A Whitelist Browser — Built So They Can't Wander Off
No URL bar. No search. Only the sites you've added to the whitelist, only for the minutes they've earned.
No URL bar. No search. Only the sites you've added to the whitelist, only for the minutes they've earned.
Leo is 7. His mom enables the Safe Browser, sets the cost to 5 coins per minute, and adds YouTube Kids to the approved list. She approves Leo specifically.
On Monday, Leo finishes his morning routine — make bed, brush teeth, put away backpack. He earns 30 coins. He opens the Play tab, sees YouTube Kids, and taps it. The “Buy Time” sheet shows 10 minutes for 50 coins. He doesn't have enough.
He goes back to his task list and finds two bonus tasks: water the plants (10 coins) and help set the dinner table (15 coins). He does both. Now he has 55 coins.
He buys 10 minutes. The timer counts down in the browser bar. At 2 minutes, a warning pops up. He decides to close the video early and save his remaining coins for tomorrow.
His mom checks the transaction history. She sees three task completions and one browser_time deduction. Leo did extra tasks to earn screen time — and he managed his own budget. She didn't have to say a word about screen limits that day.
Internet access is something your child opens — not something that's always on. Every minute is approved, earned, and visible to you.
Kids earn Kudo Coins by completing their daily routines and tasks — then spend them to buy minutes of browsing time. Finishing their tasks is how they unlock the internet, not the other way around.
Your child cannot type a web address, run a search, or follow a link off-domain. They can only open the sites you've added to the whitelist. Pick from 20+ curated kid-focused sites (PBS Kids, Khan Academy Kids, Code.org, Scratch) or add your own custom domains. For YouTube and YouTube Kids, you can narrow even further to a specific channel allowlist.
Every second of browsing costs coins. The timer counts down live in the browser bar. At 5 minutes and 2 minutes remaining, the child gets a friendly warning so they can decide whether to buy more time.
When time expires, kids choose: buy more time (if they have coins), go earn coins from tasks, or close the browser. The economy creates a natural loop between effort and screen time.
No content filter is perfect. So we don't rely on one. The browser is built so the things parents are most worried about aren't reachable in the first place.
Type a web address
Run a Google search
Open an off-whitelist site by tapping a link
Watch a non-allowlisted YouTube channel (when allowlist is set)
Open a downloaded file or a javascript: / data: URL
Keep browsing past the daily cap without parent approval
Buy more time without earning the coins first
Use the browser at all unless the parent has enabled it
Whitelist-only access is the primary safety control. We don't claim to filter the open internet — we choose not to load it.
In Settings → Safe Browser, you choose which websites are allowed, set the coin-per-minute rate, and approve each child individually.
From the Play tab, the child sees approved website cards. They tap one, choose how many minutes to buy, and coins are deducted instantly.
A live countdown shows remaining time in the browser bar. Warnings appear at 5 and 2 minutes. When time hits zero, browsing pauses until they buy more or close.
Shaped by working with over a dozen child and family therapists.
A whitelist your child can't bypass, minutes they earn instead of demand, and a timer that ends the session for you.
No credit card required. Set up their digital world in 5 minutes.