Qui peut quand?

Find a dinner date with friends

When you organize a dinner with friends, the hard part isn't the menu: it's finding the evening when everyone's free. The thread drags on for a week and the date keeps slipping as the messages pile up.

A date poll settles it in one go: you propose a few evenings, everyone checks what works for them, and the date that suits the most people rises to the top.

The group chat that never lands

"I can do Thursday", "oh not me, Friday?", "Friday I'm working": in a group chat, finding a date turns into an endless negotiation where you lose track of who can do when. Often, you give up and postpone the dinner.

An availability grid puts everyone on the same page: each person checks their free evenings, and the best date shows in black and white. Nobody has to create an account to reply.

Find the date in three steps

  1. Propose a few dates

    Pick the evenings that might work. Two, five, ten: up to you.

  2. Share the link with the group

    One link, in the group chat or by email. No account to create to reply.

  3. The best date stands out

    Everyone checks their availability and the date that suits the most people rises to the top.

Frequently asked questions

Do my friends have to sign up to reply?

No. They open the link and check their availability in the browser. No account, no password.

Can I propose times, not just days?

Yes. You can propose specific slots (Friday 6 p.m., Saturday noon), not just whole days.

Once the date is set, how do I send the invitation?

When the poll closes, a link creates the invitation on Qui sera là? (quiserala.ca) with the date already filled in. No need to retype anything.

Qui peut quand? finds the date that works for everyone: you propose, the group checks, the best date rises to the top.

Start the poll on Qui peut quand?

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