Vs subscriptions
Race Day Log vs the monthly bill
On Race Day Log —
The health record aisle is stacked with subscriptions: habit-tracker apps with premium tiers, health-data platforms that upsell insights back to you. The Race Day Log is one HTML file that does the honest working core of what those tools sell, once, for the price of a Swiss Knife.
The bill you were quietly paying
Add up an average health stack and it costs $5–$20 a month per app, forever. That is a rental fee for arithmetic and records — neither of which have changed since the invention of paper.
Two premium habit trackers a year cover the Swiss Knife. Every year after that is pure savings on this category.
What the Race Day Log replaces cleanly
At kilometre thirty-eight you made yourself a promise, and by the following Tuesday you had entered another one. That is the working shape most subscriptions in this category are wrapped around; the Race Day Log delivers it without the wrapper.
You keep the workflow. You lose the login, the sync outage, the price hike email, and the export deadline.
What you honestly give up
Team collaboration in real time. Auto-import from third-party APIs. A mobile app that pings you. If any of those are load-bearing for how you work today, keep the SaaS — the Race Day Log is not trying to compete on those fronts.
Most people, honestly, were paying for features they did not use. The Race Day Log is what remains when you strip that back to the tool.
What you stop renting
- habit-tracker apps with premium tiers (and its clones)Working core replaced by a file you own.
- The "team plan" you're on for one seatA file has no per-seat price and no unused-invite awkwardness.
- The email that raises the price 15% every MarchFiles don't send emails.
Questions people ask
Will this pay for itself?
Two premium habit trackers a year cover the Swiss Knife. A Swiss Knife folds the Race Day Log in with up to eleven other tools for $95, once.
What if my needs grow past a single file?
Excellent problem. Keep the Race Day Log for what it does well; add a specialised SaaS on top only when you have a specialised need. Nothing here locks you in — it is a file.
Can I import my current data?
The Race Day Log is deliberately hand-entered. Two minutes of typing on Monday keeps you closer to your own health record than an integration ever will.
The subscription was renting the arithmetic. Buy the arithmetic instead.