Legacy Recording
When time becomes precious, the things we've always meant to say suddenly feel urgent. The stories we've carried for decades — the ones only we know — deserve to be heard. Not just remembered quietly by those who love us, but actually heard, in our own voice, for generations who haven't been born yet. EverMemory was built for exactly this moment.
When we ask families what they wish they had saved, the answers are always the same. Not objects. Not photographs. Voice.
They want to hear a grandmother explain how she met their grandfather. They want a father's advice on navigating a difficult marriage, told in his own words with his particular humor. They want a mother's recipe — not the card version, but the real one, with all the things she never wrote down. They want a message addressed directly to a grandchild who is only three years old today and will need those words most at twenty-five.
These things cannot be reconstructed after the fact. They can only be captured now.
It can be tempting to wait. To feel more ready. To find a better moment. But the reality is that cognitive and physical capacity can shift in ways that are difficult to predict. Energy fluctuates. Good days are real, and so are harder ones.
The recordings that matter most are made when someone is still themselves — curious, reflective, unhurried. Even ten minutes of voice, captured on a good afternoon, can hold more meaning than hours of written text.
There is no perfect time. But there is a right window, and it belongs to now.
EverMemory was designed to be as simple as possible — because simplicity is the only thing that works when energy is limited.
Takes about ten minutes. They generate a personal QR code linked to the patient's profile.
No app to download, no login to remember. Scan the QR code, press one button, begin speaking. Sessions can be as short as ten minutes — in a hospital room, a living room, anywhere comfortable.
Every recording is shaped into a structured, readable narrative. The final result is a literary-quality memoir, printed and bound as a hardcover book — something a family can hold, pass down, and return to.
No story should be lost because of the cost
We believe that financial difficulty should never be a reason a story goes untold.
Through our Pro-Vita Program, EverMemory offers free access to patients facing terminal illness or receiving hospice care. Qualifying institutions — hospitals, palliative care facilities, hospice organizations — can receive a program code to share with patients at no cost.
If you are a healthcare professional and would like to learn more about offering this program to your patients, please reach out to us directly. If you are a patient or family member, ask your care team whether your institution participates.
EverMemory organizes recordings into chapters that cover a full life. Patients can record in any order, in any session, and the AI assembles the pieces into a coherent whole.
Childhood and early memories
Where you grew up, your family, your earliest recollections
Education and becoming yourself
School years, friendships, first passions
Career and work
What you built, what you learned, what surprised you
Love and partnership
How relationships shaped you
Parenting and family life
What you hoped for, what actually happened, what you'd do again
Life lessons
What you know now that you wish you'd known earlier
Messages to loved ones
Direct words to the people who matter most, including those not yet born
Even a handful of chapters creates something irreplaceable.
Is this the right time to do this?
There is no single right time — but the present is almost always better than later. You don't need to feel settled or at peace. You don't need to have your story figured out. Speaking honestly, even about uncertainty, is exactly what makes a memoir meaningful. The people who will read this book in twenty years will want to know who you actually were in this moment — not a polished version.
What if I can't finish?
You don't have to. A partial memoir is not a failure — it is still a gift. One chapter. Three stories. A single message to someone you love. Any of these things, preserved in your voice and bound in a book, will matter more than you can imagine. EverMemory does not require completion. It only asks you to begin.
Will this actually mean something?
Yes. We say this not as a slogan but as something we have seen again and again. Families describe receiving a completed EverMemory book as one of the most significant moments of their lives. Children who never thought to ask their parents the important questions suddenly have answers. Grandchildren who were born after their grandparent's death grow up knowing a real person, not a name. The voice recordings themselves — preserved alongside the text — become something people return to for decades.
How does the Pro-Vita Program work?
Through our Pro-Vita Program, EverMemory offers free access to patients facing terminal illness or receiving hospice care. Qualifying institutions — hospitals, palliative care facilities, hospice organizations — can receive a program code to share with patients at no cost. If you are a healthcare professional, reach out to us directly. If you are a patient or family member, ask your care team whether your institution participates.
How long does it take to produce the book?
The book takes two to four weeks to complete after recording ends. You can add recordings over weeks or months — there is no deadline. We offer a 7-day free trial.
EverMemory is here whenever the moment feels right. You can begin with a single memory. You can pause and return. The book takes two to four weeks to complete after recording ends.
Start RecordingLegacy Gift Pack — $89 one-time · Legacy Premium — $299 one-time
Pro-Vita Program — Free for qualifying patients · 7-day free trial