Gamified formation for better humans.

HomeBiz Kids helps parents turn everyday family life into a game for responsibility, service, courage, follow-through, and entrepreneurial thinking.

Less load on parents

Helping around the house becomes incentivized, visible, and less dependent on nagging.

More formation for children

Children practice initiative, detail, courage, service, follow-through, and delayed gratification.

Stronger family bonds

Sibling favors and trusted-adult encouragement help the whole home become more peaceful.

What it is — and isn't

HomeBiz Kids is a parent-led mission game. Parents create growth challenges around household help, sibling service, social courage, stewardship, discipline, and savings goals. Kids can also pitch work they notice on their own. Tokens stay virtual and point toward family-controlled rewards.

It is not a chore tracker disguised as a sticker chart. It is not a public marketplace or a way to pay kids real cash through an app — there is no fiat exchange in HomeBiz Kids, ever. Tokens are virtual. What they unlock is up to your family.

Why kids stick with it

The Job Pitch flow teaches kids to articulate value, but it is only one part of the system. Parent-created missions let you address a weakness you notice: a shy child can earn tokens for saying hi first to 10 people, siblings can earn for doing quiet favors for each other, and every child can practice saving toward something meaningful.

Most family apps manage tasks. HomeBiz Kids forms people — young entrepreneurs who notice problems, serve their family, negotiate fairly, finish with excellence, and learn not to think only in hours-for-dollars.

Why parents stick with it

Because formation and household peace can happen together. The bathroom gets cleaned, the shy greeting gets practiced, siblings receive unexpected help, and parents get a repeatable way to reward the habits they want to see grow.

The weekly report turns it all into a record — for parents, homeschool portfolios, and most of all for the child looking back years later thinking: I became someone who follows through.