AI assistant by text

AI isn’t an app.
It’s a text.

No app. No signup. TextAgent lives in your text messages — the place you already live.

Text +1 (737) 377-1927 Opens your messages app

$30/month. 30-day free trial. Less than the morning coffee you don’t drink twice.

A couple in their late 50s on a wooden porch with coffee, one reading a text message on her phone with a soft smile.

No app required

Just send a text

What is this, really?

An assistant that lives in your messages.

TextMyAgent is an AI assistant you reach by text message. There is no app to install. There is no account to create on this website. You start by texting our number.

When you text +1 (737) 377-1927, you’ll reach your assistant. It introduces itself, explains what it can help with, and waits for you to tell it what you need. From that point forward, it’s a regular text conversation — except the person on the other end remembers everything, never forgets a birthday, and handles the small stuff while you live your life.

Looks like a text

A few real conversations.

Not a chatbot. Not a feature inside another app. Just a number you text — and it remembers everything.

Loop someone in. Done before the next message.

Snap a photo of anything dated. It lands on your calendar.

It remembers the dates that matter. You stay the person who shows up.

How it works

Three steps. No app required.

You already know how to text. That’s the whole onboarding.

Step 01

Text the number.

Send “free for 30 days” to +1 (737) 377-1927 from your phone. Your TextAgent answers.

Step 02

Talk to it like a friend.

Tell it what you need. Add things to your calendar. Forward emails. Ask it questions. It learns you over your first 30 days.

Step 03

AI superpowers — one text away.

It remembers birthdays, screens your calls, drafts your messages, and keeps your calendar honest. You stay in your life.

Day in the life

Your TextAgent’s Capabilities.

Five real moments. None of them require a new app.

A couple in their 60s near a pickleball court, paddles in hand, one showing the messaging screen to the other.

They want a Saturday court. Both their calendars are scattered.

He texts his TextAgent: “Find me and Sue an open Saturday morning.” His agent talks to her agent, checks both calendars, finds a window. Texts back: “Saturday the 18th, 9am works for both of you. Would you like me to call Northwest Park and book the court for you?” He says yes. It’s done.

Text ‘free for 30 days’
A man in his late 60s in a sunlit kitchen, reading a text message on his phone with a quiet smile.

His granddaughter’s birthday is in five days. He doesn’t want to forget.

He told his TextAgent about Emma’s birthday once, last year. It remembered. Five days out, it texts him: “Emma’s 12th birthday is Saturday. You sent her a card last year. Want me to draft something this year too?” He says yes. The agent drafts something warm and specific. He copies it, signs the card, drops it in the mail.

Text ‘free for 30 days’
An open notebook with a fountain pen on a worn table, warm afternoon light through a window.

She hasn’t talked to her best friend from college in three months. Life got loud.

Her TextAgent texts her on a Tuesday morning: “Quick heads up — you and Lauren haven’t connected in about three months. You said in March you wanted to plan a visit. Want me to draft a check-in text?” She replies yeah. The draft comes back. She edits two words and sends it. They make plans for fall.

Text ‘free for 30 days’
A man in his early 50s at a restaurant table, taking a phone photo of a dinner check.

He takes a photo of the receipt. That’s it.

His TextAgent reads the receipt, notes the meal, the restaurant, the wine. Two months later he asks: “Where did I have that delicious glass of wine a couple months ago?” His agent remembers — tells him where, drops a pin on the map, and he goes back to enjoy it again.

Text ‘free for 30 days’
A smartphone resting on a wooden nightstand under soft lamplight, evening warmth.

He hasn’t found a new show in months. The kids are out of ideas.

His TextAgent texts him on a Wednesday evening: “Based on what we’ve talked about, I bet you’ll like Dutton Ranch. New episode drops tonight at 7. Want me to remind you?” He says yeah. At 6:55 the reminder lands with the channel. He pours a beer. The show starts.

Text ‘free for 30 days’
A smartphone face-up on a kitchen counter showing a recently ended call — moments after the agent finished booking a reservation.

Friday night out. The good Italian place is always booked.

He texts his TextAgent: “Get me and Sarah a table at Tony’s, Friday 7pm if possible.” Five minutes later: “Just called Tony’s. They have 7:15 or 8:30 Friday. Which works?” He picks 7:15. The agent calls back, books it, and texts: “Confirmed. Friday 7:15. Reservation under your name.”

Text ‘free for 30 days’

And so much more

Just a few more things people text us.

There’s no menu. You just type the thing.

Do this for me On it. Do that for me What’s the weather today? How did the Cowboys do? Won 24–17. You good? Remind me every Wednesday Send me an inspirational quote every morning Set ✓ Help me plan my day the night before Give me a journal prompt Who plays at 7? Cancel the 3pm. Reschedule for Thursday. Done. What was the name of that book Sarah recommended? Order more coffee beans Wake me up if Mom calls tonight Find me a quiet hotel in Asheville next weekend Track this package Confirmed. Translate this for me Draft a thank-you note to my doctor
Text ‘free for 30 days’ Opens your messages app

Pricing

One number. Two ways to use it.

Both come with a 30-day free trial. No credit card required to start.

TextMyAgent

$30/month

about $1 a day

  • 30-day free trial
  • Text, email, document handling
  • Calendar coordination
  • Reminders and follow-ups
  • Cancel anytime
Start the trial

We invite you to subscribe at the end of the 30 days.

Keith Eddleman, founder of TextMyAgent.

A note from me.

Hi — I’m Keith. I built TextMyAgent because my wife and I kept missing each other’s appointments, dropping the ball on family stuff, and ignoring our voicemails. I wanted an actual assistant. Not a chatbot. Not a feature inside another app. An assistant with its own phone number and its own email address that I could give out instead of mine.

So I built it.

If you’re an adult with too many people texting you and too many calls you’re avoiding — this is for you. Text the number, see if you like it, and if you do, stay. If not, walk away. No app to delete. No subscription to cancel by phone. Just a conversation that ends when you want it to.

— Keith

Questions.

Text +1 (737) 377-1927 Opens your messages app