1 signal from Reddit — June 21, 2026

1 signal from Reddit — June 21, 2026

r/SomebodyMakeThis ran dry for the third consecutive day, so today's sole signal comes from a first-time probe of r/androidapps: a user requesting an Android payment reminder app with custom recurrence scheduling, payment history, cloud sync, and a one-time purchase model. Verdict: conditional (buildability 3/5) — DueDate and Bluecoins were suggested in the thread but OP never confirmed they cover all four criteria.

Twitter 'I want an app that...' Demand Radar
21/6/2026 · 21:20
3 suscripciones · 30 contenidos
Coverage: Jun 20 13:19 UTC → Jun 21 18:00 UTC (28.7h). Source: r/androidapps (first-time probe). r/SomebodyMakeThis produced zero qualifying signals this window.

Quick scan

#IdeaUpvotesSourceGap statusBuildabilityVerdict
1⚠️ Android payment reminder app with custom recurrence, payment history, cloud sync, one-time purchase4r/androidappsLikely gap — DueDate and Bluecoins suggested in comments but OP never confirmed they cover all requirements3 / 5Conditional

Signal 1 — Payment reminder app with custom recurrence

Source: r/androidapps, posted Jun 20, 2026 at 8:55 AM EDT by /u/sanmarcha. Score: 4 upvotes, 7 comments, upvote ratio 75%. 1
Cargando tarjeta de contenido…
The demand is specific. /u/sanmarcha wants an Android app that:
  • sends pre-due-date notifications before a payment is due
  • keeps a payment history with amounts recorded
  • supports custom recurrence — not just "monthly," but things like "every 2 weeks on Monday and Friday"
  • syncs to OneDrive or Google Drive for backup
  • is a one-time purchase or lifetime IAP — no subscriptions, no ads
The OP tried existing options and hit a wall: 1
"I've only found subscriptions, and I really hate those. I'm okay with a paid app or one single lifetime IAP. No ads."
When a commenter suggested a generic notification app (com.kila.addnotification.lars), the OP replied: 1
"Hi, thanks! But I'm looking for something specific for bills and payments, so I can get records and amounts."
That second reply is the clearest signal in the thread: OP knows generic reminder tools exist and is explicitly asking for something that combines payment tracking with reminder logic under a one-time purchase model.

Competitive landscape check

Two apps were suggested in the comments. Neither was confirmed by OP as meeting all requirements. 1
DueDate (open-source, github.com/MateYou-Apps/DueDate) — suggested by /u/Prophec20, received 2 upvotes in the thread. DueDate is focused on due-date tracking and can handle recurring items. Whether it supports custom recurrence at the granularity OP described ("every 2 weeks on Monday and Friday") or records payment amounts with history is not confirmed from the thread. OP did not respond to this suggestion.
Bluecoins — suggested by /u/InevitableSpring2828 as supporting "manual reminders with complex repeat rules" (1 upvote). Bluecoins is primarily a personal finance and budgeting app. Its reminder functionality is a side feature rather than the core product. OP did not respond to this suggestion either.
The heavily downvoted suggestion (score −3) was for trymark-ai.com — a self-promotional post that other commenters rejected. 1
Bottom line on the competitive picture: the gap may exist, but it isn't confirmed. DueDate and Bluecoins are plausible partial solutions — they were not ruled out by OP. A quick functional check of both apps against the four-criteria checklist (custom recurrence granularity + payment history + cloud sync + one-time pricing) would resolve this before committing to a build.

Demand profile

The signal is narrow. This is one post with 4 upvotes and 7 comments — not an eruption of unmet demand, just a user who knows what they want and couldn't find it after searching. That's meaningful, but it's a single data point from a subreddit (/r/androidapps) that functions primarily as an app-recommendation community, not a problem-expression space. Signal purity for the full 28.7h window across r/androidapps was approximately 3.3% (1 qualifying post out of 21). 1
The requirement combination — custom recurrence + payment-specific history + cloud sync + one-time pricing — is distinctive enough that it probably isn't fully satisfied by mainstream budgeting apps. Apps like Wallet, Money Manager, or YNAB are either subscription-based, overkill for pure bill reminders, or don't support arbitrary recurrence rules. The one-time-purchase constraint filters out a large chunk of the Android finance app market, where subscriptions are the prevailing pricing model.

Buildability assessment

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The build itself is not technically complex. A local SQLite database for payment history, a flexible recurrence engine (Android's WorkManager handles scheduling), and a file-based export to Google Drive or OneDrive cover the four requirements. The constraint is market size: this is a narrow niche inside Android personal finance, and the one-time-purchase model limits lifetime revenue per user. A sustainable path would be a $2–4 one-time price with optional cloud sync as a paid add-on, or a simple open-source release with a Play Store listing.

Source pool note

r/SomebodyMakeThis — 0 qualifying signals in 28.7 hours. Six in-window posts; all were builder-intent, I-made-this, or meta discussions. Weekend timing (Sun–Mon) partially explains the volume drop. Status: active, below baseline. 2
r/androidapps — first probe. 21 posts in-window; 1 qualifying consumer demand signal (~3.3% purity). The subreddit runs primarily on app recommendations and tech support; genuine unmet-need posts are rare. Low-priority supplemental source. 1
r/Doesthisexist — first probe. Zero posts in the primary window; five posts in a 72h fallback, all excluded (physical products, off-topic, NSFW). ~1.5 posts/day average, 0% software demand hit rate. Not recommended for regular rotation. 3
Cover: AI-generated illustration.

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