What Kept does
Three jobs, done properly: document what you own without losing an afternoon, export proof an adjuster accepts on the first pass, and keep a backup that’s proven to restore — not assumed to. Here’s the tour.
Capture a room in minutes
Pick a room, snap a photo, name the thing, give it a rough value — done, next item. Serial numbers and details are there when you want them, never in the way. The running total grows in front of you, room by room, so ten minutes of work is visibly ten minutes of protection. Pause anytime; Kept saves as you go.
A running total that means something
Every item carries a replacement value; every room shows its own subtotal and the home shows the grand total — the number that tells you whether your contents coverage is even close. Most people are surprised. Better to be surprised now.
The Claim Packet
One tap exports a polished PDF — room, item, brand, serial, quantity, replacement value, date, and the photo on the same line — plus a clean CSV in carrier-schedule shape. Evidence linked per line is the difference between “accepted” and “please provide documentation.”
Test My Backup — the drill
Kept writes your backup as one plain, documented, checksummed file that you keep. Then it does what no other inventory app does: restores that file into a sandbox, rebuilds everything from the file alone, verifies the counts, and tells you in plain words that it works. The home screen carries the calm green answer: Backup verified.
Locked, private, yours
App Lock asks for Face ID or your passcode every time Kept opens. Your inventory never leaves the device unless you export it. No account, no analytics, no cloud of ours — the App Store privacy label reads “Data Not Collected” because there’s nothing to collect.
Bought once, kept forever
€24.99, one time, Family Sharing included. The free tier documents a real room — about thirty items, unlimited photos, basic CSV export — so you can see how it works before paying. And if the worst day ever comes with a new phone in your hand: Restore Purchases, restore your file, whole again.
Start with one room
Ten minutes in the living room is a real inventory — and the moment the backup drill says “verified,” it’s a protected one.