 This video features a montage of photographs depicting landscapes, community agriculture, and farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa. Onscreen text appears phrase by phrase, synchronized with the images. Two-thirds of land in Sub-Saharan Africa is degraded. This puts huge pressure on limited resources, negatively impacting food and nutrition security, which has extensive social and economic implications. Packling degradation through ecosystem restoration is critical for building resilient landscapes and livelihoods. Given the global scale of land degradation and its negative impact, we need to more effectively target and track interventions. This means facilitating real-time data collection by stakeholders on the ground. Addressing this need, the Regreening app was developed under the Regreening Africa program, funded by the European Union. The app puts data collection and data in the hands of farmers and implementers, connecting science and practice. The app allows tracking of multiple restoration activities such as tree planting and farmer-managed natural regeneration, FMNR. The success of the app can be attributed to its design and the close engagement with users and filling a critical gap of real-time data collection of restoration activities on the ground. Each module uses universal symbols, making the app user-friendly for a range of stakeholders, including farmers, community facilitators, NGOs, and scientists in different countries. The app fosters a dialogue between scientists, farmers, and other stakeholders to scale restoration efforts toward achieving food, nutrition, climate, and social security. Regreening Africa, funded by the European Union.