incase for iPhone

Everything your people would need to know.

In one place — shared only with the people you choose.

Where the spare key is. Which vet the dog goes to. What the alarm code is, who does the taxes, which pill is the important one. It lives in one person’s head — and everyone else is guessing.

Things only one person knows

  • What’s the alarm code?
  • Who’s the dog’s vet?
  • Which pill is the important one?
  • Is there a will?
  • …and forty more.

incase is where a family keeps the answers.

Not a vault for after the fact. A living record you keep current while life is ordinary — so it’s there for the hospital stay, the trip, the sitter, the surgery, and one day, for the hardest week of all.

Nine folders. One map.

About

The details that identify them — names, dates, the documents that say who they are.

Health

Doctors, medications, conditions — what a hospital would need to know.

Home

How the household actually runs — codes, keys, the people who keep things going.

Pets

Who they are, what they need, who looks after them when no one's home.

Finances

Where the money lives — accounts, policies, and the people who help manage them.

Passwords

Only two live here — the phone passcode and the computer password. The two that open everything else.

Keepsakes

Little things worth keeping for generations. Not a form — a place to leave things behind.

Estate Planning

The decisions and documents that protect everyone who depends on you.

Wishes

What you'd want for the people who love you, gathered so no one has to guess.

What a phone can do that a laptop can’t.

It has a camera and a microphone. Most of what’s hardest to write down is easiest to simply show or say.

Point the camera at it

A driver’s licence. An insurance card. The six-page policy that arrived this morning. Photograph it or scan it and it files itself — no typing out a policy number from a document you’re holding in your other hand.

Record it in their voice

Sit with your mother and let her tell the story of the ring — and keep the recording, in her own voice, for the people who come after. Some things should not be typed up. They should be heard.

Ask, and get an answer

“Mom’s blood type.” “The alarm code.” Ask the way you’d ask a person, in the hospital corridor or on someone’s doorstep, and get the answer — not a folder to go rummaging through.

The app is a companion, not the whole thing.

incase is a web service. Cases are built in a browser — and building one the first time is real work that wants a keyboard and a cup of coffee, not a phone on a train platform. Accounts are created on the web, at shareincase.com.

The app doesn’t create accounts, and nothing can be bought inside it. If you already have a Case — or someone has shared theirs with you — the app is how you keep it alive, and how you reach it when it counts.