/ˈtät-vē-ə/
noun
From tot (a young child) and Latin via (a way or path), totvia is your co-pilot for parenthood.
A tool that turns overwhelming parenting information into a personalized, practical path forward.
BUILT FOR YOU
No two journeys through parenthood are the same, that's why totvia was created. It curates the abundance of parenting information and personalizes it for your family and your child.
Totvia helps you navigate each phase of parenthood - from early childhood through adolescence - by knowing what you need now and helping you understand what's coming next.
HOW IT WORKS
Tell us your child's age and a few details about how you like to parent.
Totvia surfaces what matters, shaped to what's right and what's important to your family.
Guide your family through milestones with confidence and clarity.
It's not more information. It's the right information — for your family.
HOW WE'RE DIFFERENT
Most parenting apps stack information. Some focus on one area, like sleep or feeding. Others give broad advice that doesn't fit your child.
Totvia does something different.
We start by understanding your child and how you parent. Then we surface the topics that matter most - and shape the guidance so it aligns with your values, routines, and real life.
Not a checklist. Not a data tracker. But a personalized path forward with less guessing and more growing.
DON'T JUST TAKE OUR WORD FOR IT
Researchers, journalists, and parenting experts keep reaching the same conclusion: parents are overwhelmed by advice, and what helps is guidance shaped to their own child.
"Parents today are exposed to thousands of opinions about how they should feed their child, sleep train, discipline, stimulate development, or support emotional health."Read the article → SheKnows
"The most effective parenting doesn’t come from applying a single expert’s rulebook. It comes from paying attention to your child, to yourself, and to the ever-evolving dance between the two."Read the article → Nesta — Future Signals 2025
"Parenting apps can help address common barriers that parents face in accessing trusted advice. These include stigma, being too busy to get in-person support, or not feeling like advice is relevant."Read the article →