Keep track of inventory like a pro with Inventory List. Here's what it can do: MULTI-USER You can invite other users to work on your inventory with their own devices. HISTORY Every transaction is recorded, including stock transfers, increases/decreases, deletions, etc. It includes helpful information like date, user, item, status, and more. TRACK ANYTHING Use templates and custom fields to track asset details like prices, barcodes, and other helpful information. STOCK CONTROL Visual stock indicators can tell you at a glance what is out-of-stock, what is running low, and where. ALERTS Set up reminders for expiration dates, returns, reorders, etc. ACCURATE COUNTS Effortlessly perform inventory counts across multiple locations. IMPORT & EXPORT Import your data via CSV using a custom template & export precisely the data you want. FIND THINGS FAST Lightning-fast search and smart custom filters to help you find what you need faster. STRUCTURE & ORGANIZATION Organize with tags, collections, locations, folders, and filters. ... AND MUCH MORE We made Inventory List to offload the mental workload of inventory management and make it more accessible and more straightforward to accomplish. SUBSCRIPTION DETAILS If you purchase Inventory List Pro, payment will be charged to your iTunes account. Your account will be charged for renewal within 24 hours before the end of the current period. Auto-renewal may be turned off at any time by going to your settings in the iTunes Store after purchase or by navigating to your Apple ID in the settings app and managing subscriptions. The multi-user yearly subscription is USD 99.99/year. Prices are in U.S. dollars and may vary in countries other than the U.S. and are subject to change without notice. If you don't choose to purchase a subscription, a standard license is also available. Terms of service: https://www.inventorylist.app/terms Privacy policy: https://www.inventorylist.app/privacy
URL
It’s great that you can add a URL however without being able to tap on it and having it take you to the site this feature is worthless
Good features
Good features Just wish I could also use on laptop
Hugo
Thank you
Hugo
It was working fun on the free app but not that I purchased the app. The camera is not responding I put quantity in it appears on the low inventory. and my opinion is very difficult to navigate an IRA paid for life. I wish I can get my money back.
Can’t figure out quantity
This sounds really stupid but I literally can’t figure out how to add quantity to an item. I see in edit where you can change details but not the quantity, I love the app so far but I can’t figure out the most important part!
Great app, but should have Mac App Too!
I think this app is amazing, but it would be really useful to have a Mac App! I use my iPad as a companion and it works great, but some people don’t have iPads and this would be a great way to expand your target audience.
positives outweighed by fundamental design flaws
Took this on a test drive as I seek a new tool for keep track of a constellation of things from consumables like medical supplies to tools, kitchen items, and music gear. The UI appears to be nicely designed, blending well with the feel of iOS. It is also fairly easy and intuitive to set up templates, tags, locations, and so on (though I would have liked to see more icon options—maybe including emojis). The data use and privacy policy are more palatable than options like Sortly, which makes extensive use of identity-linked data. The option to buy a lifetime license is also quite nice. Lots of potential. However, that’s where the pros seem to end for me, and that’s pretty far short of what an app like this needs to be able to do to satisfy my uses for it. The problems I’ve identified so far, in a nutshell: • Search by barcode/SKU doesn’t work (exact matching enabled). • Data export does not include photos. • Items of the same type can be put into folders but they cannot be grouped for overall quantity across entries/boxes/locations. The last problem seems pretty fundamental to the way the app is structured. Inventories tend to be nested nested (e.g., items inside boxes in drawers at locations). Let’s say you have 10 boxes of your favorite chocolate bars. Each box has 5 bars. Three of the boxes expire in a month, 3 expire in 4 months, and the other 4 expire in a year. Each box has a bar code, which you can scan when adding the item. So to inventory these chocolates you would want to be able to track the boxes, so you can eat the ones expiring sooner before eating the ones expiring later, and the overall quantity of the bars (50). Unfortunately, this app does not allow you to do this in a useful way. You could enter each box as an item, use the handy SKU barcode scanning feature, and track the quantity of chocolate bars in each box. And you could add the expiration date as a custom field. But then you will not see the total number of bars across all your boxes—only the number of bars in each box. Moreover, you will have to have a distinct name for each box even though they are the same (other than the expiration date). You could instead enter the chocolate bars as one type of item with a quantity of 50, ignoring the boxes, but then you cannot distinguish subsets of bars based on properties like location or expiration date. Perhaps there’s a workaround I haven’t figure out yet, but the lack of a hierarchical structure is pretty glaring. It seems like a mistake in the basic design that should be at the core of any inventory app. Instead, this app appears to have a flat structure and tries to make up for it with tags. The same problem affects locations: you can add locations and shift items between locations, but you cannot add nested locations. I can add the northeastern drawer of the bed in the upstairs bedroom as a location, but I cannot add the upstairs floor, bedroom, and bed drawers as levels in a nested hierarchy. This again collapses something fundamentally hierarchical into a flat structure, with each location floating free from the others. Thus the app lacks the flexibility needed to manage all but the most basic inventories.
Minor bug fixes
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Price
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