Install
openclaw skills install household-chore-rotation-cardCreate a fair weekly chore split for a household, with a printable rotation card and a simple weekly reset checklist.
openclaw skills install household-chore-rotation-cardHousehold Chore Rotation Card helps families, partners, or roommates divide recurring chores in a fair, low-drama way. It turns a list of household tasks into a printable weekly card with owners, effort levels, timing, and a reset checklist.
The skill avoids blame language. It focuses on visible work, realistic effort, clear ownership, and a shared reset rhythm.
Use this skill when the user asks to:
Trigger phrases: "make a chore rotation", "split chores fairly", "roommate chore chart", "weekly cleaning card", "family chore reset".
Ask the user for:
If the user is upset about an unfair split, acknowledge the frustration and reframe toward clear, respectful workload design.
Create a complete chore list using neutral wording. Avoid phrases such as "the messy person" or "the person who never helps". Use task names instead:
Group chores by estimated effort and frequency:
Ask the user to correct effort estimates when local reality differs.
Assign chores so each person gets a fair mix of effort, frequency, and desirability. Consider:
Do not assume all household members have identical capacity. Fair does not always mean identical.
For each chore, define:
Keep the backup rule practical and non-punitive.
Pick a weekly reset day. If the user did not choose one, suggest a low-conflict option such as Sunday afternoon or the evening before trash pickup.
Define the reset as a short household check-in:
Make a compact printable card with:
Use simple language that can be taped to a fridge or shared in a group chat.
Create a weekly reset checklist:
Before finalizing, remove blame, sarcasm, scorekeeping, and loaded wording. Use language such as:
# Household Chore Rotation Card
**Week of:** ...
**Reset day:** ...
**Rotation style:** Weekly / Biweekly / Monthly
**Tone note:** This card is for clarity, not blame.
## Chore Load Groups
- **Tiny:** ...
- **Small:** ...
- **Medium:** ...
- **Large:** ...
## Printable Rotation Card
| Chore | Effort | Owner this week | Backup | Done by | Done enough means | Check |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | ... | [ ] |
## Weekly Reset Checklist
- [ ] Review what changed this week.
- [ ] Rotate owners.
- [ ] Confirm schedule conflicts.
- [ ] Check supplies.
- [ ] Pick one deep-clean task.
- [ ] Post or share the new card.
## Swap Rule
If someone cannot do a task, they ask for a swap before the done-by time and help choose the backup plan.
## Kind Reminder Line
Shared spaces work better when the work is visible, specific, and rotated.
Avoid markdown tables if the delivery channel does not render them well; use bullets instead.
Apartment rotation: "Make a chore rotation for our 3-person apartment. We need to handle dishes, trash, floors, bathroom, kitchen surfaces, and meal cleanup. I'd like to rotate weekly, with Saturday as reset day."
Family with kids: "Create a family chore chart that includes kids ages 8 and 12. The 8-year-old can do small tasks like feeding the pet and clearing the table. We need a printable card with checkboxes."
Mixed schedules: "Our 4-roommate house needs a fair chore split. Two people work from home and can do tasks during the day; the other two can only do evenings. Can you make a rotation that accounts for this?"