Aisance Cloud — Aisance Cloud is a Swiss AI platform for households. Camille helps you understand mail and everyday documents. Your files stay in your own cloud storage (Google Drive, OneDrive).
Letters explained in plain words. A budget you can finally see. Homework helped without tears. Aisance Cloud is the Swiss home for your family's everyday life, with every major AI working quietly behind it.
60 sec
To understand any letter
1 account
For the whole household
CHF 0
Monthly subscription
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If most households never use AI, it's not because they don't need help — it's because it never felt relevant to their everyday lives. Aisance simplifies everything by tackling the three biggest challenges families actually face.
No subscription · Pay only for what you use














No model pickers. No prompts. Choose the thing that stresses you most, and get your first win in under a minute.
Photograph any letter. Camille explains it in plain words, tells you what to do next, and remembers the deadline for you.
Your spending, sorted into plain categories you can see and talk to. Set a goal the whole family can actually keep.
A tutor that never sighs. Quizzes, flashcards and mind maps, built from your child's actual lesson.
And when you're ready for more: chat with every major AI, create images, write documents, automate the repetitive stuff. It's all behind these three doors. Same account, same credits.
This is the whole learning curve. If you can take a photo, you already know how to use Aisance.
A school letter, an insurance form, a bill that makes no sense. Take a photo or drop the file. That's the hard part done.
Aisance opens the right room on its own: Camille for letters, Finance for numbers, Campus for homework. No menus to learn.
Plain words, the deadline saved, a polite reply drafted. You decide, Aisance does the typing.
Start with one letterMade for parents, grandparents, caregivers, and everyone who never opened ChatGPT
No new habits to learn. Aisance slots into the moments your family already has.
A permission slip lands in the mailbox. One photo: plain-language summary, deadline saved, reminder set before the coffee is poured.
“Can we afford it?” One glance at the family budget answers what used to be a Sunday argument.
Fractions, again. A patient tutor turns today's lesson into a quiz Lucas actually wants to finish.
Three sentences from you become a polite, firm letter in proper French. Sent before the kettle boils.
Four moments. Zero prompts. That's the whole idea.