Add From Photo
Snap a label, review the extracted details, and save the equipment record faster than typing everything by hand.
Home inventory app
If you are tired of re-looking-up filters, appliance models, equipment labels, or old repair notes, Heart Of The House keeps model numbers, serial numbers, linked supplies, and house history together in one place.
Add From Photo captures a label, then saves the equipment record, room, brand, model numbers, serial numbers, and linked supplies in one place.
Heart Of The House is strongest when your inventory problem is really a house-memory problem. Instead of managing a static valuables list, you keep the everyday operational details that make maintenance, reorders, and future repairs easier.
Snap a label, review the extracted details, and save the equipment record faster than typing everything by hand.
Keep the exact equipment details with the saved item so you do not have to re-find them during maintenance, repairs, or warranty questions.
Connect filters, cleaners, batteries, or replacement parts to the right equipment so reorders and future upkeep start from the right record.
If you need a full insurance-style valuables catalog, you may still want a dedicated asset list. Heart Of The House is built for the practical operational inventory that keeps a home easier to maintain.
The app does not stop at a saved item name. It keeps the label-scan shortcut, the equipment record, and the linked supply details together so future maintenance starts from the right record.
It focuses on the everyday inventory that helps you run a home, including Add From Photo, equipment details, model numbers, serial numbers, linked supplies, and maintenance history.
Yes. You can save home equipment records, label photos, notes, model numbers, serial numbers, and related supply information.
Yes. Filters, cleaners, batteries, and other repeat-buy supplies can stay linked to the equipment they belong to, while still living in the main House Supplies list.
Not exactly. It is strongest for systems, appliances, repeat supplies, and practical house records rather than a room-by-room valuables catalog.