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Best StoryWorth Alternatives in 2026

Best StoryWorth Alternatives in 2026

StoryWorth is the name most people think of when they want to capture a parent’s or grandparent’s life story. And for good reason – it’s been around longest, it’s simple, and the hardcover book at the end is a lovely keepsake.

But it’s not for everyone. Maybe your parent doesn’t enjoy writing. Maybe you’d rather sit together and have the conversation in person. Maybe you want voice recording, video, or AI-powered writing instead of typed responses to weekly emails.

Good news: there are excellent alternatives. This guide reviews the best services like StoryWorth available in 2026, explains how they differ, and helps you find the one that fits your family.


Why Look for a StoryWorth Alternative?

StoryWorth does one thing well: it sends your parent a question each week, they write their answer, and after a year it’s compiled into a book. If your parent enjoys writing and is happy working independently, it’s a solid choice.

But people look for alternatives for several common reasons:

None of these are criticisms – StoryWorth is a good product. But different families have different needs, and there are now plenty of alternatives to StoryWorth that address these gaps in different ways.


StoryWorth: A Quick Recap

Before looking at alternatives, here’s what StoryWorth offers as the baseline:

Best for: Parents who are comfortable working on a computer or phone independently, whether they prefer writing or speaking their answers.

Main limitations: Solo experience (your parent works alone), Q&A format (responses don’t read as a flowing narrative), no video recording.

Does StoryWorth Work in the UK?

Yes – StoryWorth is available in the UK. The subscription costs $99/year (approximately £80), and books are printed from facilities in both the US and Europe, so delivery to UK addresses is straightforward. Note that the price is charged in US dollars, with free economy shipping included for US addresses – UK shipping is calculated separately.

A few things UK buyers should know:

StoryWorth works well from the UK. But if you’d prefer a different approach to capturing stories, the alternatives to StoryWorth below are worth considering. Several of them – including services like StoryWorth that use prompts and services that take a completely different approach – are reviewed in detail.


Remento

How It Compares to StoryWorth

Where StoryWorth asks your parent to write, Remento lets them speak. Your parent receives a prompt via email or text, clicks a link, and records a short audio or video response – no app to download, no passwords to remember. Remento’s AI “Speech-to-Story” technology then converts the spoken response into polished written narrative.

StoryWorth added phone recording recently, but speaking into a phone isn’t the same as using a platform designed around voice from the start. Remento’s whole experience is built for speaking – the prompts, the recording flow, the AI writing. Many older adults have wonderful stories but find writing them down exhausting. Speaking is easier, more natural. And Remento’s AI does a good job of turning casual speech into readable prose.

Best For

Parents who prefer talking to typing. If your dad could tell you stories all day but would never sit down and write them, Remento removes that barrier.

Price

$99/year (approximately £80). Includes one hardcover book (up to 200 pages). Additional copies are $69 each.

Key Features

Limitations

Like StoryWorth, Remento is a prompt-based, individual experience. Your parent responds on their own – the interaction is between your parent and the platform, not between you and your parent. The AI writing converts a spoken monologue into a readable story, but it’s not capturing a conversation with its natural tangents and follow-up questions.


Willow

Disclosure: This is our product.

How It Compares to StoryWorth

Willow takes a fundamentally different approach. Instead of sending prompts for your parent to answer alone, Willow provides guided conversation prompts designed for two people – you and your parent, sitting together. You choose a topic, Willow suggests questions, and you record the conversation as it naturally unfolds. Willow then uses AI to turn your recorded conversations into a written biography.

The core difference from StoryWorth is the together experience. You’re doing it as a pair. You ask the questions. They tell the stories. The conversation captures things that solo prompts never would – the follow-up questions, the “I never knew that” moments, the stories that only surface because you were there to draw them out.

If you’ve already read our guide on interviewing your parents, Willow is a tool that structures and enhances that exact experience.

Best For

Adult children who want to sit with their parent and capture their life story together. If the experience of having the conversation matters to you as much as the finished biography, Willow is designed for exactly that.

Price

Free 14-day trial (no credit card required). Paid plans available after the trial period.

Key Features

Limitations

Willow requires you to be present. That’s the whole point, but it means both you and your parent need to find time to sit together. If you live far apart, conversations can be done over a video call. It’s a newer product than StoryWorth or Remento, which means the feature set is still growing.


StoryCorps

How It Compares to StoryWorth

StoryCorps is a non-profit organisation dedicated to recording the stories of everyday people. Their free app lets you record conversations between two people. You sit with someone, press record, and talk. The app provides suggested questions, but the format is open-ended. Recordings can be uploaded to the StoryCorps archive at the Library of Congress.

Unlike StoryWorth, StoryCorps is conversation-based – you’re both present. But unlike Willow or Remento, there’s no writing component. It captures the raw conversation and preserves it as audio.

Best For

Families who want to capture raw, unedited conversations. Excellent if the recording itself is the goal – the sound of your parent’s voice telling their story – without necessarily turning it into a written biography.

Price

Free.

Key Features

Limitations

StoryCorps is a recording tool, not a writing tool. There’s no transcription, no AI writing, no book printing. If your goal is a written family biography, you’ll need to pair StoryCorps with other tools for everything that comes after the conversation.


Storii

How It Compares to StoryWorth

Storii takes a phone-call approach. Rather than emails or an app, Storii makes automated phone calls to your family member – up to three times a week – and asks them a question. They answer by speaking into the phone, and the call is recorded, transcribed, and saved to an online profile. No smartphone or internet connection required – Storii even works with landlines.

Where StoryWorth produces a written book from typed answers, Storii produces an audiobook and PDF from spoken responses. It’s designed for people who would never sit at a computer but would happily answer a phone call and chat.

Best For

Older family members who are comfortable with phone calls but not technology. If your parent or grandparent doesn’t use a smartphone, email, or the internet, Storii removes every digital barrier – they just answer the phone and talk.

Price

$119/year (approximately £95). Monthly plans also available.

Key Features

Limitations

Storii is audio-only – there’s no video component. The output is an audiobook or PDF transcript rather than a polished written narrative, so if you want a flowing biography you’ll need to do additional editing. The phone-call format also means stories tend to be shorter responses to individual questions rather than the longer conversations you might have sitting together.


The DIY Approach

Not every family needs a dedicated platform. If you enjoy the hands-on process or budget is a primary concern, you can build an effective biography workflow from general-purpose tools.

For recording: Your phone’s built-in recorder is genuinely all you need. Otter.ai provides AI transcription (free plan available, though with limited file imports – their paid plan offers more). Most Android phones include a basic voice recorder app.

For writing: Google Docs is free, shareable, and familiar. Notion offers more structure for organising stories from multiple conversations. Our guide on writing a family biography covers the writing process in detail.

For printing: Blurb offers professional-quality book printing with flexible layouts. Mixbook provides user-friendly templates combining text and photos. Local print shops can produce beautiful results at reasonable prices.

The trade-off: Complete control, very little cost – but significant time investment. You’ll spend hours transcribing, organising, writing, editing, and formatting. For some people, that’s part of the joy. For others, it’s the reason the project never gets finished.


Comparison Table

ToolTypePriceVoice/VideoWritten OutputTogether Experience
StoryWorthPrompt & write$99/year (~£80)Voice (phone)Yes – compiled responsesNo – individual
RementoVoice-first$99/year (~£80)Yes (audio/video)Yes – AI-generatedNo – individual
WillowAll-in-oneFree trial, then paidYes (audio)Yes – AI-generated from conversationYes – designed for two
StoryCorpsRecordingFreeYes (audio)NoYes – conversation-based
StoriiPhone-call$119/year (~£95)Yes (audio)Transcript/PDFNo – individual
DIYMix and matchFree to low costDepends on setupYou write it yourselfUp to you

How to Choose the Right Alternative

Start with How Your Parent Prefers to Communicate

This is the single most important factor. The best tool is the one your parent will actually use.

Consider Whether You Want to Be Involved

If you already know you want to interview your parents yourself, look at the tools that support that.

Think About What You Want at the End

Factor in Budget

For a detailed breakdown of free vs paid options, see our biography app comparison.


The Most Important Thing

Here’s what matters more than which alternative you choose: starting.

Every one of these tools – StoryWorth included – will help you capture something irreplaceable. Your parent’s stories, in their own words, preserved for your family.

The difference between the tools is real, but it’s small compared to the difference between starting and not starting. A StoryWorth book with thirty written answers is wonderful. A Remento collection of spoken stories is wonderful. A phone recording of you and your parent at the kitchen table is wonderful. A half-considered plan to “do something like that one day” captures nothing.

Pick the tool that feels right. Give it a try. If it doesn’t work, try a different one. The stories are what matter, and they’re waiting to be captured – in whatever format suits your family best.


This article is part of a series:

  1. How to interview your parents about their life – capturing the stories
  2. How to write a family biography – turning conversations into a story
  3. Best StoryWorth alternatives – you’re here

Ready to capture your family’s story together? Try Willow free for 14 days – no credit card required.