You likely have tasks that repeat themselves on a regular basis—monthly reports, putting out the garbage every week, remembering to call Mom on her birthday.
Instead of creating a new task for each occurrence, give it a recurring due date!
When you complete a task with a recurring due date, it automatically shifts to the next due date with no extra effort required on your part.
Turn on smart date recognition
Before adding a recurring due date, check if smart date recognition is turned on:
- In Todoist, click your avatar in the top-left corner.
- Select Settings.
- Select General from the menu.
- Turn on Smart date recognition.
Add a recurring due date
Note
Due dates in Czech and Turkish aren't supported yet. Use this form to request support for these languages in Todoist.
Type the recurring due date into the task name using natural language, like every Monday or every other week.
The smart Quick Add will automatically recognize, highlight, and add the recurring date to the task.
Quick tip
A date may be a part of a task name rather than a deadline.
For example, for the task Create monthly report, the word monthly is highlighted as a recurring due date. Click or tap the word to un-highlight it. You can also turn off smart date recognition.
Best practices
When adding a recurring due date, follow these best practices to ensure Todoist recognizes and adds it correctly:
- Place the start date at the end:
every 14 days 7am starting 1 Nov
- Place the due time after the first date:
every other Tues 7am starting 1 Nov
- Specify the days of the week the due date will recur:
every mon, tues, wed, and fri
Todoist doesn't support every day except as a recurring due date.
Examples of recurring due dates
There are so many options when it comes to creating a recurring due date. Let's start with basic examples:
Type this | To add this recurring due date |
---|---|
every day or daily | Every day starting from today |
every morning | Every day at 9am |
every afternoon | Every day at 12pm |
every evening | Every day at 7pm |
every night | Every day at 10pm |
every weekday or every workday | Every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday |
every week or weekly | Every week starting today |
every weekend | Every Saturday |
every month or monthly | Every month starting today |
every 3rd friday | Every 3rd Friday of the month |
every 27th or every 27 | Every 27th of the month |
every year or yearly | Every year starting today |
every jan 27th | Every January 27th |
every last day | Every last day of the month |
every hour | Every hour starting from now |
Note
If you schedule your recurring task for every day, your task will set its next due date based on the date you complete the task. This means that if your task was due yesterday and you complete it today, the task will not move to today. It will instead move to tomorrow's date.
You can use natural language to schedule a recurring task with a start and end date:
Type this | To add this recurring due date |
---|---|
every day starting aug 3 | Every day starting on August 3 (from aug 3 also works) |
every day ending aug 3 | Every day starting today and ending on August 3 (until aug 3 also works) |
every day for 3 weeks | Every day for the next 3 weeks starting today |
every day from 10 May until 20 May | Every day starting May 10th ending May 20th |
Quick tip
You can learn more about start dates here.
Type this | To add this recurring due date |
---|---|
every 12 hours starting at 9pm | Every day at 9am and 9pm |
every mon, fri at 20:00 | Every Monday and Friday at 20:00 |
every 3rd friday 8pm | Every 3rd Friday of the month at 8pm |
every 6 weeks at 09:00 starting jan 3 | Every 6 weeks starting on January 3rd, at 9am |
every fri at noon | Every Friday at 12pm |
every mon in the morning | Every Monday at 9am |
in the evening every weds | Every Wednesday at 7pm |
Note
Tasks with due times can't be set independently for each recurring day. This means that if you create a task with the due date every Monday, Friday at 8pm, both the Monday and Friday recurrence will be scheduled for 8pm.
Type this | To add this recurring due date |
---|---|
every monday, friday or ev monday, friday or every mon, fri | Every Monday and Friday |
every 2, 15, 27 or ev 2, 15, 27 | Every 2nd, 15th & 27th of the month |
every 14 jan, 14 apr, 15 jun, 15 sep | Every January 14th, April 14th, June 15th & September 15th |
every 15th workday, first workday, last workday | Every 15th workday, every first and every last workday of a month |
every 1st wed jan, 3rd thu jul | 1st Wednesday of each January and 3rd Thursday of each July |
You can create a recurring task that repeats at regular intervals from either the original task date or from the task's completed date by using every or every!, respectively. Here's how:
- Every: Completing a task that has a due date of every 3 months will set the task’s due date to 3 months from the task's original date. So if you created a task on January 10th with a due date of every 3 months, it will recur on Jan 10, Apr 10, July 10, etc regardless of when you complete the task.
- Every!: When you complete a task with a due date of every! 3 months, it will set the next due date to 3 months after the day you completed the task. So if you completed the task on January 20th, the next occurrence of the task will be April 20th.
Here are some examples of recurring due dates that use every or every!:
Type this | To add this recurring due date |
---|---|
every 3 days | Every 3 days starting today |
every first workday | Every first working day (Mon to Fri) of the month |
every last workday | Every last working day (Mon to Fri) of the month |
every 3 workday | Every 3rd work day (mon-Fri only) from today |
every quarter or quarterly | Every 3 months starting from today |
every! 3 hours | Every 3 hours from the time the task is completed |
every! 5 days | Every 5 days from the day on which the task is completed, starting today |
every! 2 months | Every 2 months from the day on which the task is completed, starting today |
after 10 days | Once the due date is entered, it will change to every! 10 days effective from today |
after 10 days starting 1 Aug | Once the due date is entered, it will change to every! 10 days effective from August 1 |
Warning
Every week is a dynamic recurring due date. This means that the task is scheduled according to when you last completed the task.
- For example, if you complete a recurring task that has the due date every week on a Monday, the task will be scheduled for the following Monday. If you complete the task on a Tuesday, the task will be scheduled for the following Tuesday.
Todoist will only schedule recurring tasks on future dates. If your recurring task is overdue past the date the task was next due to occur, Todoist will schedule the next occurrence on the next future recurring date when you complete the task.
- For example, if you create a task with the due date every 3 months starting from 15 Jan 2023 and you complete the task on 19 September 2023, Todoist will schedule the next occurrence of the task to 15 October 2023, because 15 April 2023 and 15 July 2023 have already passed.
Type this | To add this recurring due date |
---|---|
every other day | Every other day starting from today |
every other week | Every other week starting from today |
every other month | Every other month starting from today |
every other year | Every other year starting from today |
every other fri | Every other Friday, starting with the second Friday from now (and not the next upcoming Friday) |
Tasks that need to be done on holidays can be specified using these respective keywords:
Type this | To add this recurring due date |
---|---|
new year day | January 1 |
valentine or Valentine's Day | February 14 |
halloween | October 31 |
new year eve | December 31 |
Note
Thanksgiving used to be included in the natural language, but was removed as some countries, e.g. Canada, celebrate on dates differing to the US.
Special thanks to our Todoist ambassador Leighton Price for providing examples for this article.
View future recurrences of a task
Future recurrences aren't visible when using the list or board layouts in Todoist. This is because these tasks have a shifting due date, rather than being multiple separate tasks.
Here's an example:
You created a task called "Clean the house" and set the due date to monthly on the 28th.
The task is scheduled for the 28th of this month. When the task is completed, the due date is shifted to the next recurring date — the 28th of the next month.
If you're using the calendar layout, click View and select Future occurrences to see all recurrences of a task.
Reschedule a task with a recurring due date
If you suddenly need to put a task off for another day, reschedule the task.
When rescheduling a task with a recurring due date, the next recurrence depends on the type of recurring due date:
- Absolute recurring due date: the next recurrence will always be on that specific day of the week or date of the month. For example:
every Tues
orevery 15th day
. - Relative recurring due date: the next recurrence will continue based on the newly set date. There's no option to reschedule them where they would still maintain the original pattern. For example:
every week
orevery 12 days
.
Complete a task with a recurring due date
To complete a task with a recurring due date, click or tap the circle icon beside the task.
When the task is completed, the due date automatically updates to the next recurrence. It won't appear in the list of completed tasks in a project, but it's logged in the Activity Log.
To complete a task and no longer update the due date to the next recurrence:
- Click the task to open the task view.
- Click the three dots icon.
- Click Complete forever.
When completing an overdue task with a recurring due date
When you schedule your task to recur every! day or every day, your task will set its next due date based on the date you complete the task.
If your task was due yesterday, and you complete it today, the task will not move to today. It will instead move to tomorrow's date.
When completing a rescheduled task with a recurring due date
When a task with a recurring due date is manually rescheduled, it skips all occurrences between now and when the task is manually scheduled.
Here's an example:
Imagine today is November 1, 2000, and a task is due every December 1st.
If it's rescheduled to January 5th, and completed before or on that new due date, this completes the next occurrence. The next occurrence from January 5th is December 1, 2001.
The task is now due on December 1, 2002.
Undo a completed task with a recurring due date
When you complete a task with a recurring due date, an Undo pop-up will appear in the bottom-left of Todoist. This pop-up lasts for just a few seconds.
Click Undo if you decide not to complete the task. The recurring due date will shift back to whatever it was before you completed it.
If you've completed a task, and the Undo option is no longer visible, you can no longer revert it.
FAQ
No. If you schedule your recurring task for every! day or every day, your task will set its next due date based on the date you complete the task. This means that if your task was due yesterday and you complete it today, the task will not move to today. It will instead move to tomorrow's date.
Yes, but only if you're adding due dates with the same pattern. For example, every Monday, Tuesday.
You can't add recurring due dates using more than one every or with a different recurring pattern. For example, every Monday every 1 hour won't work.
It’s not possible to see all upcoming recurrences of a task in Todoist. This is because a recurring task is a single task with a shifting due date, rather than multiple separate tasks.
For example, if you create a task, Clean the house, and set the due date to monthly on the 28th, the task will be scheduled for the 28th of this month. When the task is completed, the due date is shifted to the next recurring date - in this case, the 28th of the next month.
You can do this by scheduling the task for multiple days in a week and including a specific end date, too.
For example, if you want to schedule a task for this Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, you can simply set the due date to every Wednesday, Friday, Saturday ending Saturday. The task won't recur anymore after Saturday.
To postpone a recurring task, use the task scheduler by right-clicking (Web, Windows, macOS) or swiping left (iOS, Android) and pick a new date from there.
Note
If you type out a new date for a recurring task, you will completely change the task's due date and lose the recurrence.
Yes, you can! Here's how.
You can view all the recurring tasks on your account by either searchingrecurring or using recurring as a filter query.
In general, recurring tasks will only show the next upcoming occurrence.
However, if you are a Pro or Business user, you will have access to the calendar layout option. If you view your Upcoming view in calendar layout, you will be able to see all future occurrences of your recurring tasks. You can enable or disable this option in your view options.