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Hayley

Hayley is a voice-first thinking companion for iPhone that turns short spoken entries into reflections, patterns, and follow-up questions.

Hayley

What is Hayley?

Hayley is an iPhone app that records short voice entries and responds with a structured reflection rather than a free-form chat. After you speak for up to sixty seconds, it returns three elements: an insight into what you may be saying beneath the surface, a pattern that may be recurring across sessions, and a question to sit with.

The app is designed as a private thinking companion for people who process by talking. It builds session history over time, surfaces monthly reflections, and keeps transcription on-device so your voice does not leave your phone.

Key Features

  • Short voice entries up to 60 seconds — You can tap and speak without a prompt or preset structure, which makes it easier to capture a thought quickly.
  • Structured reflection after each entry — Hayley returns an insight, a pattern, and a question, giving each session a consistent output format.
  • Pattern memory across sessions — The app keeps track of recurring language and themes over time so reflections can build on earlier entries.
  • Monthly summary reflection — Once a month, Hayley surfaces a recap of what slowed you down, what you avoided, and one concrete next step.
  • Entry history — Past entries are stored so you can review how your thinking changes and where patterns repeat.
  • On-device transcription — Transcription happens on the phone, and the app states that nothing leaves your device.
  • Free trial and subscription options — The listing notes a 14-day free trial, with in-app purchases for monthly and annual plans.

How to Use Hayley

Install the app on an iPhone, open it, and tap to record a voice entry when you want to think something through. Speak for up to sixty seconds, then review the insight, pattern, and question it generates.

Over time, return to the app for new entries and monthly reflections, and use the history view to compare how your themes evolve across sessions.

Use Cases

  • Rapid self-reflection after a stressful moment — Record a quick voice note when you need to process a conversation, decision, or emotional reaction without writing.
  • Capturing recurring thoughts between tasks — Use it when the same issue keeps resurfacing and you want a record of how it changes over time.
  • Supporting inconsistent journaling habits — People who do not want a blank page or long-form writing can still create a lightweight reflective routine.
  • Thinking through founder or maker problems — The app can help users who talk through ideas discover assumptions, blind spots, or repeating concerns.
  • Reviewing monthly patterns — Use the monthly reflection to see what slowed you down, what you avoided, and what next step is most concrete.

FAQ

Is Hayley a chatbot or therapy app? No. The listing explicitly says it is not a chatbot, not voice notes, and not therapy.

How long can each voice entry be? Entries can be up to 60 seconds long.

Does Hayley save my audio in the cloud? The source says transcription is on-device and that your voice never leaves your phone. It also says the developer does not collect data from the app.

What devices does it support? The App Store listing says it is designed for iPhone. It also shows compatibility information requiring iOS 26.4 or later.

Does the app offer a free trial? Yes. The listing mentions a 14-day free trial and in-app purchases for monthly and annual subscriptions.

Alternatives

  • Voice journaling apps — Similar if you want to speak thoughts aloud and save them, but they may focus on transcription and archiving rather than structured reflection.
  • Text journaling and mood-tracking apps — Useful if you prefer typing over speaking, or if you want mood logs and written entries instead of voice-first processing.
  • AI coaching or reflection apps — These can also help with self-review and pattern spotting, but they may use broader coaching workflows instead of Hayley’s short, voice-led format.
  • Therapy or mental wellness apps — Better suited if you want guided mental health support, check-ins, or exercises rather than a lightweight reflective companion.