
SexTracker
A private sex tracker for couples who want to keep the flame alive.
Most couples don’t have a love problem. They have a memory problem and a “we’ll fix it later” problem. SexTracker helps partners track intimacy, spot patterns, and talk about what’s working (and what’s not) before the spark turns into roommates-with-a-calendar.
Your relationship doesn’t need more advice. It needs proof.
Couples fight about sex like it’s a mystery.
“It’s been a while”. “No it hasn’t”. “You never start”. “I always start”. Then you both go quiet and pretend the problem will die of boredom.
Here’s the deal: your brain is a liar under stress. It remembers vibes, not facts.
SexTracker (thesextracker.com) is built for couples who want to track intimacy without turning it into a spreadsheet of shame. You log what happened. You see what’s changing. You catch the drift early - before resentment sets up camp.
What it actually does (and why you’ll care)
SexTracker focuses on the hard part: consistency and honesty.
- Track your intimacy in a simple, shared place so you stop debating “when” and start talking “why”.
- Relationship stats and trends that make patterns obvious: dry spells, spikes, and what life events do to your connection.
- Goals that don’t feel cheesy. Think: “twice a week”. “more initiating”. “try something new”. not “be more romantic”.
It gets worse if you ignore it.
When you don’t measure anything, every conversation turns into a trial. One partner becomes the prosecutor. The other becomes the defense. Nobody wins.
The real selling point: privacy + momentum
This category attracts creeps and data-hungry apps. So the bar is simple: be private, be respectful, and don’t guilt-trip users.
SexTracker positions itself as fun and private, made for two people who trust each other but still want boundaries. It’s not couples therapy in an app. It’s a mirror.
Who this is for
- Long-term couples who feel the slow fade and want to reverse it.
- New couples who want to build a rhythm before life bulldozes it.
- Partners who struggle to talk about sex without turning it into a fight.
But there’s a catch: tracking won’t save you if you use it as ammo.
Use it to start better talks. Use it to notice effort. Use it to rebuild.
That’s the play.
