A smarter, safer alternative to trackers and nametags
Lost blazer, headphones, passport or laptop tomorrow, it could be £££ gone.
Yet trackers don't stick, have limited range, and need constant charging. Name tags only work when the finder knows you, can’t be updated, expose personal info and need relabelling between owners.
BoomerangTag® is a smarter alternative: a durable QR code that finders can scan to easily return your lost belongings without even sharing personal information.
We've all seen those "I've found" messages in group chats and viral social media posts. Research shows finders return things, make it as easy as possible for them.
Add your name with our personalisation service
Personalise your Stick On in just a few steps. Start by choosing your colour and pack size. Then simply add your name.
How does it work?
BoomerangTag® uses safe QR technology that allows finders to scan the code and return your belongings without having access to any of your details.
All you have to do is tag & register your belongings to your account. Here’s how!
Don't worry if still not sure after reading, any tags purchased come with a free call and support from Boomerang® to get set up.
Tag it
Iron On
Follow the instructions included with the tags to apply them to your belongings.
Stick On
Stick them on your belongings like any sticker.
Keyring
Attach on your belongings like any keyring.
Got extra tags?
Feel free to share them with friends or family. They can register them easily using the same steps listed below.
Once tagged, scan the QR code and follow these steps
Soon anyone, anywhere can return what you lose
You choose what a finder sees
Every item can show just the right amount of information you want
The research
A study dropped wallets with contact details across 40 countries (355 cities, 17,000 wallets) and found wallets with money were returned over half (51%) of the time - almost double the expected rate. In the UK the return rate was even higher at 60%!
The results shocked economists and survey respondents who expected people to act selfishly.
Why do people return items? The researchers concluded that "people want to see themselves as an honest person, not as a thief" and as soon as they keep an item that self-view changes. They also added “the results show just how prevalent civic honesty is".
Watch when the BBC dropped 10 wallets around Belfast with contact details in, how many do you think were returned?
Every account comes with 30 days free of our family premium plan.