Who's actually close to you?
Orbit maps your relationships by how often you actually connect — not how close you feel. Quiet, honest, on your iPhone.
Three steps. No streaks.
No daily goals, no badges, no celebration animations. Just the data and the gap between what you said and what you do.
Add people
Five in your inner circle, fifteen in sympathy, fifty friends, one hundred fifty in your active network. You decide who goes where.
Tap log when you talk
One sheet. The person, optionally how (call, text, in person) and who reached out. Under five seconds.
See the gap
Orbit shows who is actually where, by behavior. Aligned, drifted, or dropped. No nudges, no guilt, no streaks to defend.
Honest geometry for your circle.
Insights are pure statistics, not AI guesses. Every observation can be traced to a number you'd count yourself if you had the patience.
You declared five people in your inner circle. By how often you talk, two of them are actually there.
Three people you said are inner-fifteen are behaving like layer fifty this month.
One person you declared close. Zero contact in over a year. Just so you know.
Three relationships have moved at the same rhythm for six months. Through all of it.
You initiated seventy-eight percent of contacts with one person this month. They reached out twice.
A quiet weekly summary. No celebration, no score. Just the picture as it is.
Private by behavior.
The whole product depends on you trusting where the data lives. So we made the answer short.
Your relationship data — names, photos, contact history, notes — stays on your iPhone. We never see who's in your circle. To measure which channel brought you to Orbit, the app uses anonymous device-level attribution (AppsFlyer) you can decline. For notifications, a Firebase token is registered so push messages can reach your device. Neither service receives any information about the people you log.