You opened your home to someone. Now you cannot relax in it.
The rules were obvious to you. You never said them out loud. Now everything feels tense.
Kinly makes the expectations you assumed were obvious into something everyone can actually see — so you stop carrying it alone.
You agreed to share your home. You never agreed on how.
The things that bother you were never said out loud. That is where the tension starts.
Kinly puts the unspoken rules into one shared place. Your tenants see the same expectations you do — so you stop repeating yourself and start feeling at home again.
Private by default. No ads. No surveillance.



Does this sound like your place?
I opened my home to someone. Now I feel like a guest in it.
The rules were obvious to me. I never said them out loud. Now everything is tense.
We agreed to live together — but we never agreed on how.
What Kinly is
Kinly is a shared living app. You agreed to share your home — Kinly helps you agree on how. House rules, routines, and shared expectations in one place so the home stays yours without the tension.
How Kinly helps in practice
Once the unspoken rules are finally said, Kinly adds simple tools that keep shared living working day to day.
Make shared space routines visible so you are not the only one who notices.
Kitchen expectations stop being a guessing game.
Shared costs stay simple so money never becomes the awkward conversation.
Small frustrations surface early — before they become resentment.
Kinly role: reflection first
Makes the rules you assumed were obvious into something everyone can see.
Reduces the tension of repeating yourself by making expectations shared.
If your home is still forming
Tenants change, but the way your home works stays written down.
If things drift, the weekly check-in surfaces it before it becomes resentment.
Who this is for
Live-in landlords who opened their home and lost the peace that came with it.
Resident owners who want shared expectations without awkward confrontation.
Kinly is not...
Not a legal document.
Not surveillance.
Not a scorecard.
Not a way to control people.




