For families
The call that finally makes sense.
Half the family is in one country, half is in another, and the kids born here are slowly losing the language of the people who raised them. NatChatt is for the conversations you don’t want to lose.
You don’t have to translate for your grandmother on Sunday any more. You don’t have to pause the cousin chat to summarise what someone said in Spanish. You don’t have to wonder if your nephew, who only really speaks English now, is actually following along when his abuela writes to him.
We hear over and over: the relationship is already there. The love is already there. The thing that gets lost is the small daily talk that would have happened if everyone had been in the same kitchen. The “how was the doctor?”, the “did the rice turn out OK?”, the “tell your dad happy birthday from me” you almost forgot to pass on.
NatChatt is for the small daily talk. Group chats that hold every generation. Voice notes that arrive as text in the language each person reads in. Photos with captions in both languages. A Sunday call where everyone follows the joke at the same time.
A typical week
Sunday morning calls
The 30-minute video call that anchors the week. You both pour coffee. Captions sit under the frame so you can keep eye contact.
A typical week
The cousin group chat
Birthdays, photos of the kids, the funeral arrangements when they have to be made. Everyone reads it in the language they read in.
A typical week
The voice note from your aunt
Four minutes long, recorded while she was cooking. You read the transcript on the bus and reply with one of your own.
In the app
A thirteen-person family thread, in one place.
Cousins. Aunties. The brother who only sends voice notes. Each person reads the thread in the language they chose at signup. No interpreter in the middle. No one falls behind the conversation.