Despite its high ratings, Baby Tracker isn't for everyone. Here are the most common reasons parents start exploring other options.
Ads in the free tier
Baby Tracker's free version includes ads. When you're logging a feeding at 3 AM, an ad popping up is more than annoying — it's disruptive. Some parents would rather have a genuinely ad-free experience without having to pay.
No AI features or smart guidance
Baby Tracker records what happened. That's it. There are no personalized insights, no care plans, no developmental guidance. Parents who want their tracker to help them make decisions — not just store data — start looking for more.
No growth charts
Baby Tracker doesn't include WHO or Fenton growth charts. If tracking your baby's weight, length, and head circumference on percentile charts matters to you, you'll need a different app — or a separate tool.
Caregiver sync requires Pro
Sharing data with a partner is a premium feature in Baby Tracker. If both parents need to log and view data — which most do — you're essentially forced into the paid version for a feature many competitors include for free.
Want more than basic logging
Sometimes you outgrow an app. Baby Tracker is great for the first few weeks when all you need is a simple log. But as your baby grows and feeding patterns, sleep schedules, and milestones become more complex, some parents want a tool that grows with them.