← All press kits Complete Kit · revised May 2026

CardCue Pro, in one read.

Everything worth knowing about the micro-money-decision wallet for the money hiding in your junk drawer , the five categories of the forgotten financial layer it recovers, the architectural layers underneath it, the best pull-quotes from each, the ROI math on those dusty dollars, the founder's origin story, and how to reach us.

The one-sentence version

Cue is the wallet that uses smart notifications and geolocation to recover the $400–$1,500 of pre-paid value sitting unused in the average US household , the forgotten financial layer spread across gift cards, punch passes, loyalty rewards, memberships, and prepaid balances. We call them dusty dollars: the money is fine, it just hasn't been touched in a while. Seven architectural layers, one promise: spend what you already own before you swipe a credit card.

~290 lines · the whole app · best-of-seven · for journalists Read the white paper →Jump to all kits →
CardCue Pro 1.0 overview SCANNER Shutter-less capture Vision + Claude fallback ECOSYSTEM Phone · Watch · Car One source, many surfaces GEOLOCATION 500m radius, quiet zones Right-moment engagement PRIVACY Face ID, on-device only Zero trackers DESIGN Craft at every surface Apple-aligned VOICE Warm, dry, never chirpy One voice, 8 languages
Six pillars, one product. Each press kit below is the deep-dive on one.

1. What Cue is

CardCue Pro is a micro-money-decision wallet for iPhone and Apple Watch , the app that recovers the pre-paid value most households quietly accumulate and forget. Five categories of stored value live inside it: gift cards (industry estimates: $150–$300 stuck per household), punch passes & class packs (30–50% under-redemption), loyalty rewards (~$170 unredeemed across the average household's ~15 programs), memberships (Sam's Club Plus's $50 cashback, REI's annual dividend, AAA, BJ's One+), and prepaid debit balances. Added up, the realistic recoverable number for an engaged household lands in the $200–$500/year range.

You scan a card with one photo. CardCue Pro extracts the brand, the balance, the card number, the PIN, the expiration, and, for reward certificates, exactly what it redeems for. It pins the card to the store where it's spendable. When you walk within 500 meters of that store, your phone whispers a lock-screen banner: "Target · $47 · you're right here."

Not when you're driving past. Not at midnight. Not three days in a row because you said no once. Just when the moment actually matters , the moment of payment, where the better money decision actually gets made.

Everything else in the app, privacy, design, voice, onboarding, Apple Watch, widgets, Live Activities, 8-language localization, is infrastructure for that single, frictionless moment.

And once a card is in: your cards are always with you, and ready to use. No more digging through wallets, drawers, or that one shoebox under the bed. The physical card becomes a backup, not a requirement , biometric-gated brightness-boosted barcode on the phone screen, cashier scans, transaction completes, plastic stays at home.*

*Limited to cards that store value in a barcode or QR code , most gift cards, loyalty cards, and reward certificates. Magstripe-only cards, chip-and-PIN cards, and traditional prepaid Visa/Mastercard gift cards still need to come along, sadly. Cue keeps their balances and PINs straight either way.

2. Why now: the $27B problem

$27B
Unredeemed gift-card value held by Americans at any given time, not because people are lazy, but because gift cards are quietly hard to track. Sources: CEB TowerGroup; Mercator Advisory Group; Bankrate 2024 consumer wallet survey.

The gift-card industry is a $270 billion category where roughly 15% of face value goes unredeemed every year. That's not a niche; that's the biggest unclaimed wallet on consumer earth.

Most wallet apps ask you to type card numbers in and then show you a list. CardCue Pro treats the wallet as a notification layer instead, software that remembers for you, at the moment it matters, with a voice you don't mind hearing from.

3. Seven kits, seven stories

Every layer below has a full press kit of its own. This is the highlight reel, the single paragraph and the single best quote from each.

Ecosystem

The Intelligent Notification Ecosystem

Cue touches six Apple surfaces, iPhone, Apple Watch, Widgets, Dynamic Island, Live Activities, and Notifications. All of them share a single source of truth (the NotificationConductor) and a single shared memory (App Group + SwiftData). Surfaces don't compete for user attention; they coordinate.

"The same alert never fires twice, never fires in the wrong place, and never fires at the wrong time."
Read the full kit →
On-Device Intelligence

Four Senses, One Brain, Zero Uploads

Apple Intelligence's Foundation Models categorize a new card on the Neural Engine in under 200ms. Vision and VisionKit DataScanner read cards entirely on-device before a cloud fallback is even considered. Sensitive Content Analysis gates every photo so the scanner politely refuses to OCR what it shouldn't. And WeatherKit quietly teaches the Conductor to suppress the lock-screen banner when it's pouring, because a "walk 3 minutes to coffee" nudge in the rain is noise.

"Four frameworks, zero uploads, graceful fallbacks, the intelligence is everywhere, and yet the critical path never depends on it."
Read the full kit →
Scanner

Shutter-less Card Capture, plus Share-from-Mail

Tap + and the camera is already up. Apple-Pay-style auto-fire trips the shutter the moment it sees a readable card, no tap required. Apple Vision runs on-device first (free, private, fast), with Claude as a cloud-optional fallback only for cards Vision can't crack. A scratch-off guard catches covered PINs, a smart flip prompt asks for the back only when exactly one side of the pair is missing, and single-use reward certificates get their own "Redeems For" banner instead of a fake $0.00 balance.

Gift cards also arrive by email. Open the message in Mail, tap Share, pick CardCue Pro, and the form is already filled in. The Share Extension parses brand, number, PIN, balance, and expiration with an on-device regex matcher. No API key lives inside the extension, no upload happens, no network call fires. Two doorways into one wallet: the camera, and the Share Sheet.

"Most wallet apps make you type. Cue has the camera up before you finish reaching for the card, and the form already filled in when the card arrives by email."
Read the full kit →
Geolocation

The Geolocation Brain

Cue's geofencing isn't a circle on a map, it's a five-gate decision engine: where, when, how fast, how often, in what mood. Combined with cluster coalescing, driving detection, quiet zones, trajectory prediction, and auto-quiet learning, the result is an alert you're glad to receive instead of one you dismiss.

"Most apps that claim 'smart notifications' have one rule. Cue has five gates, twelve signals, and a persistent memory of what you said no to."
Read the full kit →
Privacy

Your Gift Cards Are Nobody Else's Business

SwiftData-first. Biometric-gated. App-Group-isolated. Account sign-up optional. Zero third-party tracking SDKs. No IDFA, no ATT prompt, no crash reporter that phones home. Data Processor: one (Anthropic, under a Zero-Data-Retention agreement). Data leaving your phone: one thing, and only when you tap the scan button.

"The only data that ever leaves your phone is the image you explicitly point at a gift card."
Read the full kit →
Voice

The Voice at the Counter

Personality as architecture. Copy lives in Copy.swift with typed notification templates so a rogue string can't ship. Three voice rules: warm, specific, quiet. A banned-phrase list (no "Don't miss out!", no "Hurry!", no countdown timers). An error is a handoff, not a dead end. A paywall is a list and a price, not psychological warfare.

"Would a real person say this to a real friend? If no, we rewrote it."
Read the full kit →

4. What makes it different

You can build a gift-card list in a weekend. Cue isn't that. It is a coordinated system where seven architectural layers are paying constant, quiet attention so the user doesn't have to. The easiest way to feel the difference is to compare the moment a generic wallet app sends an alert to the moment Cue does:

  • Generic wallet: "You have cards nearby!", fired on a cell-tower region change, no context.
  • CardCue Pro: "Target · $47 · walk 3 min", fired because you're walking (not driving), in a waking hour, near a store you pinned, with a card you haven't been alerted about in 30 minutes, and you haven't dismissed this one three times in the last month.

The first one earns a swipe-away. The second one earns a walk into the store.

Each of these is a small thing on its own. Together they produce the feeling that the app is paying attention to the world around you, without having to ask the world for permission.

5. The two doctrines the whole app rests on

Every feature in CardCue Pro is a consequence of two opinions, held hard, for a long time. They are the real product. The long-form version with citations and the full five-gate breakdown lives in the Unredeemed white paper; what follows is the summary.

The Right-Moment Doctrine

Eight seconds, total, across the entire lifecycle of a gift card. Three seconds to take one in, two seconds to read the cue that the right moment has arrived, three seconds to open Show-at-Register and pay. No setup, no menu hunting, no thinking, just task completion as a feeling. That's the clock every tap, sentence, haptic, and notification is measured against, and it's why the app looks and feels the way it does. The team has a word for it: effortless.

"The user supplies a few deliberate moments. The app supplies everything else."

The Right-Moment Engagement Thesis

The wallet earns attention before it asks for it. Silence is the default state, and silence stays in effect for closed stores, commutes, rainy walks, and cards the user has already dismissed. Across the five gates (where, when, how fast, how often, in what mood), the app is quietly building a case for one interruption. When all five gates agree, one banner fires. The engineering budget is mostly spent on reasons not to speak.

"The best notification is the one a user is glad they got. Everything else is a tax you're charging on their attention."

6. The positioning line

One sentence, on record

"Cue is the gift-card wallet that knows, before you do, that you have $47 on a Target card, the second you walk into the Target. It's frictionless design, for the part of your life that still has drawers."

7. Stats & specs

Platform
iOS 18+ iPhone · Apple Watch
Launched
April 9, 2026 Public 1.0 on the App Store
Languages
8 at launch EN, ES, FR, DE, PT-BR, JA, KO, ZH-Hans
Free tier
3 cards AI scanner · wallet · widgets · location alerts · digital barcode at register
Intake paths
3 Camera scan · Share-from-Mail · Photo library import
Pro tier
Unlimited iCloud backup · Watch app · widgets
Tracking SDKs
Zero No Google · no Meta · no Mixpanel · no Adjust
Data processors
One Anthropic · under Zero Data Retention
Built by
Pika Product Lab LLC Indie iOS studio · solo-dev

8. The founder & the origin story

Portrait of Christian Sorensen, founder of CardCue Pro
Christian Sorensen · Founder, CardCue ProPika Product Lab LLC

Christian Sorensen spent 15 years as a UX leader, first at an interactive employee-benefits company, then at one of the country's largest Medicaid software development firms. He built his career around the same question every time: what is the simplest thing a person can do to get what they came for?

He was laid off on a Monday morning. That afternoon, walking out of the grocery store, he realized he'd had a gift card for that exact store sitting unused the whole time. Again. He looked down at his iPhone, glanced at his Apple Watch, the one that reminds him to stand up, to breathe, to close his rings, and thought: if this thing tells me when to stand up, why can't it tell me I already have thirty dollars to spend, right here, right now?

Cue was born that afternoon. Christian put his user-first design chops to work on a gift-card wallet that's meant to feel like magic: the right moments across the life of the card , take it in once, read the cue, tap to pay. No plastic bulking out a wallet or purse. No "loyalty" section of your phone that you forget exists. Just a notification at the right moment, for money that was already yours to spend.

CardCue Pro is a deliberate bet on the Apple ecosystem. Rather than "porting" a wallet onto every surface, the app leans all the way into what iOS, watchOS, WidgetKit, ActivityKit, and CoreLocation already do well, and then pushes those tools to the edge of what they were designed for. Seven surfaces, one source of truth, zero third-party SDKs. That architectural choice is what makes the frictionless moment possible.

There's $27 billion in unused gift-card value held by Americans right now, value given to us that quietly expires, gets lost in drawers, or ends up as corporate breakage revenue. Christian's line on it: "Let's take back what's ours, and stop giving corporations free money."

CardCue Pro shipped to the App Store on April 9, 2026, after a long TestFlight beta. No seed round. No VC. No growth-hacking playbook. Built by Pika Product Lab LLC, a solo-developer indie iOS studio.

9. The pull-quotes, in one list

For journalists who want a quote block to drop into a story:

  • "The same alert never fires twice, never fires in the wrong place, and never fires at the wrong time." on the notification ecosystem
  • "Four frameworks, zero uploads, graceful fallbacks, the intelligence is everywhere, and yet the critical path never depends on it." on on-device intelligence
  • "Most wallet apps make you type. Cue has the camera up before you finish reaching for the card." on the scanner
  • "Cue has five gates, twelve signals, and a persistent memory of what you said no to." on the geolocation brain
  • "The only data that ever leaves your phone is the image you explicitly point at a gift card." on privacy
  • "Every haptic is earned, every color is a token, every accessibility path is tested." on design craft
  • "Would a real person say this to a real friend? If no, we rewrote it." on voice
  • "Frictionless design, for the part of your life that still has drawers." on the whole app
  • "The user supplies a few deliberate moments. The app supplies everything else." on the Right-Moment Doctrine
  • "The best notification is the one a user is glad they got. Everything else is a tax you're charging on their attention." on the Right-Moment Engagement Thesis

10. Contact & assets

Press

Social (all handles: cardcueapp)

CardCue Pro, by Pika Product Lab LLC. One press kit to cover them all, and seven deeper dives for when you want the receipts.

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