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Disaster and Theft Preparation

Build a photo inventory before disaster strikes. Document belongings for insurance claims, police reports, and faster recovery.

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A disaster or theft is the worst time to discover you have no record of what you owned. Insurance forms ask for itemized lists, police reports need descriptions and serial numbers, and your memory is less reliable than you think under stress. Building a home inventory for disaster preparation takes one quiet afternoon. Filing a claim without one can take months.

Retinelle lets you walk through your home with your iPhone, photograph what you own, and store the record on your device. No cloud account, no subscription required for basic use, and nothing leaves your phone until you choose to export.

Core workflow

  1. Start with high-value and hard-to-replace items. Jewelry, electronics, appliances, tools, musical instruments, art, and collectibles first. These are the items that cause the most frustration when you cannot prove they existed.

  2. Photograph each item and its details. Capture the front, any serial number plates, model stickers, or maker’s marks. If you have a receipt or warranty card, photograph that too.

  3. Record serial numbers and purchase info. Add a text field for brand and model, a date field for purchase date, and a currency field for original cost. These details are often required on insurance claim forms.

  4. Add room-by-room context. Group items by room so the inventory mirrors your home. If you ever need to file a claim, a room-by-room layout is easier to review than a random list.

  5. Export and store a copy off-device. Generate a PDF or spreadsheet and save it somewhere secure – email it to yourself, store it on a USB drive, or keep a printed copy. The inventory on your phone is convenient; a backup off your phone is essential.

What to prioritize in your inventory

Not everything in your home needs the same level of detail. Focus your energy where it matters most:

  • Items over a certain value. Set a threshold that makes sense for you – anything above that gets a photo, serial number, and estimated value.
  • Items with serial numbers. Electronics, appliances, power tools, firearms, bicycles, and cameras. Serial numbers are the primary way law enforcement and insurers identify recovered or claimed items.
  • Items that are unique or sentimental. Heirlooms, art, custom jewelry, antiques, and collectibles. These are hard to replace and hard to value from memory.
  • Documents and records. Birth certificates, passports, property deeds, insurance policies, and vehicle titles. A photo of the document is often enough to prove it existed.

Why a pre-disaster inventory beats a post-disaster one

After a fire, flood, or break-in, you are dealing with shock, displacement, and time pressure. Trying to reconstruct a list from memory under those conditions produces incomplete, inaccurate results. People routinely forget 30-40% of their belongings when they list from memory, and they almost always undervalue what they lost.

A pre-made inventory flips the process. You document items calmly, with the items in front of you, when there is no urgency. If something happens, you already have the list. You just export it.

Custom fields for insurance readiness

Retinelle’s custom fields turn a photo album into a claim-ready document. Set up these fields once, and every item you add is automatically structured:

  • Currency field for “Replacement Cost” – what it would cost to buy the item today.
  • Text field for “Serial Number” – the single most useful identifier for claims and police reports.
  • Date field for “Purchase Date” – helps establish ownership timeline.
  • Enum field for “Category” (Electronics, Furniture, Jewelry, Tools, Art, Documents) – makes filtered exports possible.
  • Boolean field for “Receipt Available” – so you know which items have supporting paperwork.

When you export with filters, you can generate a focused PDF: electronics with serial numbers for the police report, high-value items for the insurance adjuster, or a full household list for your own records.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a home inventory for insurance and one for disaster preparation?

They overlap significantly. An insurance home inventory focuses on what your insurer needs when you file a claim. A disaster preparation inventory is broader – it also helps with police reports, FEMA applications, replacing identity documents, and recovering from the emotional toll of losing track of what you had. Retinelle works for both; the difference is what details you emphasize.

How often should I update my disaster preparation inventory?

Review it once a year, ideally before hurricane season, wildfire season, or whatever applies to your area. Major purchases, renovations, or life changes (new baby, elderly parent moving in) are also good triggers to update. Retinelle makes it fast to add a few new items without redoing the whole inventory.

Should I store the backup in a specific place?

Keep at least one copy outside your home. A printed PDF in a safe deposit box, a digital copy in a secure cloud service, or an emailed copy to a trusted person all work. The point is that the backup survives the same event that destroys the originals. Retinelle stores the working inventory on your device; what you do with the export is up to you.