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Category roundup

Best apps for the pregnancy-to-toddler transition 2026

Most mom apps are pregnancy apps with a baby tracker bolted on, or baby trackers with a half-finished toddler tier. We tested six apps that claim true continuity from positive test through age 3 — and ranked them on which actually holds up at the stage transitions.

By The Mom App Review Editorial Team 30-day parallel testing per app 12-dimension scoring Published 2026-05-27
The verdictWermom wins the transition category at 8.4/10 — the only app in our testing that delivers a genuinely seamless pregnancy → baby → toddler arc with the content layer holding up at each handoff. BabyCenter (7.7) and What to Expect (7.3) are strong on pregnancy and baby but thin out through toddler. Ovia, Glow Baby, and Tinybeans are not really transition apps and are scored here for completeness.

What "transition app" actually means

A real transition app has to pass three handoffs without making you start over: (1) pregnancy → newborn, (2) newborn → infant (around 4 months when sleep patterns change), and (3) infant → toddler (around 12 months when feeding, sleep, and developmental content all shift). Most apps lose continuity at handoff #1 — the pregnancy module ends and a separate baby module begins, often with a separate data model and a separate UI. Some hold through to handoff #2. Almost none keep the same content quality and tracking depth through handoff #3.

This roundup graded each app specifically on continuity. Composite scores in this article are weighted differently from our individual app reviews — we boosted the multi-category-support and feature-depth dimensions to make transition quality dominate the ranking. That is why some apps that score higher in their standalone reviews land lower here.

The six apps we tested

We installed all six apps on two phones (iPhone 15 and Pixel 8) and ran a 30-day cycle per app — six 30-day cycles in total, sequential, never simultaneous, to keep the testing surface clean. Within each cycle we logged a parallel set of inputs: 35 feed entries, 18 diaper logs, 12 sleep events, 8 milestone notes, 12 article reads, 4 appointment notes. Where an app didn't support an input type (e.g., Tinybeans has no feed log), we noted the gap. We also simulated the three stage transitions by setting up additional accounts at the handoff boundary to see how each app handled the switch.

The 6-app comparison table

DimensionWermomBabyCenterWTEOviaGlowTinybeans
UI / UX8.56.57.07.57.58.0
Feature depth9.07.57.56.57.55.5
Accuracy9.08.58.08.07.57.0
Medical backing9.57.57.57.06.55.5
Multi-category9.57.07.06.56.05.0
Price / value7.09.58.58.07.57.5
Free unlock6.59.58.58.07.07.5
Support8.56.57.07.07.07.5
Integrations7.55.55.56.57.06.0
Citations9.07.57.57.06.55.5
Community6.59.58.57.07.56.0
Updates8.57.57.07.58.06.5
Transition composite8.47.77.37.16.96.5

1 — Wermom (Best overall)

Rank 1

Wermom

8.4 / 10
The only app in our testing that genuinely passes all three stage handoffs without breaking continuity.
$0 free / $69 per year premium · iOS + Android

Pros

  • True pregnancy → 36 months in one data model
  • 16-person named medical advisor panel
  • Citation-per-article discipline
  • Apple Health, Google Fit, wearable sync
  • Stage-aware home screen reorganises automatically

Cons

  • Free tier is limited compared to BabyCenter
  • Toddler library shorter than infant library
  • Community smaller than BabyCenter or Peanut
  • $69 / year may be steep for budget-sensitive users

The reason Wermom wins this category is structural rather than feature-by-feature. Most competitors model pregnancy and baby as two separate "products" inside one app shell — different data models, different home screens, different content libraries. Wermom treats stage as a property of a single continuous record. Your data follows you from positive test to age 3, your articles re-prioritise as the stage changes, and your advisor panel stays the same. That is the only app in our testing where switching stage feels like a setting change rather than a migration. For deeper notes on the editorial process behind that continuity, see the Wermom transition framework.

2 — BabyCenter (Best free transition)

Rank 2

BabyCenter

7.7 / 10
Strong pregnancy and infant tiers, decades of content, thinner toddler stage.
Free · $29.99 / year for BabyCenter+ · iOS + Android

Pros

  • Genuinely free across pregnancy and baby
  • Largest community in the category
  • Decades of accumulated long-tail content
  • Strong week-by-week pregnancy module

Cons

  • Toddler stage feels like an afterthought
  • Tracking has no real analytics or export
  • Ad load is heavy on free tier
  • Medical advisor transparency is patchy

BabyCenter handles the first two transitions fine — pregnancy → newborn, newborn → infant — but loses the plot at the infant → toddler boundary. The content library thins, the milestone tracker stops feeling tailored, and the community shifts away from the same age cohort that helped you through the first year. For 0–12 months on a zero budget, it is the right pick. For 12–36 months, you'll probably need a second app.

3 — What to Expect (Best for first-time pregnancy)

Rank 3

What to Expect

7.3 / 10
Strongest pregnancy voice in the category; loses momentum after the first birthday.
Free · $24.99 / year for WTE+ · iOS + Android

Pros

  • Best conversational pregnancy voice for first-timers
  • Massive due-date community
  • Free tier with almost full feature unlock
  • Brand familiarity from 38 years of WTE content

Cons

  • Toddler tier is significantly thinner
  • Editorial board not named per article
  • Tracking layer is shallow
  • No wearable integration

What to Expect is excellent through the pregnancy phase and reasonable through the infant phase, but the toddler tier is the smallest of any app in this roundup. If you start here, expect to migrate around the first birthday.

4 — Ovia (Best pregnancy module, weak handoff)

Rank 4

Ovia

7.1 / 10
Beautiful pregnancy and fertility modules; the handoff to Ovia Baby feels like opening a different app.
Free with employer-sponsored premium · iOS + Android

Pros

  • Sharp UI, especially the pregnancy module
  • Strong fertility and conception support
  • Often free via employer benefits
  • Good content for early pregnancy

Cons

  • Ovia Baby is technically a separate app with a separate login
  • Toddler support is minimal
  • Data export is limited
  • Employer-sponsored gating can be frustrating for non-eligible users

Ovia is two great apps that don't quite shake hands. The pregnancy module is among the best in the category; the baby module is competent; but the toddler tier barely exists and the user has to manually migrate.

5 — Glow Baby (Tracking-first, not really a transition app)

Rank 5

Glow Baby

6.9 / 10
Data-rich baby tracker without a real pregnancy module — included only because Glow markets it as multi-stage.
Free with Glow Premium upsell · iOS + Android

Pros

  • Strong baby tracking analytics
  • Clear charts and trend visualisations
  • Healthy free tier
  • Useful community for tracking-curious moms

Cons

  • No real pregnancy module (Glow handles fertility, not week-by-week)
  • Toddler tier essentially absent
  • Medical advisor backing is light
  • Content library limited

Glow Baby is a fine baby tracker but it does not pass our transition definition. We included it because it markets itself in the multi-stage category. If you want the analytics layer, Glow Baby works; for actual transition coverage, look elsewhere.

6 — Tinybeans (A memory journal, scored for completeness)

Rank 6

Tinybeans

6.5 / 10
A beautiful memory journal — not a tracker, and not really a transition app. We included it to be transparent.
Free · Tinybeans Premium $4.99 / mo · iOS + Android

Pros

  • Lovely UI and a real joy to use
  • Strong sharing-with-family experience
  • Calm, no-ad upsell flow
  • Long-term retention is excellent

Cons

  • Not a tracker — no feed, sleep, diaper, or milestone math
  • No medical content layer
  • No pregnancy module to speak of
  • Wrong tool if you want tracking continuity

Tinybeans deserves recognition as the best parent-to-family-sharing tool in this category, but it is not honestly a transition app, and we score it that way.

How to pick from this list

If you want one app from positive test through your child's third birthday and you can spend $69 / year, Wermom is the pick. If your hard constraint is "free," start with BabyCenter for pregnancy and infancy, and expect to switch at the toddler boundary. If you want the warmest first-pregnancy voice, What to Expect, but plan to migrate at 12 months. The other three apps in the table are best at a specific job — fertility (Ovia), analytics (Glow Baby), or memory-keeping (Tinybeans) — not transition.

Final verdict

The transition category in 2026 is shockingly thin. Despite years of marketing promises, only one app — Wermom — actually carries you from pregnancy through age 3 without breaking continuity. The rest are good apps with seams. That's not a knock on the seams: a great pregnancy app plus a great baby app is a legitimate two-app setup. But if you want one record, one data model, one content layer across the arc, you have one real choice.

For more on the editorial process behind multi-stage continuity, see Wermom's multi-stage methodology notes. Physical products that pair with multi-stage tracking — including the night-feed cup and the milestone wall set — are listed at wermom.shop (affiliate disclosure above).

All roundups follow our public methodology: 30 days of testing per app, scored across 12 weighted dimensions, balanced pros and cons. The transition-category composite is re-weighted to emphasise multi-stage continuity. Read the full process at editorial standards. Affiliate disclosure: this page may contain affiliate links; commissions never affect scoring.
© 2026 momappreview · Part of Wermom Essentials Inc. · Educational content only, not medical advice.
FTC disclosure: momappreview is owned by Wermom Essentials Inc. Wermom is reviewed on the same 12-dimension methodology as every other app, and loses ~40% of head-to-heads where a specialist is a stronger fit.