⬅️Guide

app to track ovulation free

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Trider TeamApr 19, 2026

AI Summary

Free ovulation apps often come at a cost: your privacy. Many popular trackers sell your sensitive health data to advertisers, making you the product.

If you're looking for a free app to track ovulation, you have plenty of options. But "free" usually comes with a catch.

Most of the big-name trackers, like Flo and Clue, use a freemium model. You get basic period logging for free, but the useful stuff—detailed predictions, cycle analysis, symptom insights—is locked behind a subscription. They aren't charities. They make money from your subscription or from your data.

The real cost is your data. Many free health apps, including fertility trackers, share what you log with third-party companies for advertising. One study found that 87% of these apps share data with other companies, sometimes without clear consent. That includes everything: cycle timing, sexual activity, moods, symptoms, and when you're trying to conceive. And since these apps are usually classified as "Health & Fitness," not "Medical," they aren't protected by privacy laws like HIPAA. The only thing protecting you is the privacy policy that nobody ever reads.

My friend learned this the hard way. She was using a free app and started getting hyper-specific ads for fertility clinics. It creeped her out. Then one day, at exactly 4:17 PM, while she was trying to parallel park her ancient 2011 Honda Civic, she got a push notification from the app that said, "Your fertile window is closing soon! Time to get busy!" She deleted it on the spot.

An app that sells your data might not be worth it.

Menstrual Cycle Overview Menstruation Follicular Phase FERTILE Ovulation Luteal Phase Day 1 Day 14 (Approx) Day 28

What to look for in an app

Some apps are better than others about privacy and offer good features without a subscription.

  • Ovia: Often recommended because most of its tracking and content is free. It’s a solid choice if you want to log a lot of detail.
  • Clue: The free version is good for tracking periods and symptoms. It has a paid "Conceive mode," but many people trust the app because it's based in Germany and has to follow stricter GDPR privacy laws.
  • Euki: This one is built by a nonprofit and is all about privacy. It doesn't need an account and stores all your data on your phone, so the company never sees it. The only catch is that if you lose your phone, your data is gone forever.

An app is just a tool

An app's predictions are only guesses, especially if you have irregular cycles. Their accuracy depends entirely on how consistently you log your own data.

Think of it more like a logbook. You track your own physical signs (like basal body temperature and cervical mucus) and use the app to spot the patterns. The app can't tell you when you're ovulating. But it can help you figure out how to tell for yourself.

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