The beta has closed.Quartermaster is launching soon on the App Store.

The whole stack, or a wall of web UIs.

One native iOS app for 30 self-hosted services across two worlds, set against the usual ways to reach a homelab from your phone. No rankings, just the trade-offs.

ApproachBreadthOn a phoneDepth
One native iOS app30 services across two worlds, Entertainment and the Command CentreBuilt for touch in SwiftUI; one place for the whole stackLabelled per service: manage, connect + status, or monitor
A wall of web UIsEverything you host, but one browser tab and one login eachDesktop admin panels pinched and zoomed on a phoneFull control, if you can reach the right tab
An app per serviceOne service per app; many apps to install and keep updatedNative, but you app-switch to move between servicesVaries app to app
A dense control panelMany services on one screen, mostly at a glanceA wall of widgets, not built for touchMostly read-only status, not control

Each service is labelled by how far the app goes today: manage (browse and control), connect + status (live status now, deeper screens on the roadmap), or monitor (read-only by design). Quartermaster Pro is one unlock, £14.99 lifetime or £3.99 a month, covering all 30 services across both worlds, with no per-service charges.

Where Quartermaster is different

  • 30 services, two worlds, one app: your Entertainment and the Command Centre that runs it, instead of a wall of separate web logins.
  • Native iOS 26: built in SwiftUI, not a web view in a wrapper.
  • No accounts and no backend: Quartermaster runs no server of its own. API keys stay in the iOS keychain, hardware-backed by the Secure Enclave.
  • The Stuck Download Doctor: it names why an import is blocked and offers the fix inline.
  • One price, the whole stack: £14.99 lifetime or £3.99 a month, with no à-la-carte per-service charges.

See also: What Quartermaster does · Pricing

Coming soon on theApp StoreSee what works with your stack