If your alarm app looks like a graveyard of half-broken wake-up plans, VariAlarm is trying to clean it up. The new iPhone app adds schedule-based alarms, swapping fixed alarm times for routines that change with your day, so a gym morning, a workday, and a meeting-heavy calendar can each trigger a different wake-up plan without nightly tap-hunting.

That idea sounds almost embarrassingly overdue. Apple’s Clock app still treats alarms as static entries, which is fine until your routine stops being static. Third-party alarm apps have tried to be smarter before, but most stop at recurring rules; VariAlarm leans harder into the calendar-driven life many people actually live.

How VariAlarm schedule-based alarms work

Instead of building a long list of separate alarms, VariAlarm lets you create templates. The example the developer gives is simple: a gym day might start with a 5:45 am alarm and a 6 am follow-up nudge, while a workday could shift to a 7 am wake-up. If your morning meeting moves, the alarms move too, thanks to Apple Calendar syncing.

The app also uses the new alarms API in iOS 26, which should help it feel less like a clever workaround and more like something Apple might have shipped itself. You can adjust alarm volume and duration, and there are lock screen widgets for quick visibility. In other words: less alarm clutter, more automation, and a small mercy for anyone who has ever deleted the wrong alarm before bed.

VariAlarm price and availability

VariAlarm is free on the App Store for iPhone users running iOS 26 and later. The Pro subscription adds extra templates, automations, and scheduling for $1.99/month or $14.99/year, with a 7-day free trial. For a limited time, there’s also a lifetime purchase for $14.99 once, which is the sort of pricing that makes monthly subscriptions look a little awkward.

  • Free app for iPhone users on iOS 26 and later
  • Apple Calendar syncing for schedule-based alarm shifts
  • Volume and length controls for each alarm setup
  • Pro: $1.99/month or $14.99/year, with a 7-day free trial
  • Limited-time lifetime option: $14.99 once
Source: 9to5mac

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