Built for students

An agentic scheduler for students that actually fits real student life

Pace plans your studying and coursework around classes, social life, sleep, and the fact that week 7 of a semester looks nothing like week 2.

Start for $1

Why most students plans fail

Syllabi tell you when things are due, not when to actually study
Generic study apps don't know about your class schedule, shifts, or social life
Midterms and finals weeks break every plan you had in week 3
Motivation apps reset streaks after one missed day and kill the habit
How Pace is different

A plan that bends with your life

Reads your class schedule and plans around it

Pace sees your actual week (classes, labs, shifts) before suggesting study blocks. No planning sessions during a class.

Builds toward the exam, not toward today

Tell Pace when the exam is. It builds a week-by-week plan that front-loads early review and peaks the right amount before test day.

Rebuilds when the semester shifts

Midterm week, surprise assignment, a bad flu week - Pace rebuilds the plan so you still land prepared, without cramming from scratch.

Works for studying, assignments, applications, anything long-horizon

Semester-long essay, grad school applications, LSAT prep, honors thesis - same scheduling engine, different subject.

What a week looks like

An example rhythm

Monday
Post-class review, 45 min, library
Tuesday
Problem sets, 60 min evening
Wednesday
Rest or light review
Thursday
Reading, 60 min afternoon
Friday
Catch-up window (or rest if ahead)
Saturday
Deeper session, 90 min morning
Sunday
Plan next week + light review

Pace generates the actual schedule from your calendar - this is just a shape.

Common questions

Does Pace replace a study planner like Notion or a paper planner?
No, it replaces the 'decide when to study' part. You still take notes wherever works for you. Pace handles the schedule.
Can I use Pace for LSAT, MCAT, or GRE prep?
Yes - these are exactly the multi-month goals Pace is built for. Give it your test date and baseline, and it builds the plan.
Is the $49/year realistic for a student budget?
That's about $4/month. Less than one coffee per month - and the $1 first week means you're not committing until it actually works for you.

Build your plan

7 day trial. Cancel anytime.