Free tool · No account

Medication schedule builder

When someone takes more than a couple of medications, "twice a day" and "three times a day" stop adding up in your head. Enter each medicine and how often it's taken, and download a printable schedule with the doses laid out across the day — plus a clean list for the doctor. It's free, and nothing you type is saved.

Medications

Add each medication, the dose, and how often it's taken. We lay the doses out across the day — morning, noon, evening, and bedtime — on the printout.

Leave it empty and you'll get a blank schedule grid to fill in by hand. The times are sensible defaults you can adjust on the printout. We generate the PDF and send it back — we don't save it, log it, or keep anything you type.

How the schedule lays out your day

The printout is a grid: one row per medication, four columns across the day — morning, noon, evening, and bedtime. Each dose drops into the columns where it's due, so a glance tells you what to take and when. The columns show default clock times you can adjust by hand to fit your routine.

  • Once a day — morning.
  • 2 times a day — morning and evening, about twelve hours apart.
  • 3 times a day — morning, noon, and evening.
  • 4 times a day — morning, noon, evening, and bedtime.
  • As needed — listed on its own, off the clock, so a PRN medicine isn't mistaken for a scheduled dose.

Need a blank one to fill in by hand instead? Leave the form empty and download — you'll get the same grid with space to write. If you just want a flat list rather than a daily schedule, the printable medication list is the simpler page.

Questions about building a medication schedule

Is this medication schedule maker really free?
Yes. Add your medications, download the PDF, and print it — no account, no payment, no email. We build the schedule and send it back to your browser; we don't save it or log anything you type.
What times of day does a 2, 3, or 4 times a day schedule use?
We lay the doses out at sensible, patient-friendly times: morning (8:00 AM), noon (12:00 PM), evening (6:00 PM), and bedtime (9:00 PM). Twice a day is morning and evening; three times a day is morning, noon, and evening; four times a day adds bedtime. These are starting points, not medical instructions — your prescriber's directions always come first.
Can I change the times to match my routine?
The printout shows the default clock times right in the grid, so you can cross one out and write in the time that fits your day — before breakfast, with dinner, whenever works. The grid is yours once it prints.
Does it also give me a plain medication list?
Yes. Below the daily grid, the PDF prints a clean list of every medication — dose, how often, what it's for, who prescribed it, and the refill date — the page a doctor or an ER will ask for.
How is this different from a printable medication list?
A medication list answers "what does this person take." A schedule answers "what do they take, and when." If you just need the blank list, our printable medication list has you covered. This tool is for laying the doses out across the day so nothing gets missed or doubled up.
How do I keep the schedule current as doses change?
That's the hard part of any paper schedule — it's right until the next appointment changes a dose and nobody reprints it. KeptWell reads the documents you upload and pulls medication changes into one living list your whole family shares, so the current schedule is always the current schedule.

What we will never do with your records

This generator runs without an account, and KeptWell itself makes the same promises to every family, regardless of plan or price.

We won't sell your data.
Not to advertisers, not to data brokers, not to insurers, not to pharma, not to anyone, in any form, ever.
We won't train AI models on your records.
Anthropic (whose Claude model powers KeptWell) is contractually prohibited from training on anything we send them, under a signed Business Associate Agreement.
We won't lock you in.
You can export everything in your circle as a ZIP at any time. Cancellation is one click.

Read the full data practices →

Keep the schedule current without retyping it.

A paper schedule is right until the next appointment changes a dose. Upload the after-visit summary and KeptWell reads it, updates the medication list, and keeps one living copy your whole family can see. It's the medical record organizer that does the organizing. Free today.

Get started

No password. We'll email you a sign-in link — it works whether you're new here or already have an account.