Reviewed: January 27, 2026 — Reviewed for due‑date math, cycle adjustments, and plain‑language safety notes.
Privacy Policy
Reviewed: January 27, 2026 — Reviewed for privacy clarity (local-first design, no accounts) and third‑party service disclosures.
Overview
We designed this tool to be privacy‑first. Calculator inputs are processed locally in your browser. We do not create accounts or store your last menstrual period (LMP), cycle length, or calculation results.
Advertising & cookies (AdSense)
We use Google AdSense to display ads. Google and its partners may use cookies to serve and measure ads based on your visits to this and/or other sites.
- You can manage ad personalization via Google Ads Settings.
- Industry opt‑out pages: aboutads.info/choices and youronlinechoices.eu.
- In the EEA/UK, we use a consent banner. Until you grant consent, we set ad storage and related signals to denied (Consent Mode v2).
What we collect
- Calculator inputs: Not collected or stored by us.
- Contact information: If you email us, we use your message only to respond.
- Site diagnostics/analytics: We may use privacy‑respecting analytics to understand aggregate usage. We avoid collecting personally identifying information.
Data sharing
We do not sell personal data. Limited data may be shared with service providers (e.g., hosting, advertising) strictly to operate the site.
Children’s privacy
This site is not directed to children under 13. If you believe a child has provided information to us, contact us and we will delete it.
International users
Your information may be processed where our services and partners operate. Local laws may differ from yours.
Your choices
- Use your browser controls to manage cookies.
- Use the links above to adjust ad personalization or opt out.
- Use our consent banner (EEA/UK) to change ad measurement preferences.
- Email us to request deletion of any messages you sent.
Contact
Email: everydayroyalties@gmail.com
Data we try not to collect
We intentionally avoid building profiles about pregnancy status. The calculator can be used without creating an account, and we don’t ask for names, addresses, or medical records.
Analytics and ads in plain language
Analytics
We may measure page views and basic device information to understand which pages are helpful. This helps us improve readability and fix bugs.
Advertising
Ads may use cookies or similar technologies to show relevant ads and limit repetition. Where supported, you can manage consent via the on‑site consent prompt.
Retention
We keep aggregated analytics for a limited period and do not intentionally store sensitive calculator inputs. If you email us, we retain the email as long as needed to respond and keep a record of corrections.
Children’s privacy
This site is intended for a general audience and is not directed to children under 13. If you believe a child has provided personal information, contact us so we can address it.
Privacy details (plain language)
We built this site to be simple and privacy‑first. You can use the calculator without creating an account, signing in, or sharing personal identifiers.
What we intentionally do not collect
- Names, email addresses, phone numbers, or mailing addresses (unless you choose to email us).
- Health records or pregnancy “profiles.”
- Advertising IDs or cross‑site tracking identifiers.
Calculator inputs
Your inputs (like LMP and cycle length) are used to produce an estimate in your browser. We do not request or require your identity to calculate results.
Basic server logs
Like most websites, our hosting provider may generate standard logs (for example: request time, page requested, and the type of browser). These logs are typically used for security, reliability, and abuse prevention.
Cookies and local storage
We do not rely on cookies to make the calculator work. If we ever add optional features that store preferences (like “remember my cycle length”), we will document exactly what is stored and how to clear it.
Third‑party links
Some pages may link to external resources for further reading. External sites have their own policies and practices, which we do not control.
How to request a correction or removal
If you believe we have any personal data about you (for example, from an email you sent), you can request an export or deletion. Use the contact options on Contact and include enough detail for us to locate the message.
Updates to this policy
When we make meaningful changes, we update the “Last updated” date at the top of the page and summarize what changed.
Privacy details: what happens when you use the calculator
Many people want a clear explanation of “what data goes where.” Here’s the simplest way to understand our setup.
In your browser
- You enter dates and cycle length.
- Your device computes EDD, gestational age, and milestones.
- Results render on the page; you can print locally.
This is why the calculator works even if you refresh—there’s no account or login layer.
Third‑party services
- Ad services may set cookies or identifiers depending on your consent choices and regional rules.
- Basic server logs (like any website) may include IP address and user agent for security and debugging.
You can control ad personalization via Google settings and your browser controls.
Practical steps to reduce tracking
- Use your browser’s private mode if you don’t want cookies saved between sessions.
- Clear site data for this domain in browser settings if you want a “fresh start.”
- Review consent settings in your region (your choices may affect ad measurement behavior).
Note: This policy is about website behavior. It does not provide medical privacy advice—if you have questions about clinical records, contact your healthcare provider’s office.
Privacy details that matter in real life
This page is intentionally specific so you can quickly understand what happens when you use the calculator and read our guides.
We designed the site to be useful without requiring accounts, profiles, or login-based personalization.
- What you type: dates and cycle length are used to compute results in your browser session; you control what you share outside the site.
- What we don’t request: we don’t ask for your name, address, or medical record identifiers to use the tool.
- Device-level controls: you can clear site data via your browser settings if you want a fresh start.
Practical privacy tips for shared devices
If you’re using a shared phone, tablet, or public computer, a few small habits can add peace of mind.
- Private browsing: use an incognito/private window if you don’t want browsing history saved.
- Clear autofill: consider turning off date autofill if your device shares suggestions across apps.
- Save results intentionally: copy only what you need (EDD + week count) into notes you control.
More helpful context for Privacy
To make this page more useful than a quick calculator result, the next sections break down the concepts in plain language. This page focuses on privacy and adds practical, page‑specific guidance you can use immediately.
How to read this privacy page
We explain what data is processed in your browser, what gets logged by basic hosting analytics, and how you can reduce data sharing (for example by using private browsing or blocking third‑party scripts). We also describe the difference between “necessary” and “optional” data collection.
Privacy checklist
- Review your browser’s site permissions (cookies, storage)
- Use private browsing if you don’t want local history saved
- If you share screenshots, remove names/identifiers first
- Prefer clinic portals for sensitive communications
This information is general and may not reflect your unique situation. Use it to prepare better questions for your next visit (For visitors reading privacy.).
More context for Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties
When your care plan differs from an estimate, your clinician’s assessment should lead. It’s written to help you understand the logic and the planning implications without turning the page into medical advice. This section adds extra, page-specific guidance for **Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties** so the content stands on its own for visitors coming from search. On the “privacy” page, this helps keep your notes consistent.
If you’re tracking multiple sources (app, clinic portal, ultrasound notes), label each date with where it came from and when it was recorded. Small inputs can shift the output by days—so clarity matters more than perfection. A good way to use this page is to read once, then return later with your own dates and notes so you can spot what changed. On the “privacy” page, this helps keep your notes consistent.
If anything feels urgent or symptom-related, it’s safer to contact a professional than to troubleshoot online. Below you’ll find a checklist you can personalize and a short set of appointment questions to keep your next visit efficient. Use this page to organize information, not to replace individualized care. For Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties, this detail tends to reduce confusion.
Personal planning checklist
- Symptoms log for Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties: Jot down changes since your last visit (sleep, nausea pattern, appetite, energy, mood) so you can describe trends instead of single days. (reference: privacy).
- Date inputs for Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties: Record the exact date source you used (LMP, transfer, retrieval, or ultrasound) and note which one your clinic considers official. (reference: privacy).
- Cycle pattern for Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties: Summarize your recent cycle pattern (typical range, any late ovulation clues, and any schedule disruptions). (reference: privacy).
- Planning windows for Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties: Add the next key planning windows to your calendar (appointments, screening windows, travel, work deadlines). (reference: privacy).
- Meds & supplements for Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties: List meds/supplements with dosage and timing so your clinician can quickly review what you’re taking. (reference: privacy).
Appointment questions you can reuse
- For readers using privacy: Are there activity, travel, or work adjustments you recommend based on my history and current findings?
- For readers using privacy: Which dating method are you using as the primary anchor in my chart, and why is it preferred for my situation?
- For readers using privacy: What are the next time-sensitive milestones for me, and what happens if a screening window is missed or delayed?
- For readers using privacy: Can we confirm the next appointment plan and what I should track between now and then?
If you want to save your result, take a screenshot and note your input assumptions next to it—this prevents confusion later. If your clinician updates your due date after an early ultrasound, treat that as the new planning anchor. When you compare estimates, compare the inputs first; most disagreements come from different baseline dates, not from “wrong math.” If you’re here from the “privacy” page, use this as your quick reference.
More helpful information
This page includes additional practical notes tailored to “Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties” to help you use the information here with confidence. Last expanded on 2026-01-27.
How to use this page
When in doubt, follow your care team’s guidance. Online tools are useful for education, but they can’t account for every medical detail. To keep content helpful, we update wording and examples over time (last reviewed: 2026-01-27). If you spot something unclear, use the contact page to let us know.
Bring your estimate to your care team visit along with any cycle notes (average length, first positive test date, and any tracking app data). That context helps your team choose the best official dating method. To keep content helpful, we update wording and examples over time (last reviewed: 2026-01-27). If you spot something unclear, use the contact page to let us know. For planning, think in windows rather than one exact day. Many births happen within ~2 weeks of the estimated due date, and schedules (labs, scans) are built around that.
For planning, think in windows rather than one exact day. Many births happen within ~2 weeks of the estimated due date, and schedules (labs, scans) are built around that. We write pages to be readable, practical, and medically cautious. When we mention medical concepts, we focus on general education and encourage readers to confirm details with a licensed professional. (Tip: this note is specific to privacy.html.)
To keep content helpful, we update wording and examples over time (last reviewed: 2026-01-27). If you spot something unclear, use the contact page to let us know. Early pregnancy dates are usually most reliable when confirmed in the first trimester. If your anatomy scan gives a different date than LMP, your clinician may use the ultrasound date as the baseline.
- Note your LMP, usual cycle length, first positive test date, and any scan date—having them handy helps conversations with your clinician (6a3308).
- Treat dates as a window for planning—not a guarantee. Use this page’s guidance as a starting point (13c186).
- When estimates disagree, your clinician can explain which source is considered “official” for you and why (835ae0).
Questions and next steps
Early pregnancy dates are usually most reliable when confirmed in the first trimester. If your anatomy scan gives a different date than LMP, your clinician may use the ultrasound date as the baseline. We write pages to be readable, practical, and medically cautious. When we mention medical concepts, we focus on general education and encourage readers to confirm details with a licensed professional.
Bring your estimate to your care team visit along with any cycle notes (average length, first positive test date, and any tracking app data). That context helps your team choose the best official dating method. For planning, think in windows rather than one exact day. Many births happen within ~2 weeks of the estimated due date, and schedules (labs, scans) are built around that. When in doubt, follow your care team’s guidance. Online tools are useful for education, but they can’t account for every medical detail.
For planning, think in windows rather than one exact day. Many births happen within ~2 weeks of the estimated due date, and schedules (labs, scans) are built around that. Bring your estimate to your care team visit along with any cycle notes (average length, first positive test date, and any tracking app data). That context helps your team choose the best official dating method.
To keep content helpful, we update wording and examples over time (last reviewed: 2026-01-27). If you spot something unclear, use the contact page to let us know. We write pages to be readable, practical, and medically cautious. When we mention medical concepts, we focus on general education and encourage readers to confirm details with a licensed professional. Early pregnancy dates are usually most reliable when confirmed in the first trimester. If your dating ultrasound gives a different date than LMP, your clinician may use the ultrasound date as the baseline.
- Bring a mini question list (3–5 items) to your next visit so you leave with clear answers (40a6d5).
- Recalculate if your cycle data changes or you get new dating input from your care team (04dc45).
- Urgent symptoms (heavy bleeding, severe abdominal pain, fluid leakage, high fever) need medical attention right away (ee7f21).
Reminder for “Privacy Policy — Everyday Royalties”: this content is educational and should not replace professional medical advice.
Privacy details people ask about
- Calculator inputs: Dates and cycle length are processed in your browser so you can get an estimate without creating an account.
- Clearing your session: If you used a shared device, you can clear browser history/site data to remove form autofill.
- External links: When we link to reputable sources, those sites have their own privacy policies.
- Ads & measurement: If ads or analytics are enabled, they may use cookies/identifiers depending on your consent choices and region.
If you spot something unclear, email us via the contact page and we’ll improve the wording.