The term comes from Charles Duhigg's The Power of Habit. A keystone habit is not just one good behavior among many — it is a behavior that pulls others along with it. Change it, and seemingly unrelated parts of your life shift too.
The classic example is regular exercise. People who start working out often, without intending to, begin eating better, sleeping earlier, procrastinating less, and feeling more in control of their spending. No one added those goals to a list. The keystone habit created a cascade because it changed the person's self-image and daily structure at the same time.
Keystone habits work through a few mechanisms. They produce small early wins that build belief that change is possible. They create a new identity — I am someone who trains — that makes other aligned choices feel consistent rather than effortful. And they often establish a cornerstone in the day around which the rest of a routine can organize itself.
Common keystone habits include exercise, a consistent wake time, planning the day in the morning, a shared family meal, and tracking something you care about — money, food, or your habits themselves. The last one matters here: the simple act of keeping a record tends to raise awareness across the board.
This is why Daychain encourages starting with one anchor task rather than ten. A single chain you refuse to break becomes a keystone: the daily act of showing up, logging the link, and protecting the streak spills into how you approach everything else. Pick the one habit that, if it held, would make the others easier — and build that chain first.