Simple. Honest. Nothing hidden.
Last updated: February 25, 2025Welcome to NeuCalc ("we," "our," or "the app"). This Privacy Policy explains how NeuCalc handles information when you use our calculator application on Android devices.
NeuCalc is a simple, offline calculator app. We believe privacy is a fundamental right — so we designed the app from the ground up to operate entirely without collecting any personal data.
We collect no information whatsoever. This includes:
All calculations you perform exist only on your device and are immediately discarded when you close the app. Nothing is ever written to external storage or transmitted over any network.
NeuCalc requests zero permissions from your Android device. The app does not ask for access to:
You can verify this yourself by going to Settings → Apps → NeuCalc → Permissions on your Android device.
NeuCalc does not integrate any third-party SDKs, analytics tools, advertising networks, or tracking libraries. There are no:
Firebase integrations, Google Analytics, Facebook SDK, Crashlytics, AdMob ads, or any other external service embedded in the app.
NeuCalc is safe for users of all ages, including children under 13. Since we collect absolutely no data, we are fully compliant with the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) and Google Play's Families Policy.
Parents and guardians can be confident that NeuCalc poses no privacy risk to children.
If we ever update this Privacy Policy, we will update the "Last Updated" date at the top of this page and post the new policy here. Any significant changes will also be noted in the app's Play Store update notes.
Continued use of NeuCalc after any changes constitutes acceptance of the updated policy. Since we collect no data, policy changes are unlikely to affect you in any meaningful way.
Since NeuCalc collects no personal data, there is nothing to access, correct, export, or delete. You have full and complete control over your experience at all times.
Users in the European Union (GDPR), California (CCPA), and other privacy-regulated regions have no data-related obligations to exercise with us — because there is no data.