Most homes aren’t run by one person. A parent, a partner, a nanny, a driver, a housekeeper: each one does things that the others need to know about. A dose of medicine. A tank of fuel. A receipt that will matter in three months. Today most of that lives in a group chat, on paper, or in someone’s memory, which means it goes missing exactly when it counts.
We built Homelog to put it all in one calm place. Not another calendar, and not another chat. A record: who did what, and when, across the four things that actually run a home, which are care, vehicles, groceries and tasks.
What we believe
The right people should see the right things. The person who gives your children their medicine should be able to log it. The person who drives should be able to log the fuel. Neither needs to see everything else. Role-based access is the heart of Homelog: invite the people who help, control exactly what each one sees, and revoke it in one tap.
A home record is sensitive by nature.Homelog can hold children’s care and medical information, so we treat it that way. We store as little as we can, encrypt it, and let you delete it whenever you choose. You can read the detail on our privacy policy.
It should feel made, not generated.The cheapest way to run a household shouldn’t feel like a downgrade. Whether you’re two people or a household of a dozen, it’s the same well-made tool.
Who it’s for
Homelog started with households that have outgrown a shared calendar: dual-income and expat families with some help at home, often across the Gulf, Singapore, Hong Kong and London. But the same record serves any family that wants one trustworthy place for medicine, cars, receipts and tasks.
Where we come from
Homelog is a product in the Vavao portfolio. It’s live on iPhone and Android, and it’s actively built and improved. If you have a question or an idea, our support page is the fastest way to reach us.