Personal month
A starter goal that makes one regular cleanup habit feel winnable.
Coming soon to iPhone
Walk. Bag litter. Log the haul. Score points. Make your block harder to ignore.
The mission
Litter League™ is competitive litter cleanup: start a cleanup walk, pick up what does not belong there, photograph the haul, and bank points for yourself and your crew.
The goal is simple: make the clean choice visible, repeatable, and a little addictive. Cleaner sidewalks. Cleaner parks. Cleaner drains, creeks, rivers, bays, and beaches.
League pickup goals
Litter League™ tracks pounds cleaned at the personal, crew, monthly league, and 2027 goal levels.
A starter goal that makes one regular cleanup habit feel winnable.
A shared target for friends, neighbors, classmates, teams, and local crews.
The app-wide push: one month, one scoreboard, a lot less junk outside.
One million pounds removed from streets, land, and water paths by the end of 2027.
Clean toward 1,000,000 lbs
The app
Litter League™ tracks cleanup walks, hauls, proof photos, points, streaks, crews, and leaderboards. The first public release is being prepared for iPhone.
Crews
Crews are the team layer of Litter League™: friends, family, neighbors, classmates, coworkers, church groups, local clubs, and community organizers all cleaning under one scoreboard.
Start a private crew, invite your circle, and turn ordinary walks into friendly monthly competition.
If there is a team in your neighborhood, school, workplace, or community, jump in and add your hauls to the board.
You can collect alone and still move the league goal. Crew or no crew, every bag off the ground is a win.
Why picking up garbage soothes the soul
A cleanup walk will not fix everything. It does give your brain, your block, and the water downstream one clear win.
A pickup walk adds light movement, outdoor time, and a simple focus task. That can support mood, attention, and stress relief. It is not medical advice or a substitute for care.
Cleaning a place asks you to notice it. That little act of care can turn a normal route into a practice: see the mess, bend down, leave it better.
It is a refusal to shrug. You did not make every piece of litter, but you can still remove the one in front of you.
Litter breaks down, spreads, and gets expensive. Removing it early protects parks, soil, wildlife, storm drains, and the people who share those spaces.
Street trash moves with rain. Creeks feed rivers, rivers feed bays, and bays feed the sea. A bag pulled from a curb can be ocean prevention.
The scoreboard turns scattered good deeds into visible momentum. Solo cleanups count. Crew cleanups compound.