Recommendations from people you actually trust.
The advice you’d normally text a friend for — the right plumber, a restaurant for Friday night, where to stay in Lisbon — pulled out of your group chats and into one quiet, private app for home services, food & drinks, and travel.
No anonymous review feed. No paid placement. Just referrals organized by circles you trust.
Three rooms.
One trusted set of friends.
Vouchlist runs on one account and one network of circles. Your people stay the same; the color of the room you’re in tells you what kind of recommendation you’re looking at.
Home Services
The plumber, the electrician, the cleaner, the contractor. The person whose number gets passed around the cul-de-sac.
Food & Drinks
Friday-night spots, the perfect spritz, that one taco truck. With the dishes and drinks your circle actually orders.
Travel
Where to stay, the area worth the splurge, the trip that was actually worth it — plus the top three things to do, from people who went.
Somewhere along the way, the internet’s recommendation systems stopped feeling like recommendations and started feeling like marketing. Stars from strangers. Paid placement. Five-page Yelp threads written by no one in particular. Meanwhile, the way you actually decide where to eat, who to hire, or where to go is the same as it’s always been — you ask someone you trust.
Vouchlist is built around that single act. A vouch is a real name, attached to a real recommendation, sent only to the circles you choose. There’s no public feed, no anonymous score, and no algorithm deciding which strangers to elevate. Just your people, and the things they’d actually tell you about.
We split it into three rooms because those are the three questions people ask each other most: who can I hire, where should I eat, and where should I go. One account, one network, three small worlds.
“Found the leak two other guys missed, and charged exactly the quote.”
“Go on a weekday, order at the counter, and don’t you dare skip the horchata.”
“Stay in Alfama, ride Tram 28 early, and book the fado bar a week out.”
A few quiet rules
the whole app runs on.
Vouchlist is what happens when you take three product decisions seriously: trust is personal, sharing is private by default, and signal beats volume every time.
Trust tied to a real name.
Every vouch comes with the person who made it, a rating, a note, and the details that matter — favorite dishes, favorite drinks, or the top three things to do somewhere. No anonymous five-stars, no review farms.
Circles keep sharing personal.
Make a circle for family, neighbors, coworkers, or friends — anyone whose taste you actually want. Each recommendation goes only to the circles you pick, and new ones land in everyone’s feed instantly.
Privacy as a product.
Private groups, hashed contact matching, manual location controls. The default isn’t “everyone can see this” — it’s “only the people you chose to share with.”
Three steps
to a directory built
entirely on your people.
You can use Vouchlist completely alone — saving spots for yourself — or invite a handful of people you trust and let it become the group chat you wish you had.
Make your circles.
Family, neighbors, friends, coworkers. Add the people whose recommendations you’d actually take, and skip everyone else.
Save what you trust.
The people you’d hire, the places you’d go back to, the trips that were worth it. Send each one only to the circle where it fits.
“Found the leak two other guys missed.”
Add the real context.
Rate it, leave a note, attach the details: favorite dishes, favorite drinks, your top three things to do. So your circle reads it and knows exactly what to try.
“Go on a weekday, order at the counter.”
Carnitas tacos Horchata 1. Alfama sunriseA real product, with
real policies behind it.
Vouchlist isn’t a waitlist or a beta. It ships on both major app stores, runs on production infrastructure, and is supported by public privacy, terms, child-safety, and listing-removal policies.
- ✓Live on the App Store and Google Play — not a landing page promise.
- ✓Public Privacy Policy and Terms of Service, maintained for both the app and the web.
- ✓Users can report content, block other users, delete their account, or request a professional listing removal.
Is Vouchlist available on Android?
Yes. Vouchlist is available on both Google Play and the Apple App Store today — same account, same data, both platforms.
Is Vouchlist free?
Yes — free to download and free to use, on both stores. No subscription, no paid placement, no ads dressed up as recommendations.
Can everyone see the listings I add?
No. Pros, restaurants, and destinations are only published to the circles you choose. The whole app is built around private groups, not a public review feed, and your circle sees new listings the moment you add them.
Does Vouchlist verify every pro, restaurant, or destination?
No. Vouches are personal endorsements from real users, not platform certifications. You should still do your own due diligence before hiring anyone or booking a trip — we just give you a better starting point than a stranger’s star rating.
Do I need a separate account for home services, food, and travel?
No — one account covers all three. Each space is color-coded so you always know which one you’re in: green for home services, red for food & drinks, blue for travel.
How do I remove a professional listing?
If you added the listing, you can delete it directly in the app from your own listing’s detail page. If you’re a professional asking to remove or correct a listing someone else added about you, email support@vouchlist.app with the subject “Professional Listing Removal.”