Privacy Policy

SubTrack runs entirely in your browser. We do not collect or store your inputs on our servers. Using the Share feature will place your list in the page URL; you control where that URL goes.

Privacy, in Plain English

Your subscription list can reveal a lot about you (where you shop, what you watch, what tools you use). That’s why the calculator is built to run locally in your browser. You can use it without creating an account or typing sensitive personal information.

Tip: If you’re sharing results, share totals or categories rather than the exact service names—unless you’re sharing with someone you trust.

A practical way to think about privacy-first tracking

If you’re tracking privacy-first tracking, don’t forget add‑ons. The sticker price rarely tells the full story because add‑ons pile up. Extra storage, premium support, and additional profiles should be tracked separately so you can see what is actually driving the total.

Quick check for privacy-first tracking: if you’ve paid for 23 months and used it fewer than 36 times, it’s a strong pause candidate. If it saves you more than $30 per year, keep it and cut a weaker line item instead. (privacy and local calculations tip: revisit this after 8 days.)

Data Handling

All calculations happen locally in your browser. We never transmit your subscription list to any server. When you use the Share feature, the data is embedded in the URL — you control where that goes.

Cookies

We do not set tracking cookies. Basic analytics may be collected via Google Analytics to understand usage, but personal subscription data is never stored.

Data we collect

By default, SubTrack does not collect or store your inputs. If you use Share, your list is encoded into the page URL for you to copy.

Third‑party services

Your choices

Contact

Email everydayroyalties@gmail.com for privacy questions.

Information We Collect

Calculator Inputs

Inputs process in your browser to produce results. We store as little as possible to operate features and improve quality.

Analytics

We use privacy‑respecting analytics to understand feature usage in aggregate.

Contact Emails

If you email us, we receive your address and message so we can reply.

Advertising & Cookies

Third‑party vendors, including Google, use cookies to serve ads based on your prior visits to this website and other websites. Google’s use of advertising cookies enables it and its partners to serve ads to you based on your visits to this site and/or other sites on the Internet.

You may opt out of personalized advertising by visiting Google Ads Settings. Alternatively, you can opt out of a third‑party vendor’s use of cookies for personalized advertising by visiting aboutads.info.

Your Choices & Rights

Security & Retention

We apply reasonable safeguards appropriate to the information we process and keep data only as long as needed for the purposes described.

Policy refreshed Jan 16, 2026

Privacy Policy

We designed SubTrack to be local-first. Your subscription list and calculations are stored in your browser and are not uploaded to a server by the tool.

What This Site Collects

Your Data, Your Controls

Third-Party Links

We sometimes link to external resources. We are not responsible for the practices of other sites. Review their policies before submitting information.

Regional Rights

If your region provides specific privacy rights (e.g., GDPR/CCPA), contact us and we will help with reasonable requests related to this site’s data.

Policy refreshed Jan 16, 2026

Cookies & Similar Technologies

We keep cookies to a minimum. Where used, they support basic site operations and anonymous analytics. You can control cookies in your browser; disabling them may affect non-essential features but not the core calculator.

Analytics Details

Analytics help us understand which pages are confusing or slow. Reports are aggregated and do not include your private calculator entries. We analyze trends like page views, device type, and approximate region, not personal identities.

Retention

We keep site logs for a limited period for security and performance troubleshooting, then delete or aggregate them. If a longer retention is legally required, we comply and minimize data where possible.

Children’s Privacy

Our site is not directed to children under 13 (or the minimum age in your jurisdiction). If you believe a child has provided information through our contact form, please email us so we can remove it.

How to Exercise Your Rights

If your region provides privacy rights (e.g., access or deletion), email us with enough detail to locate records limited to site-level data. We cannot view or recover your calculator entries because they live only in your browser.

Data Security

We use industry‑standard safeguards for the site itself, including encryption in transit (HTTPS) and access controls for administrative tools.

International Transfers

Our hosting provider may process data in multiple regions. We select reputable vendors and aim to store only what is needed for site operations.

Your Choices

Do Not Track

Many browsers offer a DNT setting. Because the industry standard is still evolving, we treat DNT as a preference signal alongside other privacy controls.

Changes to This Policy

We may update this policy as practices evolve. Material changes will be noted at the top of the page with a date. Continued use after changes means you accept the revised policy.

Privacy and Subscriptions: What to Watch For

Many subscription services collect data beyond billing. If you’re cost‑cutting, it’s also a good time to tighten privacy.

Account sprawl

Every subscription is another account, password, and data footprint. Consolidate where it truly saves money and reduce unused accounts.

Trial traps

Free trials often require a card on file and auto‑renew. Set reminders before the deadline and document cancellation steps while you can still find them.

Billing email hygiene

Create a rule in your email for receipts and renewal notices. When you can find invoices in seconds, surprise spending drops fast.

SubTrack is designed to be local‑first: your subscription list stays in your browser unless you choose to export or share it.

Privacy-first budgeting habits for subscription data

Subscription lists can reveal personal habits. Treat them like a budget: minimal details, clear totals, and frequent review.

A good rule: if a detail doesn't change the math, you probably don't need to record it.

Quick actions

Mini example: $91/year is about $7.58/month. If you may switch within 13 months, price the monthly total against the annual total before committing—this matters a lot for privacy and local calculations.

Privacy details for a subscription calculator

This kind of tool is most trustworthy when it works without collecting your personal data. As a rule of thumb, subscription names and prices should stay on your device unless you explicitly choose to export them.

If you use the export feature, treat the file like a receipt: store it somewhere safe and delete it when you’re done. If you’re sharing totals with a partner, you can share summaries without sharing account details.

Privacy-first habits

Privacy habit: When you cancel a service, remove it from the list immediately so old data doesn’t linger.

Privacy note: treat subscription lists like financial data

A subscription list can reveal a lot about someone’s life. Even if you never type your name, the combination of services is often unique. That’s why we recommend keeping your entries generic when sharing screenshots.

If you use browser storage features, periodically clear old entries you no longer need. A clean list is easier to manage and reduces accidental oversharing.

Quick takeaways

Data habits that keep your audit predictable

On the Privacy page, the goal is to turn scattered charges into decisions you control. A simple move is to anchor everything to a single monthly ceiling: pick one day each month to review your list, then set reminders 6 days before renewals so you can cancel, pause, or negotiate before money leaves.

For budgeting accuracy, you can track two dates locally: your last use and the next renewal. That’s enough to make a keep-or-cut decision without sharing personal data. If it’s been ~9 days and renewal is within 3 days, put it on the chopping block for privacy and local calculations. Privacy Policy — That one rule catches the classic silent spends—especially add-ons like extra storage, premium support, or unused seats.

Privacy Policy: convert yearly billing to a monthly equivalent, then rank your subscriptions from highest to lowest and attack the top two first. Then apply a usage log rule: any item above your personal comfort line gets downgraded, rotated, or replaced. (privacy and local calculations tip: revisit this after 7 days.) Example: cap a category at $110/mo—if adding a new service breaks the cap, pause one first (works great for privacy and local calculations).

We’re fans of low-data workflows: you can run a full audit without typing anything sensitive. If you export your list, store it where you already keep finances (not in random notes), and revisit it only during your review window.

A safer way to track costs without oversharing

Subscription lists can reveal personal habits. A privacy-first approach is to avoid putting account identifiers in any tool: no emails, usernames, or payment details — just service names and prices.

If you export your list, treat it like a receipt. Keep it in a private folder, and delete old exports so you’re not storing outdated data forever.

Checklist

A simple safety rule: if a detail wouldn’t be safe on a sticky note, don’t type it into a browser tool.

Privacy Policy: Right‑Size Your Spend in 7 Minutes

A better subscription plan starts with a small checklist: You’re on privacy.html , so the goal is simple: focus on data handling and local-only calculation and leave the rest alone. A good next move is to pick one subscription that costs about $34/month and decide—today—whether it still earns its spot. (privacy and local calculations tip: revisit this after 5 days.)

Privacy Policy: do a quick ‘usage evidence’ check: write the last time you used the service, the next day you expect to use it, and one free/cheaper substitute you’d be okay with. Then give it a 3-minute test right now. If you can’t schedule the next use within 28 days, treat it as a candidate for downgrade or cancellation. (privacy and local calculations tip: revisit this after 8 days.) Rule of thumb for annual plans: if a surprise $85 bill would make you regret it, keep flexibility—especially for privacy and local calculations. (privacy and local calculations tip: revisit this after 5 days.) Privacy Policy: if the price makes you hesitate, stay on monthly for 3 cycles before committing yearly. One‑line script “I’m auditing privacy policy costs—what’s the cheapest plan that keeps the one feature I truly use most?” Micro‑challenge Cancel or downgrade one low‑use subscription today. Privacy Policy — Put the saved amount into a “future upgrades” line item so you can re‑subscribe without guilt when you truly need it. Pro tip for privacy.html : the cleanest subscription list is a living list. Privacy Policy: do a monthly review and tag anything you haven’t touched in 28 days. Privacy Policy: this one habit usually cuts spend without changing your routines—because it removes forgotten charges.

Action Notes for Privacy Policy

In Privacy Policy, the fastest win is to translate every billing cycle into one comparable monthly number before you decide what stays.

For Privacy Policy, use a quick 13-minute audit: list your active subscriptions, circle the ones you didn’t use in the last 7 days, then price-check downgrades and bundles.

With Privacy Policy, treat add-ons as separate products—extra seats, storage, premium tiers—and keep only the add-ons that you can justify with a recent, specific use.

To apply Privacy Policy with this calculator, enter your top 5 charges first, then expand to the long tail—small $3–$9 renewals are where Privacy Policy finds most waste.