Your correspondence timeline
Open any logged issue and you will see its timeline: a dated list of everything you have recorded about that one problem, newest at the top. Each update you add — a call, an email, a visit — becomes an entry, so the whole story reads in order, from the latest development right back to the day you first noticed the fault. A dated record matters most when a claim turns into a disagreement. Six months on, “they told me it would be sorted before winter” means little on its own. A line that reads “Phone call, 14 March — Sam at the dealership said the part was on order and would arrive within two weeks” is the kind of detail that settles an argument. The timeline turns a string of half-remembered conversations into something you can stand behind.Log an update
Add an update while it is fresh, ideally the same day. Open the issue, tap Log an update, and choose what kind of contact it was.Pick what happened
Choose the type of update: a phone call, an email sent or email received, an in-person visit, an inspection, parts ordered, work completed, a letter or other written correspondence, or a plain note for anything that does not fit the rest.
Set the date
The date defaults to today. If you are catching up on something from earlier in the week, change it to the day it actually happened, so the timeline stays true to events.
Note who you dealt with
Record the person’s name and the dealer or company they work for. Months later, “Sam at the dealership” is far more useful than “someone at the shop”, especially once staff have moved on.
Write what was said or done
In your own words, put down what happened: what you asked for, what they told you, what was agreed. Keep it plain and factual — it is a note to yourself first, and evidence second.
Record any promise, and when it is due
If they promised something — a callback, a part, a repair booking — note it and add a by-when date. loadmate then reminds you when it falls due, so a “we’ll call you back next week” does not quietly slip past.
The “Issue noticed” anchor
Every timeline ends the same way: with an Issue noticed entry at the very bottom, built from the problem you first logged. It carries the original date you recorded and any photos you added at the time, so the starting point of the story is always in view beneath everything that came after. You do not add this entry, and you cannot lose it by logging updates — it simply anchors the record. However long the timeline grows, the first thing that ever happened stays put at its foot.Set the status
Alongside the timeline, each issue carries a status that shows where the claim stands at a glance. You set it yourself, and every change is added to the timeline, so you can see when things moved. There are four to choose from:- Open — logged, but nothing has happened yet.
- In progress — you are in contact and the claim is moving along.
- Resolved — sorted out. loadmate lets you add a short note on how it was settled, which is worth doing while it is fresh.
- Disputed — for when a dealer or maker will not help, or turns down a claim you believe is fair. Marking it Disputed flags the claim for follow-up, and it is your cue to lean on the record you have built.
Remove an update
Logged the wrong thing, or added an update twice? Press and hold the entry on the timeline and confirm to remove it. As with deleting anything in loadmate, it cannot be undone, so remove an entry only when you are sure it does not belong. The Issue noticed anchor stays put — it is part of the original issue, not a logged update, so it is not removed this way. To change the original problem or its date, edit the issue itself.Reading a claim’s history is free for everyone, including demo and lapsed users: open any issue and view its whole timeline and status without Pro. Logging an update, changing the status, and saving the evidence PDF each require Pro. Demo data stays visible so you can see how a tracked claim looks, but it cannot be changed or exported.
Where to go next
Save an evidence PDF
Turn the whole dated record into a tidy, branded PDF you can hand to a dealer, maker, or consumer-protection body.
Review and edit an issue
Open a logged issue to read or change its details, manage its photos, or remove it.
Log a warranty issue
Capture a problem the day you notice it, with the date and a photo, and link it to the cover that applies.