It's 2am at the emergency vet. They ask what meds he's on and when his last shot was. Do youย know?
For most of us the honest answer is โuhhโฆ let me think.โ The rabies date is on a card somewhere. The pills are in your head. The vet's number is buried in your phone. Pet Health Binder puts every bit of it in one calm place, and it's right there in your pocket the second someone asks.
One payment. No subscription. Works on your phone, tablet & laptop.
Cooper
Built for the people who keep the vet's number memorized
Your pet's whole history is scattered across six places, and most of those places are inside your head.
The last rabies shot? On a paper somewhere, you think. The pills he takes? You know the namesโฆ roughly. When the next flea treatment is due? You'll โremember.โ The vet's number, the microchip number, what the vet said at the last visit. Scattered, or gone.
And it's all fine. Right up until the one day it isn't. Somebody needs a real answer, fast, and โI'll rememberโ turns out to be the worst filing system you ever trusted.
- โA vaccine record you can't produce at the boarding desk
- โA missed dose nobody noticed until the itching came back
- โRetyping the same instructions for every sitter, every trip
- โDigging through two years of email while the vet waits
- โA partner or kid who has no idea what he takes or who to call
- โGuessing, out loud, at the emergency clinic
The 2am emergency
He's shaking and you're terrified. The vet asks one simple question. What is he on, and what's he allergic to? Every second you spend guessing is a second they can't treat him.
The boarding desk
You're dropping her off before your flight. “We just need her up-to-date vaccine record.” You don't have it. Now you're on the phone to the clinic with a boarding pass in your teeth.
The sitter text at dinner
“Hey, how much food does he get? And does he take a pill at night?” You're out at dinner, typing it from memory and hoping you got the dose right.
And all the smaller moments in between:
One calm place for everything. In your pocket. Always up to date.
You spend ten quiet minutes once putting it all in: the shots, the pills, the vet, the quirks. After that, the binder does the remembering. It tells you what's overdue and what's coming up, and it hands you the answer the moment anyone asks, whether that's the clinic, the boarding desk, or your own front door.
Your pet's complete life record
Fourteen kinds of information a pet accumulates over a lifetime, kept in one place that's always with you.
Six things off your mind and into one tidy binder
Vaccines that never quietly lapse
Every shot with the date it was given and the day it's due, plus a clear current / due-soon / overdue badge. When the groomer or boarder asks for proof, print a clean one-page record in a tap instead of begging the clinic to fax it.
Meds you actually keep up with
Doses, refill dates, and a dead-simple daily checklist so you never stand there wondering if he had his morning pill. It even keeps a little streak going, which is oddly satisfying when you're caring for a sick pet.
The whole vet story, remembered
Reason, diagnosis, treatment, cost, and the follow-up date for every visit. So the next vet (or the next you, a year from now) has the full picture instead of a foggy guess.
Weight you can finally see
A gentle line over time with notes like ‘new food’ or ‘post-surgery.’ The slow creep that's hard to notice day to day becomes obvious early, while it's still easy to fix.
Grooming & care that nudge you
Nail trims, baths, flea and tick, heartworm, all set to repeat on your schedule. One tap marks it done and sets the next. No more ‘wait, when did we lastโฆ?’
This is what โreadyโ looks like
Three of the binder's screens, doing their job.
It flags what's due before it lapses.
Tap as you give it. Resets every morning.
The slow creep becomes visible early.
Going away? Hand your sitter one page that thinks of everything.
Feeding times. The pills explained in plain words, so instead of โ16mg BIDโ it reads โhalf a tablet hidden in a treat, morning and night.โ The walk routine. The โhides during stormsโ quirks. Your number, the vet, the emergency vet, the microchip. It fills itself in from what's already in your binder, then prints into one calm sheet with your pet's photo on top.
Leave it on the counter and actually relax on your trip.
You already have a system. That's the problem.
None of them tap you on the shoulder before a shot lapses or a refill runs out. The binder does.
The junk drawer vs. your binder
๐ฎโ๐จ The way it is now
- โVaccine dates on a paperโฆ somewhere
- โPills remembered ‘roughly’
- โVet bills stuffed in a drawer
- โSitter instructions typed from memory
- โ‘When was the last flea treatment?’ Who knows
- โEach pet's history in a different place
๐ฟ With Pet Health Binder
- โEvery shot dated, with a due-date badge
- โA daily checklist that resets each morning
- โCosts logged and totalled for you
- โA printable sitter sheet that fills itself in
- โIt tells you what's due before it's late
- โEvery pet in one place, a tap apart
This is for you ifโฆ
- โNew puppy or kitten owners, before the paperwork pile starts
- โSenior pets, where the history actually matters
- โPets on ongoing medications
- โMulti-pet households with more than one schedule to track
- โFrequent travelers, boarders, and anyone with a sitter or walker
- โAnyone who'd feel awful fumbling for answers in an emergency
It's probably not for you ifโฆ
- โYou genuinely keep perfect paper records and never misplace them
- โYou want a social network for pets (this is a quiet, private binder)
- โYou'd rather keep trusting your memory and hope for the best
From people who stopped relying on memory
“I set up my two cats in about ten minutes. Last week the e-vet asked what Mochi was allergic to and I justโฆ read it off my phone. That alone was worth it.”
“The boarding place always wants the vaccine record and I always panic. Now I print one page and I'm done. My dog-sitter said the care sheet was the clearest she's ever gotten.”
“My senior dog has four meds and a weight we're watching. Seeing it all on one screen, and getting nudged before a refill runs out, took a real weight off my chest.”
I built this after the worst ten minutes of my year.
My dog got into something he shouldn't have, late at night. At the emergency vet they asked simple questions. His weight, his meds, his last vaccines. I stood there guessing while the clock ran. He was fine. I was not. I swore I'd never feel that helpless again.
So I made the thing I wished I'd had that night: one calm place for everything that matters about the animals we love, that's actually with you when it counts. That's the whole idea. I hope it saves you the ten minutes I'll never forget.
One price. However many pets you love.
Less than one bag of the good treats.
You don't get to choose when the emergency happens. You do get to choose whether you're ready.
- โUnlimited pets: dogs, cats, rabbits, birds & more
- โVaccines, meds, vet visits, weight, grooming & expenses
- โThe auto-filling printable sitter sheet
- โOverdue & due-soon reminders, done for you
- โSyncs across your phone, tablet & laptop
- โDownload a full backup any time. Your data is yours
- โNo subscription. No ads. No selling your info.
Try it for 14 days. If it's not for you, email us for a full refund and keep your backup. No hard feelings.
Questions people ask before buying
Don't wait for the 2am scramble to wish you'd done this.
You'll spend hundreds of dollars this year on their food, their vet, their treats. The last thing you should be doing on the worst night of the year is searching for paperwork.
Ten quiet minutes today buys you a calm answer on that day. Set up your binder once. After that it's with you, your sitter, and your vet, from now on, so you can focus on your pet instead of the records.
One payment ยท works on every device ยท 14-day refund