Install Yaps on Android in under two minutes.
Scan the QR if you are reading on desktop, or tap the Play badge if you are already on her phone. Both point to the same build. Free tier, one microphone permission, works offline.
Esqueça velas e bombas de banho. O melhor presente de Dia das Mães é o tempo, e essas 10 ferramentas de IA e escolhas bem pensadas realmente o proporcionam. O número um é Yaps digitação por voz. Os polegares da mamãe merecem uma pausa.

"The days are long but the years are short."
- Gretchen Rubin
Here is a scene you will recognise. A mother stands in her kitchen at 7:42 a.m. One hand holds a cereal bowl. The other thumb-types a reply to the Year 3 parents' WhatsApp group about Friday's bake sale. Her phone buzzes again: the football club needs a headcount by noon, her sister sent a photo that demands a reaction, and the family group chat is 47 messages deep in a debate about where to eat on Sunday.
She has not yet opened her email.
This is modern motherhood in miniature. Not the big dramatic moments, but the relentless drip of small digital tasks that steal minutes and compound into hours. And if you are looking for a Mother's Day gift that actually addresses this reality, you are in the right place.
This guide rounds up the 10 best AI gifts for Mum this Mother's Day 2026: ten practical picks she will actually use, not another candle she puts in the cupboard. Yaps voice typing on Android leads the list because it pays back time every single day mum picks up her phone. The other nine picks range from genuinely AI-powered (a smart photo frame, an AI art frame, a health wearable, an AI scheduler) to pleasantly cheeky (a robot vacuum, a meal kit). Mothers do hard, invisible work in a hundred small ways every day. The least technology can do is give their thumbs a break.
The gifting industry has spent decades convincing us that the right object expresses the right feeling. But ask any mother what she actually wants, and the answer is almost boringly consistent: time. Time to think without interruption. Time to finish a cup of tea while it is still warm. Time to not be the household's communications director.
The trouble is, you cannot wrap time in tissue paper. You can, however, give tools that manufacture it.
A voice typing app that lets mum dictate a reply in eight seconds instead of thumb-typing it in thirty is not a hypothetical time-saver. Over the course of a week, across dozens of messages, emails, and notes, those seconds become hours.
So what makes voice typing the gift that actually delivers?
The maths are simple. Most adults speak at around 150 words per minute but type on a phone at roughly 40 words per minute. Research from Stanford's Human-Computer Interaction group has confirmed that voice input on mobile devices is approximately three times faster than typing, even after accounting for error correction. For someone sending dozens of messages a day, that multiplier matters.
And unlike a spa voucher that gets used once and forgotten, a voice typing habit compounds. Every single day, it gives back a little more.
Voice typing, also called voice dictation, converts spoken words into text in real time. You talk, the phone types. Simple as that.
Modern voice typing has moved well beyond the clunky speech recognition of a decade ago. On-device AI models can now handle natural speech, including pauses, self-corrections, and the kind of run-on sentences that happen when you are simultaneously explaining homework and responding to a group chat. The result is clean, punctuated text that reads like you typed it carefully, even though you were walking to the car.
For busy mums specifically, voice typing solves three problems at once:
The WhatsApp backlog. Instead of thumb-typing replies to 15 threads after the kids are in bed, you can voice-type responses throughout the day, hands-free, in the gaps between real life.
The email mountain. Composing a proper email on a phone is slow and painful. Dictating it takes a fraction of the time and usually produces more natural-sounding sentences.
The physical toll. Repetitive thumb typing causes genuine strain. If mum has ever complained about sore thumbs or wrist aches from phone use, voice input is a real solution, not just a convenience.
The Thumb Marathon
Takes 25 or more minutes of solid thumb work. Requires both hands and full visual attention. Leads to sore thumbs, typos, and the creeping feeling that your phone owns you.
The Voice Shortcut
Takes roughly 8 minutes of natural speaking. Works hands-free while cooking, walking, or folding laundry. Text comes out clean, punctuated, and ready to send.


The list below pulls the 10 gifts we reach for when someone asks "what should I actually buy Mum this year?" Each pick quietly removes a recurring tax on her time, attention, or mental load. Some are genuinely AI-powered, some are AI-adjacent, one is a notebook. Yaps leads because it is the gift that pays back time every single day mum picks up her phone.
If we had to pick one gift from this entire list, it would be Yaps.
Yaps is a voice typing keyboard for Android that replaces the default phone keyboard with one that is genuinely good at turning speech into text. You tap the microphone, talk, and your words appear as clean, formatted text in whatever app you are using, whether that is WhatsApp, Gmail, Notes, or anything else. Explore the full dictation feature set to see what it can do.
Here is what makes Yaps different from the voice typing options mum might have tried and abandoned before.
This is the headline. Yaps processes all speech directly on your device. No audio is uploaded to a server. No cloud. No internet connection required for dictation. Mum's words, her half-formed thoughts, her family logistics, her private messages, none of it leaves the phone.
For more on why this matters, our deep dive on private voice keyboards for Android covers the full picture. But the short version is: most voice typing tools send your audio to a cloud server for processing. Yaps does not. That is not a technical footnote. That is a fundamentally different approach to privacy.
Yaps is not a floating button or a separate app you have to switch to. It is a full keyboard: QWERTY layout, glide typing, emoji panel, clipboard history. The voice typing is built directly into the keyboard mum already uses to type. One tap on the mic, and she is dictating. Another tap, and she is back to typing. No app-switching, no overlays, no extra steps.
When you talk, you say "um" and "uh" and sometimes restart a sentence halfway through. Yaps has an on-device AI that cleans all of this up, removing filler words, fixing punctuation and capitalisation, and even formatting lists automatically. The result reads like carefully typed text, not a raw transcript.
Because Yaps is the keyboard, it works in every app on the phone. Replying to WhatsApp? Dictate. Writing an email? Dictate. Adding to the shopping list? Dictate. There is no "open Yaps first" step. Wherever mum would normally type, she can speak instead.
Yaps offers 1,000 words per week on the free tier, which is more than enough to test whether voice typing fits into mum's daily routine. If she loves it, and she likely will, subscription plans are available through Google Play. But the gift here is the introduction, not necessarily the subscription. Once someone experiences dictating a reply instead of typing it, the habit tends to stick.
If you are giving Yaps as a gift, the kindest thing you can do is set it up before you hand the phone back.
Search for "Yaps" on the Play Store or visit the listing directly. The app is free to download.
Open Yaps, follow the setup prompt, and enable it in your device's keyboard settings. Android will ask you to confirm.
Tap any text field, then use the keyboard switcher (usually the small keyboard icon in the navigation bar) to select Yaps.
Open WhatsApp, tap the Yaps mic button, and speak naturally. Watch the words appear. That is it.
Scan the QR if you are reading on desktop, or tap the Play badge if you are already on her phone. Both point to the same build. Free tier, one microphone permission, works offline.
This one feels obvious in hindsight. A subscription to a serious AI chatbot is, functionally, hiring mum a cheerful, infinitely patient research assistant who will never sigh when she asks the same question twice.
What does it actually replace? The Google rabbit hole at 11 p.m. The frantic recipe substitution when she realises she is out of tomatoes. The "is this rash worth a GP appointment?" panic. The school project that needs a quick explanation of photosynthesis at homework time. The polite-but-firm email to the Year 4 teacher that takes her twenty minutes to draft and tone-check.
A good chatbot answers all of those in seconds, in plain English, without judgement. Pair the subscription with Yaps and she can dictate the question by voice instead of thumb-typing it. The whole pipeline becomes: speak the problem, read the answer, get on with her day.
The honest caveat: cloud chatbots send your prompts to a server, so this is not the right tool for anything truly private. For the messages and notes that should stay on her phone, that is what Yaps is for. The two complement each other rather than overlap.
The cheeky angle on this one: every mum has a phone full of photos she will never get round to printing. A smart photo frame takes the family's shared albums and turns them into a slow, beautiful slideshow on her kitchen counter or bedside table. New photos appear automatically when family members upload them from their phones.
The AI under the hood handles the boring part. It auto-rotates portrait shots, picks decent crop frames, skips duplicate bursts, and surfaces "memories from this day" without anyone curating a thing. The grandparents can send photos straight to it from across the country. It is the rare gadget that gets used every single day and still earns its space on the counter a year later.
The Aura Carver remains the polished default. The Nixplay 10.1" is the value pick. If mum is more of an art lover than a photo curator, the SwitchBot AI Art Frame is the same idea in a different mood: an E-Ink display that generates fresh artwork from her prompts and runs for two years on a single charge.
If mum keeps saying "I really should print some of these" and never does, this is the gift that solves it without her lifting a finger.
A good pair of noise-cancelling earbuds does double duty. First, they make voice typing even better by giving mum a quality microphone for dictation in noisy environments. Second, they create a tiny bubble of peace on the school run, at the gym, or during the 11 p.m. wind-down.
The AirPods Pro 3 are the obvious pick if she is on iPhone — improved ear tips, AI-tuned noise cancelling, and clearer voice pickup for calls and dictation. On Android, the Sony LinkBuds Clip with their open-ear design let her stay aware of the kids and the kettle without taking the buds out. Either pairs beautifully with Yaps and lets mum dictate messages hands-free while walking, cooking, or folding the mountain of laundry that never seems to shrink.
Half of the WhatsApp chaos comes from coordination that should live in a shared calendar. The simplest version is free: Google Calendar or Apple Family Sharing lets the whole family see who needs to be where and when. It will not eliminate the group chat entirely, but it will reduce the "what time is football?" messages by a noticeable margin.
The hardware version of this idea is the Skylight Calendar 2 — a 15-inch touchscreen wall calendar that pulls every family member's events into one colour-coded view in the kitchen, with chore charts, meal plans, and a shopping list baked in. It is the single most-mentioned "for busy moms" pick across the 2026 gift guides for a reason: it earns its space on the wall.
If you want to go a step further with software, AI scheduling tools like Reclaim, Motion, or Cal AI take the next painful step off her plate: they look at the family calendar, the work calendar, and her to-do list, and quietly arrange her day around the immovable bits. School pick-up does not move. Everything else flows around it.
Yes, it is a vacuum. Yes, it has AI. The newer ones map the house, learn which rooms get the messiest, and avoid the dog bowl without being told. They are not glamorous, but if mum has spent the last decade being the household's de facto cleaner, getting an hour back twice a week is a gift that pays out forever.
The Roborock Q-series is the value pick that punches above its price. The iRobot Roomba j7+ is the established premium choice. Eufy sits in the middle. All three have AI obstacle avoidance and self-emptying docks at the higher tiers.
This is the cheeky-but-useful pick. Pair it with a card that says "you are not the family vacuum" and you have nailed the brief.
This is the gift that says "I know you are tired of answering the question 'what is for dinner?' and I am going to make it stop, at least for a few weeks." A meal kit subscription removes the mental load of meal planning, ingredient shopping, and recipe hunting. It is not strictly AI, but it is automation of a different kind, and it targets one of the most repetitive decisions any parent faces.
HelloFresh is the broadest international option. Gousto is the strongest UK pick with the largest weekly menu. Blue Apron leans more chef-driven. Most run a "first three boxes free or heavily discounted" gift promo around Mother's Day, which makes it a low-risk way to test whether she likes the format.
If mum is the kind of person who has ideas in the shower, realisations while driving, or to-do items that vanish the moment she puts her phone down, a voice note habit might be the best gift you never thought of. Yaps has a built-in notes feature that lets her dictate a thought and save it locally, searchable and private. No typing required. It costs nothing and takes seconds per day.
If 2026 has a single dominant Mother's Day gift trend, it is the AI-powered health wearable. The category has quietly become the most-requested tech gift across consumer surveys, and the reason is straightforward: mums spend so much time tracking everyone else that nobody is tracking them. A wearable closes the loop without asking her to do anything.
The Oura Ring 4 is the discreet pick — a low-profile titanium ring that monitors sleep, heart rate, body temperature, recovery, and menstrual cycle, with a battery that lasts a week. No screen. No notifications. Just a quiet daily readiness score she can glance at when she wants to.
The Apple Watch SE 3 is the all-rounder — fitness, heart rate, fall detection, FaceTime audio calls when her hands are full, and the new AI-powered health summaries Apple introduced this year. The Hume Band leans hardest into metabolic and recovery science and is the choice for a mum who actually likes data.
The honest caveat: these are not gifts mum will use to dictate WhatsApp replies. That is what Yaps is for. But of all the wearables on the market, these are the three that earn their charge every night without becoming another thing to manage.
Not everything has to be digital. There is something genuinely restorative about writing by hand, away from screens, notifications, and the tyranny of the group chat. A proper notebook, the kind with good paper that feels satisfying to write on, is a gift that says "your thoughts deserve space." Pair it with Yaps for the digital side and the notebook for the reflective side. Between the two, every thought has somewhere to land.
A fair question. Every phone ships with some form of voice typing built in. Why not just use that?
The short answer: those tools typically send your audio to a server. When mum dictates a message using Google's default voice typing or Siri dictation, that audio usually travels to a cloud server for processing. It works, and the accuracy is generally decent. But it means every message, every personal thought, every half-formed sentence passes through someone else's infrastructure.
Audio sent to remote servers for processing. Requires an internet connection. Fails with no signal. Messages and voice data may be stored on corporate infrastructure.
All processing happens on-device. Works fully offline, in aeroplane mode, anywhere mum happens to be. No audio ever leaves the phone. Nothing stored or transmitted.
Yaps processes everything on the phone itself. No server, no upload, no connection required. For everyday messages that difference might feel abstract. But for personal notes, private conversations, medical information, or anything mum would not want stored on a corporate server, it is a meaningful distinction.
There is also the practical angle: cloud-dependent voice typing fails when you lose signal. Yaps does not.
For a detailed comparison with other mobile dictation apps, our best mobile dictation app roundup covers the full field.
This is the objection everyone raises, and it deserves a straight answer: it can be, but it does not have to be.
Most voice typing happens in semi-private moments. In the car. Walking alone. In the kitchen. At home after the kids are asleep. These are exactly the moments when mum is most likely to be catching up on messages anyway, and they are also the moments when her hands are most often occupied.
For genuinely public settings, like a crowded bus or an open-plan office, mum can simply switch back to thumb typing on the same Yaps keyboard. There is no app to close, no mode to exit. Voice and keyboard live side by side.
The bigger insight is that people already talk on their phones in public constantly, through voice calls, voice messages, and video chats. Dictating a text message is quieter and shorter than most phone calls. The awkwardness fades fast once the speed benefit becomes obvious.
The best Mother's Day gift is not something she uses once. It is something that makes tomorrow a little easier than today.
Yaps Team
Yaps voice typing is three times faster than thumb typing, fully private, works offline, and built right into the keyboard so there is nothing new to learn. Download it, spend two minutes on setup, and give mum something that pays back time every single day.
Mother's Day in the United States falls on Sunday May 10 in 2026. The UK already had its Mothering Sunday back in March, but a thoughtful gift in May is never out of season, and the mums in your life will not mind. Either way, you still have time.
What you do not have time to do is keep watching mum thumb-type her way through 47 unread WhatsApp threads while pretending the kettle is not boiling over. The WhatsApp backlog is real. The email mountain is real. The thumb fatigue from coordinating an entire household through a six-inch screen is very, very real.
Mothers wear themselves out for their kids in a hundred small, invisible ways. The least their phones can do is meet them halfway. Yaps voice typing is our headline recommendation because it addresses this directly: three times faster than typing, fully private, works offline, and built right into the keyboard so there is nothing new to learn. Download it onto her phone, set it up in two minutes, and let her experience the difference for herself. Start at yaps.ai or search for Yaps on Google Play.
And if you add an AI assistant subscription, a smart photo frame, an AI health wearable like the Oura Ring 4, or a pair of noise-cancelling earbuds to the package, you are giving mum something genuinely rare: the space to think, speak, and breathe without her thumbs doing all the work.
Happy Mother's Day.
Yes. Yaps has a free tier that includes 1,000 words of voice typing per week. That is enough for most casual messaging and email use. If mum finds she wants more, subscription plans are available through Google Play, but there is no pressure to upgrade.
Yaps is currently available on Android via Google Play. An iPhone version is in active development but is not yet publicly available. If mum uses an iPhone, it is worth keeping an eye on yaps.ai for updates.
No. All speech-to-text processing happens directly on the phone. Yaps works in aeroplane mode, in areas with no signal, and anywhere mum happens to be. An internet connection is only needed for the initial app download and optional features like GIF search.
Yaps's on-device speech model handles a wide range of accents and natural speaking speeds. It is designed for real-world speech, including the kind of rapid, mid-thought-change dictation that happens when you are genuinely busy. On mobile, Yaps supports 20+ keyboard and voice-typing languages.
Yes. Yaps is a keyboard, which means it works in any app where you would normally type. WhatsApp, Gmail, Notes, Slack, Instagram DMs, shopping list apps, all of them. If there is a text field, Yaps can dictate into it.
No. Yaps does not upload, store, or transmit any voice data. Audio is processed on the device and discarded. There are no analytics, no telemetry, and no cloud servers involved in the dictation process. Mum's words stay on mum's phone.
Yaps is a full keyboard with QWERTY typing, glide input, emoji, and clipboard history. Mum can switch between voice and typing instantly without leaving the keyboard or changing apps. Voice typing is an addition to the keyboard, not a replacement for it.
The honest answer: it depends on your mum. If she spends a meaningful amount of time messaging, emailing, or writing on her phone, and especially if she has ever complained about her thumbs hurting or her phone taking up too much time, then yes. It is one of the most practical gifts you can give. Wrap a printed card that says "I set up voice typing on your phone," show her how it works, and the two-minute setup becomes part of the gift itself.
Yes. Yaps includes text-to-speech. On Android, you can select text in any app and choose "Read aloud with Yaps" from the share menu. This is useful for proofreading messages before sending, listening to articles while cooking, or having emails read aloud during the school run.
Yaps requests six permissions:
| Permission | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Microphone | Voice dictation |
| Internet | Initial setup and optional features |
| Boot completion | Preloading speech models on startup |
| Foreground service | Keeping dictation running smoothly |
| Special-use service | Speech model management |
| Vibrate | Keyboard haptic feedback |
Notably, Yaps does not request accessibility access, screen overlay permission, or any ability to read on-screen content. No other app on the phone can see what mum dictates.
Yaps. The whole interface is "tap a microphone and talk", which is a habit most mums already have from voice messages. There is no app to learn, no new screen to navigate, no settings to wrestle with. If she can send a WhatsApp voice note, she can use Yaps. After Yaps, an AI chatbot subscription is the next easiest pick because the entire interaction is "type or speak a question, read the answer".
All three are excellent and roughly comparable for the mum-as-pocket-assistant use case. ChatGPT Plus has the broadest cultural recognition and the best "she has heard of it from her friends" factor. Claude is the strongest for thoughtful long-form replies, polite rewrites, and anything where tone matters. Gemini is most useful if she is already deep in the Google ecosystem and wants AI threaded through Gmail, Docs, and Photos. Pick the one that matches the rest of her digital life. None will disappoint.
Yes, if she has a phone full of photos she keeps meaning to print. The honest weakness is the upfront cost (£100-£250 for a good one) and the WiFi setup. The honest strength is that it earns its space on the counter every day for years. Aura, Skylight, and Nixplay all make solid frames in 2026; pick by screen size and which app the family will agree to use.
Mums who say this usually mean it, and they will appreciate something that quietly solves a problem they never asked anyone to solve. Yaps voice typing is exactly that: she did not know she needed it, and a week in, she will not remember life without it. Pair it with a handwritten card explaining what you set up and why, and the gift becomes about your attention rather than the gadget itself.