Mikodes Car Log
iOS Universel / Finance
Garage Journal is a quiet, focused service log for the cars in your driveway. The kind of app where adding an oil change takes ten seconds and reading three years of history takes one swipe.
YOUR GARAGE, ONE TAP AWAY
The home screen is a horizontal strip of vehicle cards. Tap one to switch the whole view. Cards show the nickname (Daily, Weekend, Workhorse) plus year/make/model and fuel type. Adding a new car is a five-field form — no wizard, no upsell.
A TIMELINE THAT READS LIKE A NOTEBOOK
Every service entry lives on a vertical timeline with a connector line, a circle for the service icon, the date, the cost, and a short note. Sort is newest-first by default. Each row tells you the mileage at that service so you can see the gaps between events.
REMINDERS THAT ACTUALLY KNOW YOUR INTERVALS
Garage Journal watches your most recent service of each kind, adds the typical interval (5,000 mi for an oil change, 7,500 mi for a tire rotation, 30,000 mi for brake pads), and shows what's due next. "Due in 1,800 mi" turns amber as you close in, red when you're overdue.
REAL STATS WITHOUT A SPREADSHEET
Per-vehicle: total spent, cost per mile, total entries. Numbers update as soon as you save a new service. Use them to argue with your in-laws about whether the truck is worth keeping.
LOG A SERVICE
- Pick the type (oil change, tires, brakes, battery, air filter, alignment, repair, detail).
- Date defaults to today.
- Mileage defaults to the car's current odometer (you can adjust it).
- Cost in your currency.
- A free-text note for the shop name or part number.
WORKS FOR EVERY VEHICLE
- Gas, diesel, hybrid, plug-in hybrid, full electric.
- One car or a fleet of three.
- No connector required, no OBD-II reader.
PRIVACY
- All data is stored on your device.
- No accounts, no sign-in.
- No analytics or tracking SDKs.
- No subscription. Buy once, own it.
A small tool for people who fix their own brake fluid or just want to remember when the cabin filter was last changed. Built by a solo developer who got tired of glove-box receipts.