The verses you save, your practice history and review schedule, your streak of activity, your chosen Bible translation, your language, and your settings are all stored locally on your phone. They are not uploaded to us. If you uninstall Dayly, they are gone.

Once a verse is saved, practising it works completely offline. Only looking up a new verse needs a connection.

Dayly shows a Community screen — how many people are memorizing today, which verses are most practised, how many countries are represented. That screen is built from anonymous events contributed by the people using the app.

This is on by default. You can turn it off whenever you like in Settings → Privacy. Turning it off stops the app sending anything immediately; you can still read the Community screen.

While it is on, Dayly sends an event when you add a verse, complete a review, memorize a verse, or finish a meditation. Each event contains only:

That is the complete list. No name, no email, no phone number, no contacts, no photos, no precise location, and no advertising identifier.

Because these events are anonymous, we genuinely cannot connect them to you — which also means that if you asked us to delete "your" statistics, we would have no way to find them. Switching the setting off stops any further data being sent, and uninstalling the app destroys the random install ID for good.

When you add a verse, Dayly asks our Bible service at api.mintybits.com for the passage, sending the reference and the translation you picked. That service exists to cache Bible text so we don't hammer the Bible publishers; it does not store your network address and does not keep a record of who asked for what.

If you play a verse aloud, the audio is streamed from Crossway's ESV audio servers (audio.esv.org). Your device contacts Crossway directly, so — as with loading any web page — they will see your network address. Crossway's own privacy policy governs that request.

On Apple devices, Dayly can keep your verses and settings in step across your own devices using Apple's iCloud. That data sits in your Apple account, under Apple's privacy policy. We cannot see it, and it never reaches our servers.

Android has no equivalent, so there is no cloud sync there — you can move your verses between devices by exporting and importing a backup file yourself.

Practice reminders are scheduled by your phone, on your phone. There is no push server, and we are not told whether you opened one.

Dayly is not directed at children under 13, and it does not knowingly collect personal information from anyone — children included. It has no account system, no chat, no user-generated content, and no advertising.

If we change how Dayly handles data, we will update this page and change the date at the top. Material changes will also be called out in the app's release notes.