Montreal skyline featuring the Leonard Cohen mural

Share Your Calendar. Be Anywhere Together

You need to visit clients in San Francisco. Your husband has relatives in Palo Alto. Somewhere between your timelines, there’s a window — maybe five days in late October where neither of you is committed anywhere. Airbnb in the Bay Area, but when?

That window exists. The question is whether you can see it. In a normal calendar, you’d never see it.

For couples and families splitting time across cities, the freedom to work from anywhere creates something rare: the chance to choose not just where you’ll be, but where you’ll be together. The challenge isn’t flexibility — it’s that two flexible lives are surprisingly hard to align without a shared calendar view of what’s possible.

Anywhere Calendar puts both schedules in the same frame — across months, across places — so the moments where your lives can converge become visible before they slip past.

See Where Your Shared Calendar Lines Up

Open your companion’s calendar alongside yours, and you start to see the shape of your shared time.

Where obligations have already colored the calendar — client trips, a week in the office, a friend’s birthday — you see it immediately. More importantly, you see where white space remains. Those stretches where neither of you has anything locked in are the raw material of shared plans.

Maybe it’s a long weekend in June that lines up perfectly. Maybe it’s three open weeks in November where you can be anywhere together. You wouldn’t have known without seeing them side by side. Now you do, and the conversation changes from “when are you free?” to “look what’s possible.”

And sometimes the calendar tells you something you weren’t looking for. It’s October — have you spent too many days in New York this year? Not enough in Florida? Anywhere Calendar’s residency summary tracks how many days you’ve spent in each state, so when you’re planning your next move together, you’re also keeping an eye on where you stand for tax purposes. Check your companion’s calendar, check the stay count — and maybe those three weeks in November just got a destination.

Turn Openings Into Invitations

Seeing alignment is one thing. Acting on it is where Anywhere Calendar goes further.

When you spot a window, you can drop a tentative stay on both calendars — a placeholder that says “what about here?” without committing either of you. It holds the space open while you figure out flights, logistics, or whether the timing actually works.

You can send an invite to your companion for a proposed trip or event — not a text that gets buried, but a calendar entry they can see in context, alongside everything else they have going on.

This is what turns a calendar from a passive record into a shared planning surface. You’re not just tracking where you’ll be. You’re proposing where you could be together.

And it’s not just couples. Anywhere Calendar lets you add multiple shared calendars — close friends, family members, anyone you might want to meet up with. Have a daughter still in college? Toggle her calendar on and you can instantly see spring break, when her summer internship starts, and when she’s actually home. Thinking about a week in Portugal with your college roommate? One click and you can see whether her November looks anything like yours. The same visual cues that give you instant clarity with a partner work with anyone you might want to travel with.

When Two Lives Move Across Places

Leonard Cohen once wrote about two people choosing to go their own way — but together. That’s a fair description of how shared planning works when two lives move across places.

You each have your own rhythm — your own commitments, your own reasons for being where you are. The calendar makes the places where your paths naturally run together clear, and the places where you could choose to cross become invitations.

Staying an extra week because you’re already in the same city. Shifting a trip by two days so it overlaps instead of just missing. Spotting a month where both of you are wide open and deciding, together, to do something unexpected with it.

These are hard to see from memory — and almost impossible from separate calendars. With a shared calendar, they’re already on screen.

The Sweetest Little Plan

The best thing about a shared calendar isn’t efficiency. It’s that it lets two people who have chosen lives of movement see, clearly and quickly, where their time and their places line up — and decide what to do about it.

It ends up looking less like two calendars and more like a shared map of what’s possible.

Anywhere Calendar — see where your plans overlap, where space remains, and where a shared next move is waiting.