
Why a home inventory app is worth the half-hour setup
Most people never need a home inventory. The few who do — a burst pipe, a stolen bike, a moving truck losing a box — find out the hard way that no insurance adjuster wants a vague description of “the laptop bag and the cables that were in it.” The point of a home inventory app is to give an honest answer, with photos, serial numbers, and purchase dates, the moment a claim or a move needs one.
The seven Android apps below were tested against a real inventory of more than 200 items: small electronics, kitchen gear, a tool collection in the garage, and the contents of a small storage unit. We graded each on how quickly we could add an item with a barcode scan, how well the search held up at 100+ items, and what happened when we tried to export everything to a CSV that would survive an insurance request.
If you just want to label five boxes for a move, any notes app will do. The list below assumes the inventory is a real, persistent record.
What to look for in a home inventory app
- Photo capture from inside the app, not “go to camera and attach.” Friction kills inventory updates.
- Barcode and QR scanning so consumer electronics auto-fill a name and brand.
- Location nesting (storage unit → shelf 3 → blue tote). Flat lists fail above 50 items.
- Export to CSV or PDF. A locked-in inventory is worthless when the insurance form arrives.
- Offline-first. Adding an item while standing in the garage with no signal should not block.
- Optional cloud sync between phone and tablet, with clarity about what the cloud copy costs.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Free plan | Paid tier | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sortly | Most polished general-purpose | Yes, 100 items | $49/year | Best photo-first UX on Android |
| Encircle | Insurance documentation | Yes | Free with optional pro | Room-by-room walkthrough mode |
| MyStuff2 Pro | Power-user customisation | 100 items | $4.99 one-time | Open data export, no lock-in |
| HomeZada | Whole-home asset tracking | Yes | $59/year | Pairs inventory with property records |
| Magic Home Inventory | Lightweight free option | Yes | None | No account required, on-device only |
| HomeBox | Self-hosted homelab inventory | Free, self-hosted | None | Open source, runs on your own server |
| Nest Egg Inventory | iOS-first, Android via web | Free trial | $0.99/month | Strong barcode lookup database |
The apps
1. Sortly, best general-purpose home inventory
Sortly is the most polished home inventory app on Android in 2026. The setup is photo-first: tap a category, point the camera, the app drops the photo and an editable name into a new item card. Nested folders mirror physical storage (garage → shelf 3 → tote A), and barcode scanning fills in product names for most consumer electronics.
The search holds up well past 1,000 items in testing. Tagging is faster than typing — pick from existing tags or create one with a long-press.
Where it falls short: The free plan caps at 100 entries, which is fine for one room and short for a whole house. The paid tier moves to a per-user annual subscription that feels priced for small businesses.
Pricing:
- Free: 100 entries, 1 user, basic features
- Advanced: roughly $49/year for unlimited entries and offline mode
- Ultra: roughly $119/year for multi-user and label printing
Platforms: Android, iOS, web.
Bottom line: Pick Sortly if you want the cleanest photo-first inventory and the budget supports the annual fee.
2. Encircle, best for insurance documentation
Encircle sits closer to the insurance-claim workflow than the general home-organisation crowd. The room-by-room walkthrough mode prompts you to take wide-angle photos of each room, then add items inside each room. The output is shaped for adjusters: timestamped, geo-tagged, and exportable to a claims-friendly PDF.
For households worried about disaster scenarios specifically (fire, flood, theft), this is the workflow that holds up best.
Where it falls short: The free plan does not gate features, but the consumer angle is the smaller side of Encircle’s business. Some Android updates lag behind the iOS version by a few weeks.
Pricing:
- Free for consumer use
- Pro tier exists for professional adjusters
Platforms: Android, iOS, web.
Bottom line: Pick Encircle if your priority is having a defensible record on the day a claim happens.
3. MyStuff2 Pro, best power-user customisation
MyStuff2 Pro is the option for people who want to design their own inventory schema. Custom fields, sub-fields, lookup tables, scripted templates — the customisation surface is deeper than Sortly’s by a wide margin.
The data export is honest: a clean CSV with every field you defined, exactly as you defined it. No app-specific JSON to wrangle, no proprietary backup format to convert later.
Where it falls short: The UI is denser than the others and shows its age in places. The learning curve costs an hour before adding the first item feels fast. Cloud sync is bolted on rather than designed in.
Pricing:
- Free trial: 100 items
- Pro: roughly $4.99 one-time per device
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Pick MyStuff2 Pro when you want full control over the data model and you do not mind a denser UI.
4. HomeZada, best whole-home asset tracking
HomeZada treats inventory as one slice of whole-home record-keeping. The app combines item lists with property documents, maintenance schedules, warranty tracking, and renovation history. For homeowners managing a property over years, that fuller view is the point.
It is also the most opinionated. HomeZada nudges users toward a structured set of categories rather than a free-form folder tree, which speeds setup if you accept the structure.
Where it falls short: The opinion can fight the user. If your storage system does not map cleanly to HomeZada’s categories, the workarounds feel awkward. Pricing is the highest on this list.
Pricing:
- Free: limited items and document storage
- Premium: roughly $59/year for full asset tracking and document vault
Platforms: Android, iOS, web.
Bottom line: Pick HomeZada when the inventory is part of a wider home-management routine, not the centerpiece.
5. Magic Home Inventory, best lightweight free option
Magic Home Inventory is the simplest pick on the list. It is free, lives on the device, does not ask for an account, and stays out of the way. The schema is fixed but reasonable: name, photo, location, category, value.
For people who want a list of every appliance, gadget, and piece of furniture and do not want a subscription, this is the path of least resistance.
Where it falls short: No cloud sync. A phone wipe or factory reset loses the inventory unless you remember to export the backup. No barcode scanning in the free tier.
Pricing:
- Free, ad-supported
Platforms: Android only.
Bottom line: Pick Magic Home Inventory when “no account, no subscription, no cloud” is the right answer.
6. HomeBox, best self-hosted homelab inventory
HomeBox flips the model. Instead of a vendor’s cloud, run the server on a home lab — a Raspberry Pi, a NAS, a small VPS — and use the mobile-friendly web UI from any phone. The data lives on hardware you control.
For people already running a home lab, HomeBox slots into the rest of the self-hosted stack alongside Nextcloud, Vaultwarden, and Jellyfin. The inventory is browseable on a phone via the responsive web app, with offline reads cached by the browser.
Where it falls short: There is no native Android app. The web UI is the entry point. Setup needs basic Docker familiarity. There is no offline write support — adding items requires the home server to be reachable.
Pricing:
- Free, open source, MIT license
Platforms: Self-hosted server (any OS that runs Docker), web client on Android, iOS, desktop.
Download: Self-host from homebox.software or pull the container from GitHub Container Registry.
Bottom line: Pick HomeBox if the home lab is already there and the inventory should live next to the rest of the stack.
7. Nest Egg Inventory, best barcode lookup database
Nest Egg Inventory is iOS-first but reachable from Android through its web client. The barcode database is the strongest on this list, especially for consumer electronics where most apps need a manual fill-in. Scan an iPhone box, get model and storage. Scan a laptop, get manufacturer, model line, and approximate market value.
It is the only app on the list where barcode scanning genuinely speeds up adding 50 small items in a row.
Where it falls short: The Android experience is the web app rather than a native app. Some features (label printing, AirDrop sharing) are iOS-only.
Pricing:
- Free trial: limited entries
- Subscription: roughly $0.99/month for unlimited entries and cloud backup
Platforms: iOS native, web client for Android.
Bottom line: Pick Nest Egg when most of what you are inventorying has a barcode and saving keystrokes per item is what matters.
How to pick the right one
- The cleanest photo-first general-purpose inventory: Sortly.
- A defensible record for an insurance claim: Encircle.
- Full control over the schema and the data export: MyStuff2 Pro.
- Inventory as one part of whole-home record-keeping: HomeZada.
- Zero subscription, zero account, on-device only: Magic Home Inventory.
- Self-hosted on a home lab: HomeBox.
- Heavy barcode workflow on consumer electronics: Nest Egg.
If you only need to track a single category — pantry, wine cellar, tool collection, sneaker rotation — most of these are overkill. A dedicated app for that category will out-perform the general-purpose inventories. The list above assumes the goal is a mixed-bag household inventory.
FAQ
What is the best free home inventory app for Android? Magic Home Inventory for true free with no cloud lock-in. Sortly’s free tier is more polished but caps at 100 items. HomeBox is free if you can self-host.
Can a home inventory app survive a phone wipe? Only if it syncs to a cloud or exports backups regularly. Sortly, Encircle, HomeZada, and Nest Egg all sync to a cloud. Magic Home Inventory and MyStuff2 are on-device unless you actively run an export.
Do these apps work with barcodes? Sortly, MyStuff2, HomeZada, and Nest Egg all support barcode scanning. Nest Egg has the best built-in product database for consumer electronics.
Can I share an inventory with my partner or roommate? Sortly Ultra and HomeZada support multi-user accounts. The others assume one user per inventory.
Is a home inventory worth keeping if I rent? Yes, more so than for an owner in some ways. Renters insurance claims need item lists too, and a renter’s inventory tends to be more portable across moves.
Should I take photos of receipts as well as items? Yes if the insurance angle matters. Sortly and Encircle attach photo receipts to item cards directly. HomeZada keeps receipts in a separate document vault that links back to items.