LifeKept walks you through the questions you'd want to ask your parent or grandparent, records their answer in their own voice, transcribes it, and saves it to a private archive your family keeps for as long as it matters.
Free during launch Private by design
Most people never tell their full story. Not because they don't want to, but because nobody ever sat down and asked. LifeKept changes that. It's a quiet, guided way to capture a life: real questions that move through where someone came from, who they became, the work they did, the love they built, and what they know now.
Every answer is recorded in their voice, transcribed, and saved to a private archive that belongs to your family. Voice and text, side by side, for as long as it matters.
leads the project, asks the questions, and holds the archive.
tells their story, in their own voice, at their own pace.
add the memories only they could know.
A complete short arc of a life in about thirty minutes. Place, family, identity, pride, a defining chapter, a message. Quick Start captures something meaningful in a single sitting, and leaves the door open to go deeper.
Walk us through the places you lived growing up.
Describe the family you grew up inside of.
When did you first feel like yourself, like you knew what you were made of?
What are you most proud of that you actually did?
What chapter of your life do you think about most?
What do you want the people who love you to remember about you?
Capture someone else's story, or tell your own. Either way, the setup takes about three minutes.
Begin with Quick Start, six questions in one sitting, or open the full thirty across five chapters. Take it at your pace.
Tap to start. Talk as long as you want. Save it, and your recording lands in the private archive with its transcript beside it, automatically.
Send a code to siblings or close friends. They add the memories only they could know. No account needed.
Before the first session, read the guide. The right question, asked the right way, with a little silence after, is most of the work.
Five techniques that change a recording into something worth keeping. Don't call it an interview. Send the questions first. Stop talking. Three more.
Read the guide →Almost everyone resists at first. Five common kinds of pushback and the response that works for each. Print it. Bring it.
See the scripts →Thirty questions across five chapters. Or start with the Quick Start six. Download the PDF and send it ahead of time. The answers are richer when memory has had a few days to surface.
Get the questions →You don't write anything. You don't perform. You sit with the person whose story you want to keep, you read the question on the screen, and you let them talk.
When they're done, you tap to save. The recording goes to your private archive. The transcript appears next to it on its own. You move on to the next question whenever you're ready, in this session or a month from now.
Walk us through the places you lived growing up.
Tap the button when you're ready to record.
Your stories stay yours. Three things we don't do, ever, and one thing we always will.
LifeKept will never show advertisements. We won't sell ad placement against your stories. We won't run promoted content in the archive.
Your recordings and transcripts are not used to train AI models. We use third-party transcription, but the source files belong to you.
We don't sell your data. We don't share it with brokers, advertisers, or analytics platforms. The archive belongs to the family.