Score your habit consistency and find out whether your routine will stick long-term.
Most people approach habits the same way they approach diets: with a burst of intensity that fades within weeks. They commit to 7 days a week, push hard for 10 days, miss two in a row, declare failure, and restart. This cycle is so common it has a name — the false hope syndrome — and it is the primary reason most habit attempts fail.
The research on habit formation tells a different story. The single most important predictor of whether a habit will become automatic is not the intensity of effort, but the regularity of the repetition. A habit performed 4 days per week for 12 consecutive weeks will wire far more deeply into the brain than a habit performed daily for 3 weeks and then abandoned. Consistency over time is the mechanism through which behaviours become identity.
This habit consistency score gives you an objective measure of where you stand on that spectrum. It rewards both this week's completion rate and your historical consistency, treating a long, reliable track record as more valuable than a single great week. Use Week Plan to schedule your habit days as locked calendar blocks, protecting them from the meeting creep that erodes most well-intentioned routines.
The score blends three factors: your completion rate this week (how many of your target days you actually did), your current streak (consecutive days without breaking the habit), and your tenure (how many weeks you have been tracking). Each factor contributes differently, reflecting the compounding value of sustained consistency.
The popular claim that habits form in 21 days comes from a misreading of a 1960 book by plastic surgeon Maxwell Maltz. The actual research — most notably a 2010 study by Phillippa Lally at University College London — found that habit automaticity takes an average of 66 days, with a range of 18 to 254 days depending on the complexity of the behaviour and the individual.
Simple habits (drinking a glass of water with breakfast) automate relatively quickly. Complex habits (a full morning workout routine) can take four to six months before they feel effortless. The implication is significant: if you are struggling with a habit after three weeks, you are not a failure — you are simply at the beginning of the process, not the end.
The key insight from Lally's research is that missing one day has virtually no impact on the habit formation trajectory, but missing two consecutive days significantly increases the probability of abandonment. This is the scientific basis for the common advice to "never miss twice." Your streak metric in this calculator directly captures this risk: a streak of 0 after a previous streak means you are at a vulnerable transition point.
If your score is below 60, here are the strategies with the strongest evidence base for improving consistency:
Week Plan is built around the principle that what gets scheduled gets done. Each week, you can place your habit blocks as recurring, locked time slots before anything else fills your calendar. The weekly view makes it immediately visible if your habits are protected or getting squeezed out by other commitments.
The combination of a weekly habit review (checking your consistency score every Sunday) and forward-looking habit scheduling (blocking next week's habit slots before Monday) is one of the most effective systems for long-term behaviour change. You are no longer relying on motivation or willpower — you are relying on your calendar, which is a far more reliable system.
For teams and accountability partners, Week Plan allows you to share your weekly review and habit commitments, creating the social accountability that research shows is one of the strongest predictors of habit persistence. A commitment made to another person is significantly harder to break than a private internal commitment.
Everything you need to know about using this tool effectively.
Week Plan turns your scores into a structured weekly plan — goals, tasks, time blocks, and priorities in one focused view.
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