For incoming first-year and transfer students

College messages are confusing. Get a ClearStart on your tasks.

Paste a financial aid, housing, orientation, or move-in message. Get a plain-English plan with what it means, what to do next, and which office to contact.

Not affiliated with any college. Always verify final deadlines in your official portal.

The product

A transition command center, not another generic planner.

01

Decode messages

Students paste confusing school emails or portal text. ClearStart extracts tasks and explains them in normal language.

02

Build a task board

The student saves tasks by category, marks them done, and exports a checklist before deadlines pile up.

03

Support two paths

First-year students need move-in and orientation help. Transfer students also need credit, transcript, and advising clarity.

ClearStart helps students know what to do next.

College messages can be hard to understand because they often mix deadlines, offices, forms, and portal steps. ClearStart turns those messages into simple tasks so students can act faster and feel less lost.

Financial aid

Understand missing documents, aid verification, loan steps, offer status, and billing messages.

Housing

Clarify room assignments, move-in steps, meal plans, housing contracts, and commuter details.

Orientation

Break down orientation dates, advising requirements, registration steps, and required attendance tasks.

Transfer

Keep track of transcripts, transfer credit, placement steps, advising messages, and class registration.

ClearStart Early Access

Early users get the message decoder, saved task board, checklist export, and future updates as the product improves.

Join early access for $5

Know exactly what your college is asking you to do.

ClearStart turns long school emails and portal notices into simple tasks, plain next steps, and the right office to contact.

When financial aid, housing, orientation, move-in, or transfer messages feel unclear, paste them in and get a plan you can actually act on.

Instead of rereading the same message over and over, you leave with what matters, what to ask, and what not to assume.