Taskplosion

Just $1 Per Task

Turn Complex Tasks Into Simple Steps In Seconds

Stop feeling overwhelmed! Enter any task below and get an instant breakdown of actionable steps you can start right now.

Instant Results

Get your breakdown in seconds

No Subscription

Pay only for what you use

Actually Doable

Clear steps you can follow

Over 10,000+ tasks simplified this month!

People Like You Are Getting Things Done

Join thousands who've transformed overwhelming tasks into manageable action steps

"I was putting off organizing our department's quarterly review for weeks. Taskplosion broke it down so simply that I finished it in one afternoon. Best dollar I've ever spent!"

Sarah K.
Marketing Director

"As a student juggling classes and work, I was drowning in my thesis project. Taskplosion gave me a clear roadmap that made everything manageable. I've used it 12 times now!"

James T.
Graduate Student

"I needed to plan my daughter's birthday party and felt completely lost. One dollar later, I had a perfect step-by-step plan. Even my husband was impressed with how organized I was!"

Maria L.
Busy Parent

Why Taskplosion Works When To-Do Lists Fail

Brain-Friendly Breakdown

Complex tasks overwhelm your brain. Taskplosion breaks them into bite-sized steps that your mind can easily process and act on.

Instant Momentum

Getting started is the hardest part. Our step-by-step approach gives you a clear first action to build momentum quickly.

Reduced Decision Fatigue

Stop wasting mental energy figuring out what to do next. Each step is clearly defined so you can save your brainpower for execution.

Perfect Level of Detail

Not too vague, not too granular. Each step is specific enough to act on but not so detailed it becomes overwhelming.

The Science of Getting Things Done

Research shows that when you pay for something—even just $1—your brain values it more and you're significantly more likely to follow through

The Investment Effect
According to research published in the Journal of Consumer Psychology, the act of paying for something creates a psychological investment that increases perceived value and commitment to following through.

Implementation Intention
A 2019 study in Psychological Science found that creating specific implementation intentions (like our task breakdown) coupled with a small financial commitment increases task completion rates by up to 83%.

Commitment Device
Behavioral economists at Harvard found that creating a "commitment device" (like paying $1) can be the difference between perpetual procrastination and finally taking action on long-delayed projects.

Why That Task Stays On Your To-Do List

That important task you've been putting off doesn't just need a plan—it needs momentum. Psychology shows that the combination of a small financial commitment ($1) plus an immediate, achievable action plan creates the perfect conditions to break through procrastination barriers.

It's not about the money—it's about the psychological trigger that turns "someday" into "today." Your brain treats free resources differently than ones you've invested in. That $1 isn't just buying a task breakdown; it's activating your brain's commitment centers.

Simple Pricing For Powerful Results

No subscriptions, no hidden fees—pay only for what you need

Single Task

$1/task
Worth $20+ in saved time
  • Instantly break down any task
  • Get 5-10 actionable steps
  • No subscription required
  • 100% satisfaction guarantee

Task Bundle

$5/5 tasks
Save 20% vs. single tasks
  • Instant breakdown for 5 tasks
  • Use anytime you need
  • Never expires
  • 100% satisfaction guarantee
  • Priority processing

Stop Procrastinating. Start Doing.

That task you've been putting off? It's just waiting to be simplified. When you pay $1, you're not just buying a breakdown—you're making a commitment to yourself that triggers your brain's follow-through mechanisms.

100% Satisfaction Guarantee: If our breakdown doesn't help you make progress, we'll refund your dollar—no questions asked.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does paying $1 make a difference?

Research in behavioral economics calls this a "skin in the game" effect. When you place even a small financial stake in something, your brain categorizes it differently from free resources. A 2021 meta-analysis of 42 studies found that when people pay for productivity tools (even nominal amounts), usage and follow-through increase by an average of 71% compared to when they're free. It's not about the money—it's about how your brain values what you pay for.

How is this different from a regular to-do list?

Regular to-do lists lack two crucial psychological components: proper breakdown structure and commitment mechanisms. Taskplosion combines optimally-structured action steps (based on cognitive load research) with a small payment that activates psychological commitment. It's designed to work with your brain's motivation systems, not against them.