Calendar.Ai review

Life is hectic. Sometimes there’s no other way to describe it. From work to kids, keeping a solid schedule is tough.  Calendar.Ai wants to help you find some order in that appointment book with its new mobile app.

Bringing it all together

Calendar.Ai is a calendar app that syncs all your shared accounts into one, simple interface. From your personal Gmail to your work inbox, you can streamline your day into a single app.

This includes social sites like Linkedin, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter as well. These integrations offer you real-time updates of your clients before you head into a meeting. No rush to see what company or background information in the blitz to an interview. You have it all right there.

It’s worth noting the contact insights of socials are not available in the free tier. (More on pricing later.)

It’s about the schedule

Arguably the most impressive thing about Calendar.Ai is the Smart Scheduling. With this feature, you can set times of the week that you aren’t currently tasked with and send invites to other attendees. This gives them up-to-date time slots for you to meet and then they make a choice.

Once the other invitee selects a block of time, you get a notification to confirm. Then all recipients get a new ping to the meeting details. It’s a truly clever way to avoid the back of forth of “well I can’t do now, but I have two hours on these three days next week”. No email tag, just one invite with all your available options.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTKqoFzy84g?feature=oembed&w=640&h=360]

Conferencing is there, too

Another great feature in the current climate is Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams integration. If you link your account, the Calendar.Ai will pull in the respective calls you currently have scheduled.

Again, this makes Calendar.Ai a great tool to mitigate your plethora of apps. No worries about which contacts are using each video call platform. Just open Calendar.Ai and select the call link and you will launch the appropriate app.

Pricing

The free tier of Calendar.Ai from the Google Play Store gets you many of the features out fo the box, such multiple accounts, and Smart Scheduling. However, to get many of the extensions like social contacts, etc. you’ll have to upgrade to Premium at $4.17 per month (billed annually at $49.99). Premium still limits contacts and company insights to just 30 accounts.

To unlock unlimited features, you’ll need to step it up one more notch to Pro. This moves your total cost per month to $8.75 per month ($104.99 annually). Pro gives you access to all your companies and contacts insights and 365 days of searchable data.


Conclusion

Calendar.Ai is a great option for the power broker who’s tied to their calendar and contacts. With multiple accounts, contact and company insights, and additional extensions of sister app Calls.Ai, Calendar.Ai is a must-have. You can download the app today at the Google Play Store. As mentioned, pricing does play a role, but let us know what you think of this great app in the comments.

EDITOR NOTE: This is a sponsored product review, however the views and opinions expressed here are entirely those of AndroidGuys. No editorial consideration or adjustment was made on behalf of the sponsor.

Note: Select outbound links may include affiliate tracking codes. Revenue generated from any potential purchases is used to fund AndroidGuys. Read our policy.

Related posts

Latest posts

Google gives memory superpowers to Gemini for more natural chats

You will no longer have to look up past chats with Google’s chatbot. Thanks to the memory feature, it can now recall details from previous conversations.

Android 16’s latest beta promises deeper mobile photography controls

With Android 16 Beta 2, Google is upgrading the camera app framework with a hybrid exposure system, and granular controls for color temperature and tint levels.

Why are really old iPhones suddenly so popular?

In a trend driven by K-pop stars and celebrities in South Korea, old iPhone models and digital cameras have become a desirable accessory.

Apple is working on a mini-LED Studio Display, but the iMac Pro is nowhere to be found

Apple’s Studio Display could soon get a mini-LED upgrade to elevate it for professional users. Yet it’s also made me wonder if the iMac Pro is ever coming back.

Dell slashed the price of the Alienware m18 R2 gaming laptop with RTX 4080 by $420

The Alienware m18 R2 gaming laptop with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 graphics card and 32GB of RAM is available from Dell for $2,380 following a $420 discount.

Possible iPhone 17 Air design looks strangely familiar

A fantastic concept video for the iPhone 17 Air has been released. It looks impressive yet somewhat familiar.

Like T-Mobile? You can pay your phone bill by playing games

T-Mobile customers can now work toward paying their monthly bill by playing mobile games in the Ad It Up app.

Galaxy S24 owners could fall a whole Android version behind the Pixel

If you own a Samsung device but not the new Galaxy S25, we have unfortunate news for you.

The competition between AMD and Nvidia is finally heating up

Nvidia has just announced the release date for its next GPU, and AMD is ready to compete.

Meta’s next big bet might be AI humanoid robots for at-home chores

Meta is reportedly moving forward with AI-powered humanoid robots. They will be developed by the same division that is behind its AI and wearable efforts.