Most home inventory apps give you a spreadsheet. HomeRunbook gives you an inventory that lives inside a connected topology map—every component knows what it's connected to, where it's located, and how it relates to the rest of your home's infrastructure.
A spreadsheet tells you what you own. HomeRunbook tells you what it's connected to, where it lives, and when it needs attention.
Snap a photo of any equipment label. AI reads make, model, serial number, and specs automatically. Build your inventory in minutes, not hours.
Every inventory item knows what it's connected to—the outlet, the breaker, the pipe, the zone. Relationships are what make an inventory useful.
Components are mapped to rooms and floor plans, so you know exactly where everything is. No more hunting through the basement for the right valve.
See that your water heater appears in both plumbing AND electrical AND gas inventories. One component, multiple system views, full context.
Track service dates, warranty expiration, and maintenance schedules for every component. Know when things were last serviced and when they're due next.
Complete inventory with photos, specs, and locations for insurance claims. When you need documentation, everything is already organized and ready.
Building a home inventory used to mean hours of typing serial numbers and squinting at tiny labels. HomeRunbook's AI does the work for you—just take a photo.
In other apps, "Kitchen Outlet" is just a line item. In HomeRunbook, it's connected to Breaker #12, shares a circuit with the disposal, and has GFCI protection at the counter outlet. That context is everything.
Stop digging through spreadsheets and binders. Ask your home inventory questions in plain English and get instant, specific answers about your actual equipment.
Your dishwasher stops mid-cycle. The breaker trips. You need to troubleshoot. Here's how that plays out with two different inventory tools.
A flat list that can't answer real questions
You find "dishwasher" in your inventory. It says "Bosch SHP878." That's all you know—a name and a model number sitting in a row.
You need to turn off the water supply to the dishwasher. Your spreadsheet doesn't map connections. You have no idea where the shutoff is.
The breaker tripped but you have no idea what else is on that circuit. You start flipping switches and unplugging things at random, hoping to find the overload.
Connected inventory that answers the real questions
You see the full picture: Bosch SHP878, installed 2022, warranty active until 2024, connected to Breaker #8, water supply from kitchen hot line, drain to disposal connection.
Tap the water supply connection. The map shows you the shutoff valve is under the kitchen sink, left side, quarter-turn handle. You shut it off in seconds.
Tap Breaker #8. You see everything on that circuit: dishwasher, garbage disposal, and kitchen counter GFCI outlet. You identify the overload instantly—the disposal was running at the same time.
A flat list tells you what you have. HomeRunbook tells you how it all connects. Start your intelligent home inventory today—it's free.