Which Wonderland 222 Planner is Right for You?
The best planner is the one that fits the way you actually plan. Whether you want an all-in-one system, a lightweight planner for daily carry, a flexible hybrid bullet journal, or a layout that gives weekends more room, this guide will help you find the right fit.
Start with how you plan, not just the size.
Some people want one book that holds everything. Some want a clean weekly structure with room to adapt. Some need a planner that stays lightweight and easy to carry. Others want hybrid bullet journal flexibility without starting from a blank notebook every time.
Wonderland 222 planners are designed for chronological planning with low visual clutter, flexible structure, and page numbers plus Key and Index pages for hybrid bullet journal use.
The right choice usually comes down to how much room you need, how portable you want your planner to feel, and how much built-in structure you want.
Quick Shortcut
Not sure where to begin?
- Want one book for planning with enough undated pages for page-per-day planning? Start with an All-in-One planner.
- Want a lighter, simpler setup? Start with a Core planner.
- Need more room on weekends? Check vertical stacked vs. vertical unstacked weekends.
- Trying to decide between dated structure and undated flexibility? See dated vs. undated.
- Need something easy to carry every day? Compare sizes and portability.
Core vs. All-in-One
This is usually the biggest decision. Do you want a more compact planner that can pair with a notebook in a flexible two-book system, or do you want one book that holds more of everything together?
Core Planner
Best for people who want a planner they can keep with them all the time. A Core planner is a strong fit if you like a more compact planning book and want the option to pair it with a separate notebook or journal that can stay at home, at work, or be swapped out as needed.
- More compact for everyday carry
- Great for a two-book system
- Lets you keep planning with you while rotating notebooks by purpose
Best for: portable planning, ADHD-friendly daily carry, two-book systems, simpler setups
All-in-One Planner
Best for people who want a planner with enough extra undated pages to support more day-by-day planning, journaling, notes, and flexible writing in the same book. All Wonderland 222 planners have room for planning and notes. The difference is that the All-in-One gives you more of that space, including enough undated pages that many people can use it for page-per-day planning.
- More undated pages for daily planning, journaling, and notes
- Strong fit for people who want page-per-day flexibility
- No guilt about skipped days because the extra pages are undated
Best for: one-book systems, undated daily planning, journaling, and users who want more flexible page space built in
More pages, or more portability?
All Wonderland 222 planners have ample room for planning and notes in one book. The real question is whether you want a more compact planner that pairs beautifully with a separate notebook, or a planner with enough extra undated pages that it can also support more daily planning and journaling on its own.
You can browse the full planner collection, explore the planning style guide below, or learn more about the Wonderland 222 approach.
Dated Planners vs. Undated Planners
Another helpful question is whether you want your planning system already mapped out in dated layouts, or whether you prefer the freedom of undated pages you can use only when you need them.
Dated Planners
Dated planners are ideal if you want your yearly, quarterly, monthly, and weekly views already set up and ready to use. They help you see time clearly, keep planning chronological, and reduce setup work.
Undated Planners
Undated planners are ideal if you want the same structured layout system without fixed dates on the page. They give you room for daily planning, journaling, notes, and lists without the pressure of using a page every single day. You can skip days, come back when you need to, and use the planner in a way that fits real life.
Structure plus flexibility
Many Wonderland 222 users want both. A dated planner gives the structure of mapped-out time, while undated pages or notebooks give you room for daily planning, extra notes, reminders, and the flexibility to use pages only when needed.
Choose Your Size
Size affects both how much room you have on the page and how easy your planner is to carry. Think about where your planner lives most of the time: desk, tote, backpack, or in your hands on the go.
A6
A compact option for people who want a truly portable planner. Best if you need something easy to carry, easy to grab, and enough space for focused daily planning without taking over your bag.
Best for: planning on the go, smaller handwriting, minimalist carry
B6
A sweet spot for many planner users. B6 offers a strong balance between writing room and portability, making it a great choice if you want enough space to think on paper without moving into a bulkier everyday carry.
Best for: everyday carry, balanced planning, one-book systems that still feel manageable
A5
Best for people who want more room to write, plan, track, or think across the page. A5 is still portable, especially in the Core, which stays impressively lightweight and compact for what it holds. The All-in-One is heavier, but thanks to 52gsm paper it is still more compact than many books with a similar amount of content.
A5 becomes especially worth considering if you want more writing space without automatically giving up portability. The main question is less whether you can carry it and more whether you want to carry everything in it all the time.
Best for: maximum writing space, detailed planning, portable planning with more room, and users deciding whether they want their full life book with them all day
Choose the Layout That Fits Real Life
Layout preference is personal, but a few questions make the choice easier. Do you want a horizontal view of your week, or a vertical layout? Do you want broader columns across the week, or do you prefer each day to have its own space plus a separate blank or to-do column? Or do you want no built-in planning layout at all, just an open notebook page where you can jot down appointments, to-do lists, reminders, and notes as needed? The right layout often comes down to how you naturally like to see time on the page and how much structure you want built in.
Horizontal Layout
A horizontal weekly layout is a strong fit if you prefer seeing your week in a more open, linear way. It can feel especially intuitive for list makers, people who like writing across the page, or anyone who wants a weekly view that feels clean, calm, and easy to scan.
Vertical Layout With Stacked Weekends
Stacked weekends are a strong fit if you want broader, wider columns across the weekly layout. This can be especially helpful for larger handwriting, fuller writing lines, or dual planning where you split a day’s space between two schedules.
Giving the weekdays wider real estate means removing the blank or to-do column that would usually sit before Monday. The result is a layout that feels more open across the week, even for people whose weekends are still full.
Vertical Layout With Unstacked Weekends
Unstacked weekends give each day of the week its own column, along with the blank or to-do column to the left of Monday. This is a strong fit if you want every day clearly separated and prefer keeping that extra list space built into the weekly spread.
Undated Notebook
An undated notebook is a strong fit if you want a place to plan daily or every other day without yearly, quarterly, monthly, or weekly layouts already built in. It works beautifully for appointments, daily to-do lists, reminders, notes, and page-per-day planning when you want complete flexibility.
Quick Planner Comparison
| Question | Choose this | Why |
|---|---|---|
| I want the lightest, simplest setup. | Core Planner | Great for focused planning without extra bulk. |
| I want enough extra pages for undated daily planning, journaling, and notes. | All-in-One Planner | It gives you more flexible undated page space, including enough for page-per-day planning for many users. |
| I need something easy to carry every day. | A6 or B6 | More portable for daily use, commuting, and planning on the go. |
| I want more room to write. | A5 | Best for bigger handwriting, detailed plans, and desk use. |
| My weekends are full and need space. | Vertical layout with unstacked weekends | Gives Saturday and Sunday more realistic room. |
| I want a tighter weekly layout. | Vertical layout with stacked weekends | Efficient use of space when weekends are lighter. |
| I want a hybrid bullet journal setup that stays flexible. | Core + notebook, or All-in-One | Both can work beautifully. Choose Core + notebook for a two-book system, or All-in-One if you want more together in one book. |
Still deciding?
Browse the full planner collection and compare your favorite formats, or read more about why Wonderland 222 planners work the way they do.
Tip: once your links and images are in place, this page can also link out to specific planner categories, size collections, or individual hero products to help shoppers self-sort faster.