About this collection
A weekly planner is the workhorse of the library. Once a week — usually Sunday evening or first thing Monday morning — you sit down with one of these sheets and rough-out the next seven days before they happen to you.
Different households need different week shapes. Some run on a Monday-start grid with vertical day columns, some on a Sunday-start with hourly rows, and some prefer a horizontal lined layout that reads more like a weekly journal than a calendar.
Further reading: a longer essay on building a personal planning system that pairs well with this collection.
The collection here covers the full grid of weekly layouts. Vertical-column spreads, where each day is a tall column and you write timed events down the column, work best for week shapes with many appointments. Horizontal-row spreads, where each day is a single horizontal row, work best for weeks that are more task-driven than time-driven. Hourly grids overlay both with a left-edge time scale and are the right choice for people whose week is a series of meetings or classes. Two-page spreads give you twice the writing area and are the right choice for households with multiple people on the same calendar.
We also publish Sunday-start and Monday-start variants of every layout, because academic and European calendars start the week on Monday while most US household calendars start on Sunday, and forcing yourself to plan against the wrong-shaped week is one of the easiest small frictions to remove. Inside each variant you will find a weekly top-priorities section, a meals or dinner-plan strip, a small habit or workout row, a weekly notes column, and a space for a next-week look-ahead — the six elements that, in our experience, separate a planner that gets used from a planner that gets ignored.
If you are new to weekly planning, start with a horizontal-row Sunday-start layout for a full month. After that month you will know whether you want to upgrade to vertical columns (for a more time-driven week) or stay with rows (for a more task-driven week). The single biggest reason a weekly planner stops getting used is that the layout does not match the shape of the week — switching layouts is almost always the right move.
What's typically inside a weekly planner printable
- Seven labeled day blocks
- A weekly top priorities section
- A meals or dinner-plan strip
- A small habit or workout row
- A weekly notes column
- A space for next-week look-ahead
How to choose the right one
Match the start day to your household (Sunday-start for most US calendars, Monday-start for academic and European ones). Pick vertical columns if you have a lot of timed appointments and horizontal rows if your week is more task-driven.
A note on the underlying practice
Time management is the process of planning and exercising conscious control of time spent on specific activities—especially to increase effectiveness, efficiency, and productivity.
Background context drawn from open Wikipedia summaries; the printables themselves are the editorial work of the PlannerNest team.
Related: a deeper guide to the methodology behind these printables.