Premium subscribers receive two ceremonial resolutions and one grocery absolution per quarter.
Startup Offers Subscription-Based Closure for Unresolved Errands
The company says customers can now pay monthly to receive the feeling that an errand has been completed without confronting the errand itself.
By Iris Quill, Markets and Symbolic Instruments Editor
THE RESERVE ANNEX - Published June 6, 2026 at 10:07 AM CDT

Commercial notice
A consumer software startup announced Saturday that customers can now subscribe to monthly closure for unresolved errands, allowing them to receive the emotional benefit of completion without locating receipts, driving back to the store, or opening the drawer involved.
The service, called Done Enough, creates certified closure events for tasks that are too small to justify a crisis and too persistent to disappear on their own. For $18 a month, users may submit up to five errands and receive a timestamped sense of having moved on, delivered through the app and, for higher tiers, a sealed paper notice mailed to the home.
"People do not need another productivity tool," said Toma Rill, founder and chief completion officer. "They need a monthly relationship with not doing something anymore."
Resolution Tiers
Customers begin by describing the unresolved errand in plain language. Common submissions include returning a shirt, mailing a form, using a gift card with $7.41 left on it, bringing batteries to a recycling point, and finding out whether the mystery key is still relevant.
Done Enough then assigns the errand to one of three tiers: Administratively Closed, Emotionally Settled, or Premium Absolution. The highest tier includes a dashboard animation in which the errand is placed into a calm gray folder and gently removed from the user's perceived obligations.
The company said it does not complete errands directly, as doing so would create operational complexity and "unhelpful realism." Instead, its proprietary closure engine reviews the user's description, compares it with household avoidance benchmarks, and issues a finality score suitable for personal records.
"Closure is a service category, not a fact pattern," Rill said. "When someone says they need to deal with a pile near the door, the market should meet them where they are, which is usually two rooms away."
Early Customers
Beta users said the subscription improved their relationship with small unfinished tasks. One customer reported relief after the app closed an errand involving a lamp return so completely that she could look directly at the lamp again. Another praised the Grocery Absolution add-on, which certifies that an ingredient purchased for one recipe no longer has to become anything.
Retail analysts said the model could open a lucrative segment between task management and therapy, especially among consumers with shallow drawers, inactive warranties, and bags containing bags.
"The modern household produces more errands than it can morally process," said Nella Croft, a consumer behavior analyst. "Done Enough is selling an exit ramp that does not require anyone to find a stamp."
Expansion Plans
The startup said it will use recent seed funding to expand into enterprise accounts for offices with communal refrigerators, unlabeled cables, and conference rooms still waiting for someone to order the correct adapter.
A family plan is expected next year. Rill said shared subscriptions will help households resolve legacy errands while preserving one drawer everyone has agreed not to discuss.
Commercial notice