The notes app with memory

Notes that know you.

Your notes shouldn’t just pile up. As you write, ReMemo surfaces the past thoughts that connect – ideas you forgot were linked.

Join the waitlist
This came back

No shared keywords – only shared meaning.

Try another thought
The problem

You’ve already had the thought. You just can’t find it.

Every notes app is brilliant at capture. Thousands of thoughts go in. Almost none come back. So you scroll, you search, you give up – and you write the thought again.

The cost of retrieval is higher than the cost of writing again.

The principle

Resurfacing beats retrieval.

You shouldn’t have to remember what to look for.

How it works

One memory.
Six ways it returns.

While you write

Smart Resurface

Your old notes find their way back.

As you write, ReMemo quietly surfaces notes that share your meaning – not your words. No search. No prompt. It’s simply there.

9:41
Cancel
This came back
27 Jun 2026
What I keep coming back to
Three things keep appearing in my notes…
16 Jun 2026
Call with mum — things I want to remember
She sounded tired but said…
Spent the evening with an old box of photographs from the spare room. Faces I half recognise, places I cannot name. A few of his notebooks were tucked in among them, in that small careful hand. I want to write down what I remember about each one, while the memory is still mine to keep.
Named, not guessed

Resonance

It notices how your thinking has shifted.

When a past note returns, Resonance says how it relates – a contradiction, an evolution, a repetition, an extension. The pattern you’d have felt, finally named.

9:41
Cancel
This came back
You’re now arguing the opposite of what you wrote back on 13 Jun 2026.
13 Jun 2026
The most counterintuitive thing about design is that simplicity costs more than complexity.
13 Jun 2026
Simplicity is not the absence o…
The most counterintuitive thing about…
25 Jun 2026
Design and simplici…
I keep noticing the same…
Been thinking about design again, and I think I had it backwards. Maybe simplicity is overrated. The best products are never really simple — the complexity is just hidden, pushed somewhere the user can’t see it. Complexity is honest about the work. Removing things is its own kind of effort, the kind nobody notices or thanks you for. The question of what to take away has started to feel like the wrong question entirely. Maybe the real discipline is knowing what to keep, and being honest about everything it costs to get there.
Always building

Memory Index

A living memory, built quietly from every note.

Every note joins a private index of what you actually think about – organised by theme, and by patterns you didn’t notice you were repeating.

9:41
Your memory
10 notes · 27 connections · since May 2025
Weekly digest
29 Jun
Connections
27
Forming now
Cross-theme pattern

Your notes keep circling two things: why things need to be simpler and building things that actually work. These aren’t separate — they may be the same question asked differently.

Recurring themes
Why things need to be simpler4 notes
Building things that actually work4 notes
The way the mind turns things over4 notes
Every time you open it

Your notes

Open it, and the connections are already there.

Your whole memory in one calm place – every note already showing what it connects to. No folders, no filing. It sorts itself by meaning.

9:41
Good evening.
You have three new connections.
This came back2 days ago
What I keep coming back to
Three things keep appearing in my notes regardless of what I’m…
Previous 30 days
Morning walks and why I need them
Left early before the city woke up. The light was doing that…
The notebook habi…Design and simplici…What I keep…
Simplicity is not the absence of effort
The most counterintuitive thing about design is that…
Design and simplici…Product direction…What I keep…
May
Call with mum — things I want to remember
She sounded tired but said she was fine three times, which…
What I keep comin…The notebook habi…Patience is…
Patience is active, not passive
I have been confusing patience with waiting. They are not th…
What I keep comin…Design ag…
Once a week

Weekly Digest

A personal insight, once a week.

Not a summary of what you wrote – an observation about what you’ve been circling. Once a week. That’s the whole feature.

9:41
Monday 29 June
17:49
Re
REMEMOnow
Your weekly memory
This week you kept coming back to walking and thinking, and to simplicity.
When you wonder

Ask

Just ask. Your notes answer.

Ask in plain language. ReMemo answers only from your notes – and shows you exactly which ones.

9:41
What ideas keep coming back?
What I keep coming back toThe notebook habit — what I want from a no…

Three things keep appearing in my notes regardless of what I am supposed to be thinking about: 1. … I keep coming back to this: what would a notes app look like if it had been designed by someone who actually thinks in notes? … I keep forgetting how much I need this — being outside without a destination, without a phone in my hand.

What about the walks?
Morning walks and why I need themOn walking and thinking

Left early before the city woke up. … My best ideas have come on walks.

Ask your notes…
Pricing

Free to start. Free to stay.

Pro is there when your memory grows.

Free

$0forever

No credit card

  • Unlimited notes
  • Smart Resurface while writing
  • Memory Index – semantic memory
  • Up to 3 memory themes
  • Your first Weekly Digest, in full
  • 5 Ask queries/month

Pro

$8.99/month

or $69/year – save 36%

  • Everything in Free
  • Unlimited memory themes
  • Unlimited Ask
  • Weekly Digest, every week
  • Memory Timeline
  • Proactive resurface notifications
  • Home screen widget
  • Export to PDF and Markdown
Questions

Good to know.

What is ReMemo?

ReMemo is an AI notes app with a memory of its own. You write notes, and ReMemo builds a private semantic memory from them – resurfacing past thoughts by meaning, not keywords, so the ideas you need find you instead of you hunting for them.

How is ReMemo different from other notes apps?

Most notes apps are built for capture and search. ReMemo is built for return. Instead of asking you to remember what to look for, it resurfaces related notes as you write – connecting ideas that share meaning even when they share no words.

Can I bring my existing notes?

Yes. You can import your notes when you start, and ReMemo begins finding connections across them straight away – no folders to rebuild, no tags to redo. Your memory is there from day one, not something you have to construct.

Are my notes private?

Yes. Your notes are never used to train any model, ours or anyone else’s. Never sold. Never shared. Never read by anyone but you.

How much does ReMemo cost?

ReMemo is free forever, with no credit card. Your first Weekly Digest comes in full; Pro then keeps it coming every week, and unlocks unlimited Ask, Memory Timeline, and export to PDF and Markdown – for $8.99/month or $69/year.

When does ReMemo launch?

ReMemo arrives this autumn on iOS and Android. Join the waitlist to be among the first to write notes that know you.

Why ReMemo

The opposite of capture is return.

Most apps are designed to take more of you. ReMemo is designed to give some of you back.

Privacy

Your notes are never used to train any model – ours, or anyone else’s. Never sold. Never shared. Never read by anyone but you.

Notes that know you.
Arriving this autumn.