Keep a maintenance history for your home that is still useful later.
HomeFax is the verified maintenance history Nestory builds for every property - a permanent record any owner, insurer, or buyer can read and trust. For homeowners, that means repairs, inspections, and home projects stop disappearing after the work is done.
Upkeep
Track what was done to your home
Repairs, inspections, and seasonal work stay in one place instead of disappearing into text threads and receipts.
History
Build a record you can use later
The value of the work grows over time because the maintenance history stays readable.
Resale and insurance
Show the work with more confidence
Documented maintenance makes it easier to answer questions from buyers, insurers, and service pros later.
Home timeline
Seasonal upkeep
Roof flashing repair with invoice and photos saved
The repair stays on the home record so the next contractor or buyer can see what happened.
HVAC service date and technician notes stay readable later
Routine upkeep does not disappear just because the season changes.
Insurance question answered from one maintenance history
The homeowner can pull a clear timeline instead of reconstructing events from receipts.
See the homeowner record
A home timeline should help with upkeep now and questions later.
The strongest homeowner experience is simple: keep the work organized while it happens, then reuse that same history during contractor calls, insurance questions, and resale prep.
Resale packet
Repairs and inspections already organized by date
Listing prep starts with a clean record instead of a hunt across folders and email.
Major systems show prior work and service history
Agents and buyers can understand what was maintained without guessing from disconnected paperwork.
The same history helps with insurance questions before closing
A strong maintenance record supports multiple conversations, not just the sale.
Service history
6 major repairs logged
Inspections
4 recent checks
Shareable
One readable packet
What homeowners get
A maintenance record that helps with upkeep today and value later.
Homeowners do not need an enterprise dashboard. They need a clear, usable history of what happened to the home and why it matters next.
Why one-home history matters
Upkeep gets easier when the last repair is still easy to find.
The homeowner value is practical: less guesswork during the next repair, less folder-hunting during insurance questions, and a cleaner story when it is time to sell.
Home upkeep
Keep your repairs, inspections, and seasonal work in one timeline.
Nestory helps homeowners track the work that has already happened so they do not have to reconstruct it from memory later.
Better handoffs
Share a cleaner history with contractors and future buyers.
The same maintenance history can support service calls today and resale conversations later because the record stays organized.
Long-term value
Turn routine upkeep into something you can actually reuse.
A home that has a readable maintenance history is easier to explain, maintain, and defend over time.
How it works
Track the work once, then keep using the history for years.
1. Track the work
Keep repairs, inspections, and home projects on one record instead of across inboxes and receipts.
2. Add the details that matter
Save notes, documents, and dates while the work is still fresh.
3. Reuse the history later
Bring the same record into future repairs, insurance questions, and resale conversations.
Home timeline
Seasonal upkeep
Roof flashing repair with invoice and photos saved
The repair stays on the home record so the next contractor or buyer can see what happened.
HVAC service date and technician notes stay readable later
Routine upkeep does not disappear just because the season changes.
Insurance question answered from one maintenance history
The homeowner can pull a clear timeline instead of reconstructing events from receipts.
Why homeowners care
Routine upkeep becomes more valuable when the record stays intact.
The same repair history can help with future service calls, resale conversations, insurance questions, and the simple task of remembering what was already done.