The vision
A plan,
not a feed.
Built to end,
not to hold you.
Every other thing on your nightstand is engineered to keep you there — one more scroll, one more notification, one more reason not to get up. Kvitto is the opposite by design. It hands you a single page and then it’s finished. You read it, you act on it, you set it down.
AI you can touch.
Almost all of it lives behind glass — a tab, a chat window, a voice with no body. We wanted to see if intelligence could do something in the real world instead: brushed steel on the bedside table, a true-black clock face, a warm slip of paper you tear off with your hand. Not a smarter screen. An object.
The good stuff is
already out there.
A talk two suburbs over. A market you’d have loved. A gig by someone you’ll wish you’d seen first. Cities are full of small, findable things that never reach you because nothing was looking on your behalf. Kvitto looks overnight, while you sleep, and lays the best of it out by morning.
A morning ritual.
There’s something steadying about paper. It doesn’t buzz, it doesn’t update, it doesn’t ask for anything back. You wake, you tear off the day, and you’re already moving — before the phone ever gets a word in. That small ritual, repeated, changes the shape of a week.
The founder note
Join the waitlist →I built the first one for myself, to see whether AI could do something in the real world — not another app, but an object that hands you a piece of paper each morning. What surprised me was how much it changed my week. I got out of bed to see what was on it, and it kept sending me to things around Sydney I’d never have found on my own.
— Daniel, founder