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Published 2026-01-11 · 6 min read
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Paper guide

Bullet Journal Dot Grid Ideas That Are Simple and Useful

Start a bullet journal without overthinking. Use dot grid paper to build clean trackers, weekly spreads, and project pages with minimal setup.

PGPaperGens · writing about print·2026-01-11·6 min read
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Dot grid exists so you can align lists and mini calendars without the visual weight of full graph lines. The best bullet journal pages are boring on purpose: repeatable modules, consistent spacing, and room for migration when a week slips. Below are layouts that work on a single printed page with almost no drawing skill—ruler optional, patience required.
Pick one spacing (for example 5 mm) and stay with it for a month before you chase prettier spreads; spacing consistency matters more than decoration.

Idea 1: Minimal monthly + three weekly strips

Divide the page into a narrow month strip across the top (dates only) and three horizontal bands for week one–three. Use dots only for tick marks at 5 mm intervals instead of drawing full boxes. Leave the bottom quarter blank for “carried forward” tasks.

Idea 2: Habit tracker as a 7×N dot matrix

Draw seven columns (days) with light pencil through dots, then rows for habits. Fill with dots, slashes, or color. Keep habits to five or fewer rows so the page stays honest—overfilled trackers get abandoned by week two.

Idea 3: Project page with three zones

Backlog | This week | Waiting on others. Use vertical pencil lines through the dot field to create three columns of unequal width (wider middle). Dot grid keeps column edges straight even when you rewrite headings.

Idea 4: One-page meeting log

Top third: attendees + goal. Middle: timestamped bullets (use dots as tick marks every 10 mm down the left margin). Bottom: decisions and owners. The structure survives messy meetings better than a blank page.

Printing tips (short)

Print at true size so your 5 mm field stays 5 mm—otherwise habit columns drift. For scaling and tray mismatches, use the dedicated print guide linked below.

Migration rituals that keep momentum

End each week by rewriting unfinished bullets onto the next spread—cross out migrated items on the old page so your brain trusts the system. Color-code only two meanings (for example urgent vs someday) to avoid rainbow fatigue.

Analog + digital hybrids

Photograph finished spreads into a cloud album named by month; searchable tags beat flipping binders during annual reviews. Keep physical archives for spreads heavy with sketches.

Minimal decoration guardrails

Limit washi tape to spine reinforcement until layouts stabilise—pretty edges distract new journalers from habit loops.

FAQ

Can I reuse last year’s spreads? Yes—photocopy winners at 100% scale before ink fades.
Dot grid vs lined for BuJo? Dots hide structure until you need it; lines dominate visually on minimalist weeks.

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