One shared grocery list for the household. Add items all week, check them off at the store, and everyone sees what's left in real time.
Start making lists immediately. No account, no email, no app to install.
Anyone with the URL can view and edit the list together.
Changes appear instantly across all browsers and devices.
The problem with a grocery list on a piece of paper — or even a note on your phone — is that it's a snapshot. Your partner remembers eggs at 2pm, but you left for the store at 1:30. A shared list that syncs in real time eliminates this. When someone adds "eggs" at home, it appears on your screen in the dairy aisle. When you check off bread, it moves to the bottom of everyone's list so they can see what's still needed.
There's no aisle-sorting or barcode scanning or coupon integration — this isn't trying to be a grocery app. It's a list that multiple people can edit at the same time from different places. That turns out to be the only feature most households actually need. The list builds up over the week as people notice what's running low, and clears out as you shop.
The weekly Costco run where one person shops and the other texts last-minute adds from home. Meal-prep Sundays where the recipe list becomes the shopping list. Roommate households where everyone contributes to shared supplies. The Thanksgiving trip where three cars are stopping at three different stores and nobody should buy the second bag of cranberries.