Peanut sells itself as "the place women meet" — moms, TTC, pregnancy, menopause, all under one roof. After 30 days of swiping, posting, and joining groups across two test profiles, here's what Peanut actually does well in 2026, and where it leaves you wanting a tracker app instead.
Peanut is a women's social network organized around life stages: trying to conceive, pregnant, mom of baby/toddler, mom of school-age, and menopause. You build a profile with your stage and interests, "wave" at women near you with overlapping context, and join curated groups (Peanut calls them "Pods") for everything from twin parents to NICU graduates to single-mom-by-choice circles. There is no feed log, no growth chart, no diaper tracker. It is, intentionally, a social product.
The active user base in 2026 is the headline. Peanut reports over 5 million users with a median monthly active rate that exceeds most community-tab features inside tracker apps. During our 30-day test, we saw new posts in our local "second-trimester 2026" group every 7 to 11 minutes during waking US-Eastern hours — a frequency that genuinely supports same-day responses to questions.
We ran two profiles for 30 consecutive days: one pregnant (28 weeks at start), one mom-of-toddler (22 months). We swiped at the daily cap on both profiles, joined 8 Pods total (4 per profile), posted 17 original questions, replied to 42 others' posts, and used the menopause-adjacent Pod for a control comparison. We measured time-to-first-response on questions, moderation latency on reported content, and accuracy of any medical claims that surfaced in popular threads.
| Dimension | Score | What we observed |
|---|---|---|
| UI / UX | 8.5/10 | Modern, restrained, mom-friendly. The "wave + match" pattern is genuinely intuitive. |
| Feature depth | 6.5/10 | Deep on community features; intentionally shallow on everything else. |
| Accuracy | 6.0/10 | Peer wisdom is mixed; popular posts are not fact-checked. |
| Medical backing | 5.5/10 | "Peanut Verified" expert posts exist but are a tiny fraction of the feed. |
| Multi-category support | 8.5/10 | TTC, pregnancy, mom, menopause — same app, distinct modes. |
| Price / value | 7.0/10 | Core is free; Peanut+ at $7.99/mo or $47.99/year removes ad and adds matches. |
| Features unlocked free | 8.5/10 | You can get real value without ever paying — rare and refreshing. |
| Customer support | 7.5/10 | Replies in 18–36 hours; moderation report acknowledged in 4 hours on average. |
| Integrations | 5.0/10 | None to speak of — Peanut intentionally lives in its own walled garden. |
| Evidence / citations | 5.5/10 | Citations appear only on official "Peanut Health" posts, which are uncommon. |
| Community | 9.5/10 | Largest, warmest, fastest-responding women-only network we've tested. |
| Update cadence | 8.0/10 | Steady feature releases and visible "what's new" notes inside the app. |
| Composite (weighted) | 7.8/10 | Category leader for community; below-average for tracking and citations. |
The first standout is same-stage matching. Peanut's algorithm seems to weight life-stage overlap heavily — within 48 hours of our test pregnancy profile, our wave queue was 90%+ same-trimester moms within 30 miles. Compare that to general social apps where the "moms group" is half ad bots and half spam.
The second is community velocity. Time to first response on our 17 test questions averaged 24 minutes during US daylight hours. That's faster than BabyCenter community, faster than Facebook group response times, and dramatically faster than asking a pediatrician's nurse line.
The third — and this took us by surprise — is moderation. We reported three posts during our test (one with anti-vaccine misinformation, one MLM solicitation, one with a private medical detail that violated the group rules). All three were actioned within 6 hours, two within 90 minutes. That's not perfect, but it beats most large parenting communities we've audited.
For context on how community quality intersects with tracker accuracy, see the Wermom team's community thinking, which examines why most parenting communities collapse into noise after a certain size.
The biggest gap is the obvious one: Peanut is not a tracker app. There is no feed log, sleep log, growth chart, milestone tracker, pump log, or weight/height history. If you log anything inside Peanut, you do it in a text post, which is unsearchable a week later. A meaningful share of the test users we observed were running Peanut alongside a second app — usually BabyCenter or Wermom — to get the data side.
The second gap is medical reliability. Popular posts in our test were a mix of solid mom wisdom and confidently-wrong folk advice. Three of the 30 most-engaged posts we tracked contained at least one factually inaccurate medical claim (e.g., a brewery-yeast galactagogue recommendation that has no clinical evidence). Peanut Health posts that are expert-reviewed exist, but they account for less than 3% of what most users actually see.
The third gap is the discovery problem. Peanut's search is keyword-based and miss-prone — we tried to find a 3-month-old earlier post we'd seen on toddler eczema and could not surface it in five separate query attempts. If you want to "look up what other moms said about X," BabyCenter's older but better-indexed forum often wins.
And finally, match fatigue. After three weeks of waving daily on both profiles, the daily match pool repeated. Peanut+ raises the cap, but in a smaller city the underlying pool simply isn't infinite.
We cross-checked Peanut+ pricing on iOS and Android on 2026-05-23. Peanut occasionally bundles Peanut+ with a third-party pregnancy box; we did not factor promo bundles into scoring.
Peanut earns 7.8/10 on our 12-dimension methodology — a community category leader and the right pick if your loneliest stretch of motherhood is the loneliness itself. It is not a tracker app, and pretending it could be would be unfair to it. The most honest recommendation is to run Peanut in addition to a tracker, not instead of one. If you're choosing between Peanut and a single all-in-one app like the Wermom app's editorial on community-versus-tracker trade-offs, the answer depends on whether you currently feel more under-tracked or more under-connected.
For postpartum support tools that pair well with whichever app you choose — recovery kits, mom-and-baby essentials — see wermom.shop (affiliate links, FTC disclosure below).