The register of what your business actually owns — equipment, hardware, software licenses, furniture, inventory. The MacBook bought in March. The Dell monitor on the desk. The Microsoft 365 seats renewed in February. Four stat tiles cap the page: Total Assets (count), Total Items (quantity), Total Value (dollars), Manufacturers (unique). Filter by Manufacturer (Apple, Dell, Cisco) or Type (Equipment / Hardware / Software / Furniture). Each asset carries the serial number, purchase date, supplier link, and value — the data your insurance form asks for, your accountant asks for, and your replacement-planning depends on. The "where's the iPad we bought in March?" question that takes a glance, not a closet-search. No Equipment.xlsx going stale by Q2.
Total Assets, Total Items, Total Value, Manufacturers
Filter by manufacturer or asset type
Serial numbers, purchase dates, supplier links
Name, manufacturer, model, serial number, purchase date, value. Link the supplier so the contact lives on the asset card. 30 seconds, one item on the register.
2
Categorize
Type: Equipment / Hardware / Software / Furniture / Vehicle / Other. Manufacturer auto-completes from prior entries. Filter by either at any time — the iPad fleet, the Dell stack, the Microsoft licenses.
3
Read the register
Total Value rolls up the dollar amount. Total Items rolls up the quantity. Manufacturers tile shows the unique count. Search any field, sort any column, find any asset — including the ones you forgot you owned.
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Free forever. Asset register in one place. No Equipment.xlsx.
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What gets registered here
The M2 MacBook Pro you bought in March — serial number, purchase date, $2,400 value, Apple as manufacturer. The Dell 27-inch monitor sitting on the desk — Equipment type, $450, depreciable next year. The Microsoft 365 licenses you renewed in February — Software type, 5 seats, the renewal date saved so it doesn't surprise you. The standing desk and ergonomic chair from when the home office stood up. The conference room TV that gets used once a quarter but you still own. The 'where is the iPad we bought in March?' question that takes a glance, not a closet search. The equipment register you'd otherwise keep in Equipment.xlsx until it goes stale by Q2 and gets re-created by someone with worse handwriting.