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TwinHome is a digital home organization tool designed for household use. Its website describes it as “the search engine for your physical home.” It aims to solve the problem of relying on memory or chat history when looking for physical items such as passports, tools, medical scans, or spare keys, by turning the locations of household belongings into structured, persistent records.
The product’s core model is fairly clear: the top level is a House, which can be securely shared with family members; under that are Rooms, such as a master bedroom or study; below those are Box/Shelf entries, such as drawers or suitcases; and finally there are individual Items. This hierarchy matches real home spaces, so the learning curve should be low. The site also mentions a Document Vault, combined with pinch-to-zoom for viewing fine details such as small text on prescriptions or markings on jewelry. Premium also includes unlimited photos and AI-assisted logging, suggesting that image-based records and assisted data entry may be key areas of focus going forward.
TwinHome clearly supports getting started for free, with the option to upgrade to Premium as your digital household inventory grows. Premium benefits include unlimited photos, AI-assisted logging, and advanced household roles, but the website does not disclose pricing, free-tier storage limits, photo limits, or limits on the number of household members. For collaboration, the product emphasizes replacing messy WhatsApp groups by putting household documents and item locations into a quiet, secure shared space. However, it does not go into detail on permission granularity, member invitations, or differences between roles.
Its strengths are a very focused positioning around a frequent but easily overlooked pain point: finding physical items at home. The House-Room-Box-Item structure feels natural and is suitable for non-technical users, while the free starting point lowers the barrier to trying it. The downside is that many key details commonly expected from software products are missing: there is no information on third-party integrations, APIs, import/export, security compliance, backup strategy, payment methods, or customer support. For a product intended to store sensitive information such as IDs, medical documents, and jewelry photos, simply saying it is “secure” is not enough.
TwinHome is best suited for families, shared households, people who frequently organize documents and storage boxes, and users who want to reduce the effort of searching for information in family group chats. Its website text does not make it possible to judge access from China, and payment methods are not disclosed. If access or payment proves difficult, alternatives include Feishu Base, Tencent Docs, Notion, Airtable, or a combination of cloud drive photo albums, though these general-purpose tools require users to design their own organization structure.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on mytwinhome.com official site.
mytwinhome.com is an Unknown SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach mytwinhome.com directly.