preview panel
travel uCardit
Select a travel template with or without a headshot.
Add whatever information you wish:
- personal information
- passport details
- emergency contacts
- insurance details
- medical information
NOTE: all text shown on the template (with the exception of white text), is editable and can be deleted or changed to whatever you wish. .

or

with Headshot (code:
"TRAV1")

or

without Headshot (code:
"TRAV2")
The Gap Year Student
using template t1
Travelling in Southern Thailand, Sarah's backpack including her asthma medication, insurance paperwork and glasses, was stolen from her beach-front hut.
Luckily, all the information she needed to contact her insurance company and have her glasses and medication replaced were listed on her uCardit (a copy of which was being carried by her friend Jake).
Children on Holiday
using template t2
The Gainsborough's were looking forward to the holiday of a lifetime, taking horse-mad Lucy and her brother to a 'Wild West Horse ranch' in Arizona.
They felt that any small thing they could do was worth it to ensure the trip was a memorable experience for all the right reasons.
uCardits for all the family was an easy decision........as easy as falling off a horse?
See you soon...
using template halfPL
Carol's husband Peter is away in Afghanistan on his second tour.
With photo's of herself and their children, and a few words of love, she created a durable keepsake for him while he's away..
While you're away
using any template
Passport scans, handy copies of travel documents, itinerary details.......
Select any template and add a document scan as a background, or simply type the information onto a uCardit.
what's it for?
Travelling light:
A great way to keep important information with you.
Illness or hospitalisation abroad:
Health and medical information, emergency contacts
Use the text translation feature and get your information across in the local language
Lost or stolen luggage:
Carry critical information for exceptional situations
Means of identification:
In the wake of events such as the tsunamii and terrorist atrocities it makes sense