wasl

Wasl for family-aware couples

For some couples, a relationship isn't only between two people — family is part of the picture, whether through culture, faith, or simply how a household works. Most messaging apps pretend that context doesn't exist. Wasl was built with it in mind.

The trusted chaperone

A couple can invite a trusted chaperone — someone they both agree on, often a family member — into their space with read-only access. The chaperone can see the couple's messages and what they share, and both partners always know the space is chaperoned.

Transparency, not surveillance

The difference matters. A chaperone in Wasl is invited, visible, and agreed upon — never hidden. And in a chaperoned space there are no secret side channels: the app doesn't offer ways to carry private text past the person the couple chose to trust. If the agreement is openness, Wasl keeps it.

Still a real couple space

A chaperoned space is not a formality — it has everything Wasl offers: messages with translation, mood check-ins, shared memories, the daily garden ritual, and Mochi the shared cat. Respecting family expectations shouldn't mean settling for less warmth.

Honest limits

Wasl doesn't carry any religious certification, and it isn't a substitute for real conversations with your family or for guidance from people you trust. It's simply a communication tool built so that transparency, where a couple chooses it, is genuine.

Read more about safety and trust, or learn what Wasl is.