9 printable pages
Gratitude Journals
Three lines a day, a calmer year.
Gratitude journal pages give you a small, repeatable space to notice the good parts of an ordinary day. They are designed for quick evening use, not long-form journaling.
Daily Three-Line Gratitude Page
A daily page with three short lines for the three things you are grateful for today.
Morning Pages Gratitude Spread
A morning gratitude page with prompts for body, people, and place gratitude.
Five-Minute Gratitude Page
A timed five-minute gratitude page with three prompts for evening reflection.
Weekly Gratitude Review
A Sunday gratitude page that gathers the small good things from the past week.
Family Gratitude Page
A shared gratitude page for one entry per family member at the end of the week.
Gratitude Letter Template
A guided template for writing a gratitude letter to someone in your life.
Wins Journal Page
A daily page for noting one small win — separate from the wider gratitude practice.
Thirty-Day Gratitude Challenge
A one-page thirty-day grid with a fresh gratitude prompt for each day.
Year-End Gratitude Review
A year-end gratitude page that surfaces the people, places, and moments worth remembering.
About the Gratitude Journals collection
The Gratitude Journals collection on PlannerPages is built for adults who want a paper-based system without committing to a full pre-printed planner from a stationery brand. Each page in this category stands alone: print one, try it for a week, and decide whether the layout fits the way you actually think.
Every page in the collection is sized for both US Letter and A4 paper, with binding-friendly margins. The pages are designed to print cleanly on inkjet and laser printers in colour or grayscale, so you can keep your printer settings on draft and still get a usable page.
If you are new to paper planning, start with the simplest page in the list — the one with the fewest fields. The most common mistake is printing the most ambitious layout first, then giving up after three days because the page is doing too much. Build the habit first, then move to a denser page when the simpler one stops being enough.