimer
Tralo is a personal health-tracking tool. It is not a medical device, and nothing in the app should be taken as medical advice. If you're making a decision about your health, talk to a qualified healthcare professional first.