New in ChatGPT: a better way to schedule tasks.
Scheduled tasks are faster, more reliable, and easier to manage from the new Scheduled page.
The new scheduled tasks experience is rolling out to Go, Plus, Pro, Business, and Enterprise users on web and mobile. pic.twitter.com/YC7JON6Hxn
— ChatGPT (@ChatGPTapp) June 17, 2026
OpenAI announced a new scheduled tasks experience in ChatGPT, giving users a faster, more reliable, and easier way to manage automated tasks from a dedicated Scheduled page.
The new Scheduled page is designed to centralize task management, making it easier for users to view, edit, pause, delete, and organize scheduled prompts across web and mobile.
Scheduled tasks allow ChatGPT users to ask the assistant to run prompts at a future time. These can include one-time reminders, recurring daily or weekly updates, personalized briefings, language practice, research summaries, or other automated workflows.
The updated experience is rolling out to Go, Plus, Pro, Business, and Enterprise users on web and mobile.
To create a scheduled task, users can simply ask ChatGPT in natural language. For example, a user could say: “Remind me tomorrow morning to send the invoice,” “Give me an AI news briefing every weekday at 8 a.m.,” or “Practice Spanish with me every evening.” ChatGPT can then create the task and run it at the requested time.
Users can also manage scheduled tasks from the Tasks or Scheduled page. From there, they can open a list of active tasks, select a task, and update key details such as the task name, instructions, and schedule.
The management page also allows users to pause or delete tasks. This is useful for recurring updates that are no longer needed, reminders tied to a completed project, or briefings that a user wants to temporarily stop without fully removing them.
The feature supports both one-time and recurring tasks. This makes it useful for simple reminders as well as ongoing routines such as daily news briefings, weekly planning prompts, recurring market updates, monthly business check-ins, or reminders tied to personal events.
OpenAI also said it is sunsetting Pulse over the next 14 days. Users who relied on Pulse for daily updates can continue to receive similar information by setting up scheduled tasks for daily briefings tailored to their interests, past chats, and connected apps.
For example, a user could replace Pulse by asking ChatGPT to send a daily morning briefing about AI, business news, sports, weather, personal calendar items, or topics based on previous conversations. Users can customize these briefings by specifying the timing, format, length, and topics to include.
The launch of the Scheduled page reflects OpenAI’s effort to make ChatGPT more useful for recurring workflows, not just one-off conversations. By giving users a dedicated place to manage automated tasks, OpenAI is making ChatGPT more like a proactive assistant that can help users stay organized over time.
The feature could be especially useful for professionals, students, creators, business owners, and teams that rely on recurring updates. Examples include daily executive summaries, weekly sales pipeline reminders, monthly content planning prompts, recurring study sessions, customer follow-up reminders, and personal productivity check-ins.
Scheduled tasks are supported on ChatGPT Web, iOS, Android, and macOS. Users can access the task management area from the ChatGPT interface and update tasks as their schedules or priorities change.
OpenAI’s new scheduled tasks experience gives ChatGPT users more control over proactive automation while reducing the friction of managing recurring prompts across conversations.