Track every cigar you’ve smoked, know when each one is ready, and talk it over in the Lounge. Built for those who already take notes, and finally have somewhere to put them.
Cigars logged
POTL
Reviews



















No spreadsheet to maintain.
No ads. Ever.
The Lounge is a room inside Cigarro. Post a photo, attach one of your reviews, tag the cigar in your hand, and give a nod to the ones worth it. The house opens a thread every Friday evening.
No account needed to look. Pull up a chair.
A like is a nod. They never buzz your phone one by one. They arrive as a single, quiet daily digest.
The house opens one room each Friday evening. What's lit tonight. Show us the band.
Posting takes a claimed @handle, so the room has real names. Follow the members worth following.
Photos are re-encoded on your phone, so location never leaves it. One switch controls whether your name shows.
The cedar at the foot has nothing to do with the leather at the band. We capture all three. Strength, draw, flavour, for each segment, and chart how it evolved.
“Bright cedar opens. Light pepper on the retrohale, settling fast.”
“Body climbs to medium-full. Cocoa takes over. The pepper rests.”
“Espresso and dark earth. A surprise sweetness on the finish.”
Drop a box in. Set its rest. We count down by weeks, then months, then years. Drag the timeline to scrub through your humidor at any moment.
The wheel sommeliers and tea masters use, tuned for tobacco. Tap a slice to log it. We chart what you taste, week over week.
The list view isn’t a list. It’s a stack of cigars — each row coloured by its wrapper, shaped like its vitola. You can read your humidor without reading it.
Six structural browns: Connecticut, Claro, Habano, Rosado, Maduro, Oscuro. We don’t invent new ones.
Robustos and Toros are squared off. Torpedos taper to a point. Perfectos and Pyramids carry their own silhouettes.
The age tag on the right ticks up forever. After two years it shows years. After ten, decades.
Wrapper, age, ready-status, brand, last smoked. The default is “what’s ready first.”
Sortable by quantity, age, wrapper shade, price, vitola, or ring gauge. Your humidor reads itself.
Strength and draw sliders. A 13-family flavour wheel. Dedicated notes per third. Public or private — your call.
The member feed. Post what you are smoking, with photos, tag the cigar, or attach a review. Every public post gets a shareable page.
Halfwheel, Cigar Aficionado, Cigar Coop, and dozens more, aggregated and ranked by recency. One tab over from the Lounge.
50+ cigar publications and review blogs aggregated, ranked by recency. Industry releases, deep dives, lifestyle pieces, reader reviews. The Papers sits one tab over from the Lounge; read in-app or open in your browser.
Yes. The Pocket Humidor tier is free forever: up to 30 unique cigars in your humidor and unlimited reviews. Paid tiers add capacity. We don’t sell data, run ads, or accept sponsored cigars.
Right now Cigarro is a web app, optimised for mobile but works on any modern browser, desktop included. It installs to your home screen as a PWA.
It rolls. The .com was available, the trademark was clean, and it sounds like the right amount of theatrical for a hobby that involves smoking a leaf wrapped in another leaf.
Yes. The Lounge is the member feed inside Cigarro: post what you are smoking, with photos, tag the cigar from the catalogue, or attach one of your reviews. Comments take photos, and likes are nods, delivered as one quiet daily digest. Anyone can browse the room, no account needed, at app.cigarroapp.com/discover.
No. Posting takes a claimed @handle, and one profile switch controls whether your name appears anywhere public. Photos are re-encoded on your device when you upload, so location data never leaves your phone. Nothing posts automatically; sharing is always your call.
Each cigar has a “rest” (one month) set when you log it. We start a clock. When the rest is up, the cigar gets an “aged” badge. You can also retroactively set the day you put a cigar in your humidor so you know how old it is.
Not yet. Export is on the roadmap. When it ships you’ll be able to pull your humidor and reviews as JSON or CSV with no email gate.
The web app caches your humidor and your recent reviews so you can read them without a connection. New entries sync when you’re back online. The Lounge and The Papers need a connection to refresh.
A short letter from the Cigarro desk. One featured cigar, a small lesson drawn from the Cigarro Method, and a handful of things worth knowing. Nothing shouted, nothing sold. A few hundred words over a Friday afternoon.
Free, weekly, easy to leave. Written by Hugh Ashby.