Privacy

Privacy Policy

Last updated: May 16, 2026

Coast When is designed to keep planning data in your browser by default. This page explains what data the product uses, what may be shared when you create a link, and what to review before publishing a production policy.

What Coast When stores

Planner data you enter, import, or generate is stored locally in your browser on the device you are using. That can include account names, balances, dates, cash flow entries, retirement settings, and related planning inputs.

Coast When also stores small preference data locally, such as chart display settings and other workspace state needed to reopen your plan.

What happens when you share a plan

Shared plans are encoded into the URL you generate. Anyone with that full link can open the shared view, so treat it like a private document link.

Privacy controls in the share flow can obfuscate names, round values, and reduce date precision, but they do not make a shared link anonymous or risk free.

Information sent to third parties

The app loads web fonts from Google. Your browser may connect to Google services to retrieve those font files.

If you open, copy, or send a shared link through another service or app, that service may receive the link and any information it contains.

Google Analytics

Coast When uses Google Analytics to understand overall product usage, such as page views, session activity, device type, and general traffic patterns.

Google Analytics may use cookies or similar technologies and may collect information such as your IP address, browser details, and interactions with the site. That information is processed by Google under its own terms and privacy practices. See the Google Privacy Policy and Google's Analytics Privacy Disclosures Policy.

Data retention and control

Because planning data is stored in your browser, you can remove it by clearing Coast When local data from the app settings or by clearing your browser storage for the site.

Shared links remain accessible until the link is no longer used or disclosed. If you have shared a link, the practical way to revoke access is to stop using that link and generate a new one with different data.