Reclaim.ai
AI calendar that automatically protects focus time, habits, and buffer periods in your schedule
What It Does
Reclaim.ai is an AI-powered calendar layer that works on top of Google Calendar and Outlook. It automatically protects focus time, reschedules habits when conflicts arise, and adds buffer time between meetings — acting as an 'external brain' for schedule management.
AI Features (Expert Assessment)
Reclaim.ai is a genuinely AI-core tool. Its scheduling engine autonomously manages your calendar — protecting focus time blocks, automatically rescheduling flexible habits when higher-priority events conflict, and inserting buffer time between meetings without manual intervention. This goes beyond simple reminders: the AI makes real-time scheduling decisions based on priority, flexibility, and calendar context. Reclaim takes a calendar-first approach — it protects your existing routines and habits from being disrupted by incoming meetings. For autistic adults, the automatic habit rescheduling is particularly valuable: instead of the common 'all-or-nothing' cycle where one missed routine derails the whole day, Reclaim automatically moves the routine to the next available slot.
Who Is This For?
Autistic adults who need help maintaining consistent daily routines despite unpredictable schedule changes — particularly working professionals who struggle with transition time between meetings and protecting focus periods.
Additional Notes
Reclaim.ai is a general-purpose productivity tool, not designed specifically for autism. It requires Google Calendar or Outlook — it works as a layer on top of your existing calendar rather than replacing it. As of 2026, there is no native mobile app; it functions as a web-based calendar integration.
Pros
- ✓ Free tier available with core habit protection features
- ✓ Calendar-first approach protects existing routines automatically
- ✓ Buffer time between meetings addresses transition anxiety
- ✓ Habit rescheduling prevents 'all-or-nothing' routine collapse
Cons
- ✗ Web-only — no native mobile app
- ✗ Requires Google Calendar or Outlook as the base calendar
- ✗ Initial setup requires time investment to configure habits and preferences
- ✗ Less effective without consistent use of a connected task manager