12 printable pages
Monthly Planners
Plan the month, protect your priorities.
Monthly planner pages combine a calendar grid with goal, theme, and reflection space. They are ideal for tracking projects, recurring bills, and personal milestones across thirty days.
Classic Monthly Calendar
A standard month-on-one-page calendar grid with extra space for notes underneath.
Monthly Goals Dashboard
A monthly overview with goal tracking, key dates, focus theme, and a habit grid.
Monthly Project Tracker
A page for tracking projects across the month with status, owner, and due-date columns.
Monthly Bill & Bill-Pay Calendar
A calendar grid pre-marked with recurring bills, paydays, and savings transfers.
Monthly Content Calendar
A monthly page for creators planning posts, videos, and email send dates.
Monthly Reflection Spread
A two-page spread with month-in-review prompts and a look-ahead for the next month.
Monthly Habit Grid
A single-page habit grid with thirty-one columns and up to fifteen tracked habits.
Monthly Family Calendar
A large monthly calendar with colour-coded rows per household member.
Monthly Meal & Errand Calendar
A monthly calendar with one row per week dedicated to meals and one to errands.
Monthly Brain Dump Page
A monthly capture page for everything on your mind — sorted later into the right tracker.
Monthly Theme & Word Page
A monthly intention page with space for a focus theme, word of the month, and three big rocks.
Undated Monthly Calendar
A blank, undated monthly calendar grid you can date by hand and reuse for any month.
About the Monthly Planners collection
The Monthly Planners 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.