Find a date that works for everyone, without the endless group chat
It always starts the same way: "We should get together!", followed by a group thread where everyone throws out their own date, three people never reply, and two weeks later nobody remembers what was actually decided. Finding a date that works for seven or eight people at once isn't hard by itself; it's the coordination that falls apart.
Qui peut quand? solves exactly that: you propose your possible dates on a small clickable calendar, share a single link, and each person publicly answers Yes, Maybe, or No for every date. The grid fills in openly, a score is calculated automatically for each date, and the best one rises to the top without anyone counting votes by hand.
No account to create, for you or for anyone you invite: a first name is all it takes to say when you're free.
Ready in 2 minutes · free for up to 8 proposed dates · no account
How to find a shared date in four steps
Propose your dates: click the days that work on the calendar, add a time if it matters for some of them. Two dates minimum, up to 8 on the free plan.
Share the one link: by text, email, or in the group chat. One link, sent once.
Everyone answers with just a first name: Yes, Maybe, or No, for each proposed date. "Maybe" counts as half an answer in the score, which is often what settles two dates that are otherwise tied.
The winning date rises on its own: pick it explicitly, or let the best score decide, then close the poll. Everyone who left an email gets a "It's decided!" notice with the date and time.
Free for up to 8 proposed dates per poll. After that, $5.99 CAD once for that poll, no subscription.
Why not just a text thread or a Facebook poll?
A group thread works for about eight messages. After that, someone's reply is buried under memes, two dates end up circulating at once, and nobody remembers which one actually won. A yes/no poll on social media forces a binary choice: there's no way to say a date would work for you without fully committing.
A dedicated grid fixes both problems at once: every proposed date and everyone's answer, visible in one place, with the "Maybe" nuance that neither a text nor a two-option poll allows for. And since the page stays reachable through its link at all times, nobody has to scroll back through a message thread to find the date that was chosen.
Frequently asked questions
- Do I need an account to propose dates or to answer?
- No, no account at all, not for you and not for the people you invite. You get your organizer link by email when you create the poll; everyone else just answers with a first name.
- How does "Maybe" count toward the result?
- It counts as half an answer in each date's score, half of a full Yes. It's often what settles two dates that would otherwise tie, when availability isn't clear-cut.
- How many dates can I propose, and how many people can answer?
- At least two dates, so there's a real choice to make, up to 8 on the free plan; beyond that, a one-time $5.99 CAD unlock removes the cap for that poll. The number of people who respond is never limited.
- What happens once the date is found?
- You close the poll on the winning date; everyone who left an email gets notified. You can then create a prefilled invitation on quiserala.ca in one click, with the date, time, and location already filled in.