Free Printable To Do List Planning Tool
Looking to get organized at home, work or school? This free, printable To Do List is simple to use and can be adapted to any area of your life that you are trying to get better control over!
I am very much a pen and paper girl when it comes to being organized, and I LOVE a good list! I think the physical act of sorting my thoughts as I write items onto a list helps to stick them in my brain so that I can remember what I need to do more easily – even when that list isn’t in front of me.

Printable To Do List
This printable To Do List includes two columns so that your list can be divided between home and work tasks, or home and school, or however you would like to sort your tasks. The list can be used for a day, a week, a month or a specific set of related tasks, it is completely up to you.
You can print a whole batch of sheets and write directly onto a fresh page as you need it, or use it with Post-it Notes that can be removed as each task is done. You could even laminate a copy and write on it with a whiteboard marker.
And, as there is nothing to say that a To Do List has to be ugly or boring, this cute page is available in three colors – pink, teal and black!
Printing Your To Do List Planner
Click the buttons below to save the PDF to your computer. Open the PDF and print the pages you require. When printing, select “Fit to printable area” (or similar) to ensure the page fits with your printer type and local paper size.
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Please note: All Childhood 101 printables are for personal use only, you may not use any part of this content for commercial purposes-that includes selling the document, giving it away to promote your business or website, or printing the file to sell. You may not share, loan or redistribute these documents. Teachers may use multiple copies for students within their own classroom.
More Printable Resources
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Lovely! I’m tempted to print a copy, but I just know that I would revert back to my A4 paper pad before long. I’ve tried many to-do formats, and this is the one I keep coming back to. I do put too many things on the list, but I’ve determined not to beat myself up if they don’t get done. I have a list each day, with mundane housework tasks, kids homework and making lunches, as well as some exercise and my own work and many, many other jobs that I add as I go along. At the end of the week I compile a big list of all the bits that didn’t get done through the week and attempt to get at least a few more bits done. This weekend my list started with 34 items and is now (Sunday evening) down to 20. The important ones will be added to jobs to do next week, the others abandoned.
It sounds like you’ve found a great system that works, Melanie 🙂
Love the post it note idea!!!
Me too. It makes my boring list of things to do look so much prettier 😉
So important to get organised, and I’m not really completely there yet, but I’m hoping to be! My geeky husband decided to practice his coding skills and designed a family to-do list that we can access online. (But if I’m honest, I prefer the pen and paper version too).
I keep trying to go online, Danya, but I just don’t maintain it!
I am a pen and paper girl too when it comes to planning. I have a similar template I still use from when I was teaching, but you are so fab to create this one for us in different colours.