HubTools

Monthly Recap Card Generator

Pre-loaded with a sample monthly metrics set — swap in your own numbers and post a clean end-of-month recap.

What is a monthly recap card?

A monthly recap card is a single image summarizing the previous month's headline metrics — followers, posts published, total engagement, customers acquired. The cadence matters: monthly is short enough that the metrics still feel relevant, long enough that the changes are non-trivial. Creators post them on the 1st-3rd of the new month; brands include them in monthly newsletters; freelancers send them to clients in retainer reports. The format works because monthly is the rhythm everyone already keeps — bills, salaries, and most reporting cycles all align to month boundaries. The Hub Tools generator pre-loads the metrics template with a four-row sample, the violet-haze background that reads professionally on most platforms, and the period preset "This month" so the heading auto-updates each cycle. Pair it with the QR Code Generator for a newsletter-signup QR or the Screenshot Mockup Generator for a phone-frame mock.
Period preset
This month
Abbrev.Trends

About monthly recap card structure

Monthly recap cards use the metrics template with stack layout: a heading (the month name auto-resolved from "This month"), and four metric rows with optional trend percentages.
  • Heading defaults to the period preset 'This month' which resolves to "May 2026" auto-formatted
  • Trend percentages compare current to prev — fill prev with last month's number to enable
  • Stack layout puts the most important metric (followers) at the top with hero size
  • Watermark stays off by default to keep the recap looking native to the creator's brand

Frequently asked questions

Which metrics should a monthly recap card include?
Pick four metrics that tell a coherent story together: an audience metric (followers), an output metric (posts published), an engagement metric (likes / replies / impressions), and an outcome metric (customers / signups / revenue). Four is the right number — three feels thin, five+ gets crowded. Always include the previous month's number for the trend percentage to render — context matters more than absolute numbers in a monthly cadence.