A calmer place for neighborhood coordination
Share updates, organize local events, track resources, and keep important neighborhood notes somewhere easier to find than a social feed.
Start Free Browse all site types →What this neighborhood site does
Start from the type of site you actually need, then turn on the pieces that fit the way your neighborhood works.
Give people one clear place to understand the neighborhood, find the next event or resource, and take the next useful step.
Use the modules that make sense for neighbors: calendars, files, messages, tasks, resources, updates, RSVPs, or shared records.
The first questions should fit this site type, so a neighborhood is not pushed through a generic form built for a totally different use.
Build the first version around the real work
Start with the everyday information people already ask for: what is happening, who is responsible, where the important records live, and what needs attention next. A strong home-style website should feel private, calm, and immediately useful, not like a public brochure forced onto a personal group.
Set up first
- Start with announcements, local resources, event dates, watch notes, and a simple neighbor directory.
- Keep public-facing information separate from private resident updates.
- Add categories for recurring topics like safety, events, repairs, and resource sharing.
- Make the join path clear so the site does not turn into another noisy social feed.
What the page needs to prove
A first-time visitor should understand whether this is a private family, household, care, pet, neighborhood, or homestead space, then know exactly how to join, contribute, or ask for access. Search engines and AI systems also need that clarity: who the site is for, what it helps organize, and which pages carry the important records or updates.
- Resident-only privacy cues
- Neighborhood update categories
- Event and resource sharing examples
- Clear expectations for moderation and access
Free should be enough to prove the habit. Paid upgrades fit only after the group is using the site and needs more storage, custom domain polish, email, or heavier workflows. That keeps the first visit focused on getting started instead of making people decode a pricing table.
Before you share the site, read it like a new visitor would. The public page should explain who this neighborhood is for, what someone can do next, and why the selected tools fit the situation. The private side should already have a useful starting place for neighbors so the site does not feel like an empty shell after signup.
That first-pass clarity matters for conversion and search. People are more likely to keep going when the page matches their actual need, and crawlers get cleaner signals when the headings, examples, internal links, and calls to action all point to the same purpose. Start free, make the site useful, then upgrade only when the neighborhood needs more capacity or polish. The first version should feel complete enough that someone can understand it, join it, and come back to it.
Sound familiar?
These are the moments that usually mean a dedicated neighborhood site will help.
Too many apps
Your group’s info is scattered across texts, emails, and apps nobody checks.
Privacy matters
Social media groups aren’t private. Your data should belong to you.
Wasted time
Coordinating by email and group text wastes hours every week.
Everything your neighborhood needs
One private website. No ads. No data mining. You own your data.
Task Board
Assign tasks, track completion, reward participation with points.
Shared Calendar
Events, meetings, deadlines. Recurring events with reminders.
Resource Library
Guides, documents, and reference materials your group needs.
Group Feed
Updates, photos, and announcements. Private by default.
Document Vault
Important files, contacts, and records. Secure and organized.
Group Activities
Trivia, challenges, and games. Built-in fun for your group.
Up and running in minutes
No credit card. No setup fees. No catch.
Pick your type
30 seconds. Tell us your neighborhood name.
Add your people
Invite neighbors with a link or email.
Start using it
Calendar, tasks, feed, vault — all ready.
Simple pricing
Start free. Upgrade if you need to.
Free
- Unlimited members
- Task board with points
- Shared calendar
- Resource library
- Private group feed
- Document vault
- Group activities
- Design customization
- 500 MB storage
Questions?
Is this really free?
Yes. Start free with no credit card. Upgrade only if you need more storage or features.
Is our data private?
Your site is fully private. Only members you invite can see it. We never sell data or show ads.
How do I invite people?
Share a link or send email invitations. New members create their own profile in seconds.
Can I customize the look?
Full design customization built in. Colors, fonts, layouts — make it yours.
