The barrel-shaped clicker on the end of a needle has been the default knitting row counter for decades. Cheap, no batteries, works. But row counter apps have gotten good, and for knitters working anything more complex than a scarf, the digital version does things the physical one can’t.
That said, not everyone needs what the digital version offers. The right choice depends on the project.
Physical row counters
The classic mechanical counter is a small barrel that fits on the end of a straight needle. Turn the dial after each row. Universal counters that hang from the needle, pendant-style clickers on a cord, and kacha-kacha tabletop counters are the main alternatives. A digital push-button counter that hangs on the finger (the LED finger tally counters sold for golf scoring) shows up in knitting bags often enough to count as a category of its own.
What they do well. No setup. Pull it out of the drawer, click, done. No account, no app, no learning curve. The physical click becomes part of the knitting rhythm, and some knitters find that tactile feedback more satisfying than tapping a screen. They work without electricity, don’t care about screen glare, and are usually inexpensive. Hard to argue with that.
Where they fall short. They track one thing at a time, with no history. Need to undo a row? Remember to click back, and barrel-style counters are fiddly to reverse (you have to turn the inner ring carefully without spinning the outer one). Forget, and the count is wrong with no way to verify.
They can’t track multiple things at once. A sweater might need overall row count, position within a cable repeat, and the next decrease row. A physical counter handles one of those.
They get bumped. Toss the project bag in the car, the dial shifts, and now you’re looking at a number that may or may not be right. And the barrel style doesn’t fit circular needles, which is how most garments get knit. Pendant or tabletop counters solve the needle problem but introduce their own friction.
Digital row counters
A row counter app replaces the clicker with a tap on your phone. The count saves automatically. Most apps add features on top: undo, multiple counters, reminders, session tracking, pattern viewing, or watch support. The details change by app, which is why the features matter more than the category label.
What they do well. They remember everything. Close the app, turn off the phone, pick up the project next week, and the count is exactly where you left it. For knitters juggling multiple projects, seeing all of them in one list with current row counts and last-worked dates saves the “wait, what row was I on?” moment every time you switch.
Row reminders are the feature physical counters genuinely can’t replicate. Set a reminder at row 15 for a buttonhole, row 30 for a decrease, row 45 for a bind-off. The app alerts you when you get there. For patterns with shaping at intervals, this eliminates the mental tracking that otherwise means constantly checking the pattern.
Multiple counters per project handle the reality of complex knitting. One counter for overall rows, another for the cable repeat, another for the pattern section. All visible at once, all independent. The physical equivalent would be three separate clickers and a sticky note keeping them straight.
Session tracking shows when and how long you worked on each project. Less about counting, more about the data. Some knitters find it motivating to see total hours and pace trends over time, and a long-running sweater feels more rewarding when there’s a record of the 47 evenings that went into it.
Where they fall short. Your phone needs to be nearby. If you knit specifically to get away from screens, a phone in the session defeats part of the purpose. Perfectly valid reason to stick with a clicker.
There’s a small learning curve. Not much, but a mechanical counter is instant in a way any app isn’t: open app, find project, tap. A few seconds that the barrel doesn’t need.
Battery dependency. The phone dying doesn’t lose the count (it’s saved), but it leaves you counterless until you charge. Rarely a practical problem, but it’s a dependency the clicker doesn’t have.
When physical wins
Simple projects with no shaping. Scarves, dishcloths, basic blankets. One thing to count, straightforward knitting. Adding an app to a project that doesn’t need one is overhead without benefit.
Screen-free sessions. If disconnecting from devices is part of why you knit, a clicker respects that boundary. Same goes for knitting in places where phones are awkward (a quiet train carriage, a long meeting, a knitting group where people are specifically there to be off their screens).
Backup. Even confirmed app users keep a clicker in the project bag for the times the phone is dead, missing, or somebody else’s hands are on it.
When digital wins
Any project with shaping. Sweaters, hats with crown decreases, socks with heel turns. Row reminders prevent the mistakes that otherwise mean frogging back several inches.
Multiple active projects. Three or more WIPs, each with their own row count and pattern position. A digital tracker that shows all of them beats the alternative of fishing through bags and checking sticky notes.
Complex stitch patterns. Cables, lace, colorwork. Losing your place in a repeat is expensive. Multiple counters tracking different aspects of the pattern is something physical counters can’t do at all.
Long-term projects. A sweater that takes months benefits from persistence and session history. You can see you last worked on it Tuesday, you were on row 47, the next decrease is at row 52. A clicker tells you “47” and nothing else.
KnitTools is being built for Android and combines tap counting with undo, row reminders, multiple counters per project, and session tracking. Core counter and project data are planned around local project data.
The combination approach
Plenty of knitters use both. Clicker for the travel sock, app for the sweater at home. No rule says you have to pick one system for everything.
The practical question: does this project need more than a single count? If yes, digital. If no, use whichever you prefer. Some knitters keep the clicker for in-row stitch counting (every five stitches across a long cast-on, for example) and the app for row tracking, which actually plays to each tool’s strength.
FAQ
Do row counter apps work offline? Some do, some don’t. Apps that store data locally work offline. Cloud-based apps may need a connection. Check before relying on one at a cabin or on a flight. KnitTools is planned around local project and counter data for core features.
Can I use my smartwatch as a row counter? Some knitting apps offer watch companions, and there are standalone watch counter apps. Small screen, but the counter is literally on your wrist. Worth trying if you already wear one while knitting. Tapping a watch face is also less disruptive than picking up the phone.
Are there row counters that work with circular needles? Pendant-style counters hang from a stitch marker or clip to the project. They work with any needle type. Best physical option if circulars are your main needles. Some knitters also use a removable stitch marker plus tally marks on paper, which costs nothing and never resets accidentally.
What about LED finger counters? The little ring counters sold for golf or tasbih prayer beads work fine for knitting, too. Single button, increments by one, usually a reset. No reverse, no memory between projects, but they’re hands-free in a way the barrel isn’t, and they fit on any needle size since they don’t touch the needle at all.