Privacy

Habit Tracker — nothing leaves your browser

On Habit Tracker

What you are trying to change about yourself is private. The drinking you are cutting, the routine you are rebuilding, the discipline you are chasing — a habit tracker knows all of it. Habit Tracker keeps that record in a file on your device and shares it with no one.

A tracker is a confession

The list of habits a person is trying to build or break is an unusually revealing document — it names their weaknesses, their goals, and the exact days they slipped. Handing that to a cloud app with an account and an analytics stack is more exposure than the small task deserves.

The Tracker treats that record as yours alone, because it is.

How it behaves

No account. No cloud sync. No third-party analytics counting your check-ins. The file only knows what you typed into it, and it tells no one.

There is no engagement dashboard at a company somewhere watching how often you open it — because there is no company in the loop.

The threat model

The realistic risk with a habit app is not a dramatic hack — it is the ordinary business model: your behavioral data feeding retention analytics, or a shutdown that dumps your history. A local file has neither. It sits on your disk and does exactly nothing until you open it.

What the file avoids

Questions people ask

01

Can Offline.Ltd see what I'm tracking?

No. The Tracker makes no request to us, ever. Confirm it in your browser's network panel — nothing leaves.

02

Is my data synced across devices?

Only if you move the file yourself. That is the trade: no automatic sync, and in exchange, no copy of your habits sitting on anyone's server.

03

What if I lose the file?

Keep it where you keep anything that matters — a copy on your machine, one on a drive. Export it the way you would any document you would not want to lose.

The record of who you are trying to become should belong only to you.

Other angles on Habit Tracker