Household Chore Rotation Card

Create a fair weekly chore split for a household, with a printable rotation card and a simple weekly reset checklist.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install household-chore-rotation-card

Household Chore Rotation Card

Overview

Household 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.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user asks to:

  • Split household chores fairly
  • Make a weekly chore chart
  • Create a roommate cleaning rotation
  • Reduce confusion about who does what
  • Prepare a printable household reset card

Trigger phrases: "make a chore rotation", "split chores fairly", "roommate chore chart", "weekly cleaning card", "family chore reset".

Inputs to Request

Ask the user for:

  • Household members who will participate
  • Chores that need to happen weekly or daily
  • Chores that happen less often but should be tracked
  • Preferred reset day and time
  • Any limits, schedules, accessibility needs, allergies, or tasks someone should avoid
  • Chores people prefer or strongly dislike
  • Whether the card should rotate weekly, biweekly, or monthly
  • Whether children are involved and what tasks are age-appropriate

If the user is upset about an unfair split, acknowledge the frustration and reframe toward clear, respectful workload design.

Workflow

Step 1 - List Chores Without Blame

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:

  • Dishes
  • Trash and recycling
  • Floors
  • Bathroom reset
  • Kitchen surfaces
  • Laundry
  • Pet care
  • Meal cleanup
  • Entryway reset
  • Grocery list

Step 2 - Group by Effort

Group chores by estimated effort and frequency:

  • Tiny: under 5 minutes
  • Small: 5 to 15 minutes
  • Medium: 15 to 30 minutes
  • Large: over 30 minutes
  • Daily touch: quick repeat task
  • Weekly reset: deeper task once per week
  • Rotating deep clean: occasional heavier task

Ask the user to correct effort estimates when local reality differs.

Step 3 - Balance the Load

Assign chores so each person gets a fair mix of effort, frequency, and desirability. Consider:

  • Time availability
  • Physical load
  • Mental load, such as remembering supplies
  • Existing responsibilities
  • Preferred tasks
  • Tasks requiring adult supervision

Do not assume all household members have identical capacity. Fair does not always mean identical.

Step 4 - Set Owners and Backup Rules

For each chore, define:

  • Primary owner
  • Backup owner if the primary person is unavailable
  • Done-by day or time
  • Minimum acceptable standard
  • What to do if it cannot be completed

Keep the backup rule practical and non-punitive.

Step 5 - Choose the Reset Day

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:

  • Review the card
  • Rotate assignments
  • Note schedule conflicts
  • Restock supplies
  • Handle one overdue item
  • Celebrate what got done

Step 6 - Create the Printable Card

Make a compact printable card with:

  • Week of date
  • Reset day
  • Household members
  • Chore groups
  • Owners
  • Done-by timing
  • Checkboxes
  • Notes space
  • Kind reminder line

Use simple language that can be taped to a fridge or shared in a group chat.

Step 7 - Add Weekly Reset Checklist

Create a weekly reset checklist:

  1. Clear old card
  2. Rotate owners
  3. Confirm conflicts
  4. Check supplies
  5. Assign one deep-clean task
  6. Agree on one shared win
  7. Post the new card

Step 8 - Review for Tone

Before finalizing, remove blame, sarcasm, scorekeeping, and loaded wording. Use language such as:

  • "Owner this week"
  • "Needs backup"
  • "Done enough means"
  • "Reset together"
  • "Swap by agreement"

Output Template

# 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.

Example Prompts

  1. 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."

  2. 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."

  3. 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?"

Safety and Compliance

  • Avoids blame, shame, insults, scorekeeping, and loaded labels
  • Does not assume identical capacity, family roles, gender roles, or age abilities
  • Encourages accommodations for schedules, accessibility, allergies, and child safety
  • Uses user-provided household details and asks for correction when effort estimates may be wrong
  • Does not recommend unsafe tasks for children or people with limitations
  • This is a prompt-only skill with zero code execution, zero network calls, and zero credential requirements

Acceptance Criteria

  1. The output lists chores and groups them by effort or frequency.
  2. Chores are assigned to owners with a fair mix of load and timing.
  3. A reset day or reset rhythm is included.
  4. The printable card includes owners, backups, done-by timing, and checkboxes.
  5. A weekly reset checklist is included.
  6. The language stays neutral, practical, and free of blame.