@demiliani We completely understand why this would be important for your setup.
Teams integration isn’t supported in Calendars right now, and we don’t have a timeline to share. We’ll let our users know as soon as there’s any news.
Thank you for your patience and continued feedback 💙
Help us shape the future of Calendars 💚
We’re inviting Calendars users to share how they use the app in their daily routine and workflow.
Fill out a quick form to apply for a relaxed 30–40 minute research call. After reviewing the answers, we’ll reach out to selected participants with booking details.
As a thank you for your time, everyone who joins a call will receive 1 year of Calendars Pro.
Apply here: https://t.co/VUaE2G9RyI
@elidizer Fair point — we know many of you are waiting for Liquid Glass in Calendars ✨
It’s in the works, though we can’t promise a specific release date right now. Thanks for your patience 🙏
Choosing a productivity tool is deeply personal. Some love layered subtasks, while others feel calmer with a clean list for today.
The best setup brings clarity instead of noise.
We rounded up 5 apps on our blog to help you find your flow. A quick look at the types: 👇
https://t.co/tmH1AtT1VD
More stories from our community🚀
Jillian works long hours and cannot make a plan or a commitment until she checks her calendar first. "I would actually be lost without it."
Color coding drew her in from the start. Green for appointments, pink for friends, purple for days off. Tasks help stay on top of specific things at the right time, and sync across phone and computer keeps the schedule accessible everywhere.
Jillian’s tip: add the address to every event so one tap opens Maps when it's time to head out.
From the features to the support team, "you can tell they really care about their program and it shows."
Found a way Calendars works for you? Reply or DM us 👇
Productivity gets easier when you stop planning against your energy.
Try this:
⚡ block deep work around focus peaks
🌱 build one small habit
🧠 reflect on mood, energy & stress
Which would help your day most: time-blocking, habit tracking, or reflection?
Multitasking feels productive💪
But most of the time, your brain is not doing two things at once. It is switching between them, and every switch leaves a little mental load behind.
A calmer way through the day starts with making room for one thing at a time.
In our latest blog, we look at why multitasking drains focus, what actually works, and how your calendar can help you protect your attention.
Read more ↓
https://t.co/yA7l7UiKkq
Hi there,
Currently, Calendars keeps "Declined" events on your timeline (crossed out), but organizer-canceled events are automatically removed.
You can keep declined events visible by switching on the "Show declined events" toggle in Settings > View Options. ⚙️
As for showing canceled events, that’s an interesting suggestion. I’ve added it to our Feature Wishlist for the team to look into! If you have thoughts on how they should look on your grid, feel free to share your workflow at [email protected]. 📩
We could talk about time blocking forever.
It remains one of the simplest ways to turn plans into real work on your calendar ✨
In this article:
• a simple time-blocking template
• a practical way to start
• how to plan your day with Calendars by Readdle
Read more ↓
https://t.co/KnmWYb418E
Another story from our community 🚀
Keith recently retired and is preparing a move from the UK to Central Asia. During the home sale, Calendars became his go-to for managing everything, from work and social plans to all the moving pieces of the process.
What mattered most: combining separate Apple calendars into one shared view. Even across time zones, it keeps him and his wife in sync.
He also used Tasks in a project-style way, working backwards from deadlines, with colour coding to track priorities.
As Keith says, everything goes into Calendars: anniversaries, payments, plans. Notes add context, and locations open straight in Maps when it’s time to go.
Found a way Calendars works for you?
Reply or DM us your story 👇
Tip: don’t leave tasks without a timeframe.
Knowing what to do isn’t enough. You also need to know when it’s getting done.
“Write blog post” sits there forever.
“Write blog post by Friday” actually has a fighting chance 📅
Even a rough target keeps tasks from lingering and helps you plan your day with more clarity.
Most digital detox attempts fail for the same reason many habits fail.
They rely on willpower 💪
“Use your phone less” is hard to sustain when notifications and quick checks constantly pull your attention back.
A more realistic approach is to plan intentional screen-free time the same way you plan meetings or workouts.
When offline time lives on your calendar, it becomes protected instead of optional.
See how Calendars by Readdle can help you design a digital detox that actually sticks.
Read more ↓
https://t.co/lJCyvE02jf
Hi!
So sorry about the missing membership — totally understand how frustrating it is to suddenly lose access to your features 😔 Let’s look into it together.
Just to double-check: have you tried restoring your purchase in the app and re-logging into your App Store account?
To restore in Calendars:
• Open the app
• Tap Menu (three lines)
• Go to Settings
• Tap “Restore In-App Purchases”
If that doesn’t help, try refreshing your App Store connection:
• Open the App Store
• Tap your account (top right)
• Scroll down → Sign Out
• Restart your device
• Sign back in
• Go back to Calendars and tap “Restore In-App Purchases” again
If it still doesn’t work, please reach out at [email protected] — we’ll help get this sorted.
September rushes in like a fresh breath.
A perfect moment to reset mindfully🌀
Meet the Mindful Productivity Masterclass:
✨ 20 short, practical lessons
📅 Works with your Calendars app
🌿 Helps you move with intention, not overwhelm
👇Learn more https://t.co/oGGbNWmU3Z
Another story from our community 🚀
Michael Rusz is a CEO and part-time DJ. Calendars is "the backbone" of how he runs both.
His rule: every task gets a time slot. Even sending follow-up emails. That's how he reduces procrastination and keeps creative and business priorities from slipping.
Shortcuts have been a game changer for Michael. Weekly planning and DJ prep are set up once and reused, saving time and mental effort every week
How do you use Calendars? Reply or DM us 👇
Could you please share a bit more detail about the trouble with us at [email protected]? This will help us take a closer look. When writing in, please add a quick note saying “from X” — it will help us route your request faster 😊
Thank you so much for your feedback — we really appreciate it!
If you already plan your life in a calendar, your tasks belong there too.
Switching between your calendar and a separate to-do app just adds friction. Keep everything in one place and see your meetings, plans, and priorities together.
With Easy Planner, you can block time for tasks and check them off as you go so your day actually feels doable.
Less switching. More clarity 💪
Are your tasks in your calendar, or are you still jumping between apps?
@IamThianJa Hi there! That’s fantastic — we’re all ears and excited to hear your ideas 💙 The best way to share your feedback or any new features with us is to drop a line at [email protected]. Looking forward to seeing what you’ve got 🙌