Replenishd remembers what you've got, what you've used, and what you're about to run out of — so your kitchen is one less thing to keep in your head.
Got home. Unpacked the bags. No flour.
You were in the cereal aisle ten minutes ago, kids in tow, scrolling a list you wrote from memory. Pantry's at home. Brain's full. So you grab the things you can picture, and you wing the rest.
Then you unpack and the gaps show up. The flour you actually needed — forgotten. Three boxes of pasta, because you weren't sure. A yoghurt at the back of the fridge that's been there since the last shop, and now it owes you nothing.
Three things Replenishd does in the background, so your pantry stops being a guess and starts being a known thing.
Milk by Thursday. Olive oil next week. Pasta's fine for another fortnight. Replenishd tracks how fast your household goes through things and projects when each item runs out — so the alert that matters lands before the empty cupboard does.
Photograph the receipt on the way out the car park. Replenishd reads the line items, sorts them into the right storage zones, and adds them to your inventory. Works with any supermarket receipt. No typing. No scanning a barcode at a time.
Your shopping list builds itself the night before you shop. Items are ranked by what's actually about to run out — milk and bread first, the experimental harissa paste at the bottom. Tick as you go. No more "did we run out of milk?" texts from the supermarket.
Tick what you've already got from a starter list of common items, or scan your last receipt. Two minutes. Done.
The app keeps track in the background. When usage doesn't match what it expected — or something's about to expire — it asks. Otherwise, silence. No weekly chore.
Pull it up at the shops. It's already ranked, already on your phone, already aware that you used the last of the soy sauce on Wednesday.
Five places the app earns its keep — scroll across.
14-day free trial, no card required. After that, monthly or annual — annual saves you about two months. We'll only ask for payment after the trial ends; never before.
iOS first — iPhone and iPad. Android is on the roadmap for later in 2026. The waitlist is open to both, and Android folks will be invited as that build lands.
No. Scanning is the fast way to add a fortnight's shop in 30 seconds. You can also tap-tick from a list of common items, or add anything manually. Most people use a mix.
Two ways for now. Share the same login and you both see the same pantry and list. Or send the shopping list straight to their phone via the share sheet — handy when one of you is already out and the other spots the gap. Built-in household sharing is on the roadmap.
Onboarding asks how many people you cook for (one, two, small family, big household), and the maths adapts. A six-person household burns through milk three times faster than a couple, and the app knows.
No. The app only asks when it's actually unsure — when usage doesn't match what it expected, or something's about to expire. There's no weekly chore. If everything's fine, the app stays quiet. That's the whole point.
Browsing your pantry, ticking off the grocery list, and editing items all work without signal — useful in the shops where reception is famously theoretical. Receipt scanning needs a connection.
Hosted on Supabase, encrypted in transit and at rest. You can export everything as CSV or delete your account from inside the app — both buttons, no email required.
That's fair. We'll send one note when access opens. No follow-ups, no newsletter, no marketing emails. If it's not for you when you see it, ignore it.