Best period tracking apps in 2026
This is a 2026 comparison focused on what actually matters: privacy posture, tracking accuracy, free-tier value, and the specific use case each app fits. We list the apps by their best-fit user, not by ranking, because the best choice depends on what you are tracking and why.
The honest landscape
Period tracking apps are a crowded category. The major options, grouped by primary positioning:
- Privacy-first: Stardust (US, encryption-focused), Euki (US, fully local).
- Research-grounded: Clue (Germany, peer-reviewed contributions).
- FDA-cleared for contraception: Natural Cycles (Sweden).
- Largest user base, broadest features: Flo (Cyprus/UK).
- Built-in to your platform: Apple Health (iOS), Samsung Health (Android).
- Cycle syncing focus: Lumen (this site, no account required), MyFlo, 28.
The trade-offs across these are real. There is no single dominant app.
How we compare
Five criteria matter for most users:
- Privacy posture: where is data stored, who has access, what is shared with third parties, jurisdiction.
- Prediction accuracy: how good are the algorithms for irregular cycles, post-pill, and edge cases.
- Free-tier value: does the free tier do the job, or is paywalling aggressive.
- Feature scope: tracking only, or also includes phase recommendations, fertility, pregnancy, perimenopause.
- Trust signals: research backing, clinical partnerships, regulatory clearances.
We deliberately avoid ranking on "design" or "vibe": those vary by personal taste and shift between updates.
App-by-app
Clue
The strongest all-rounder for users who want research-grounded design without compromising privacy too far.
- Strengths: Clean design, science-backed feature set, contributes to peer-reviewed research, Germany-based data jurisdiction with stronger privacy law than US, transparent privacy policy.
- Weaknesses: Free tier is somewhat narrow; some core insights are paywalled. Less aggressive marketing of premium than Flo but still annoying nudges.
- Best for: Users who want a high-quality general tracker without the privacy concerns of Flo, and who do not need contraception-grade prediction.
Natural Cycles
The only FDA-cleared contraception app. Uses basal body temperature plus algorithm.
- Strengths: Actual regulatory clearance for contraception. Requires daily basal body temperature input via included basal thermometer or integration with Oura/Apple Watch. Genuinely useful for fertility tracking.
- Weaknesses: Subscription required (no free tier). Requires daily temperature measurement discipline; missing days lowers accuracy. Sweden-based but US-cleared, so US privacy may apply for US users.
- Best for: Users seriously using cycle-based contraception or actively trying to conceive who want a regulated solution.
Stardust
Built for the post-Roe privacy landscape.
- Strengths: End-to-end encryption claims, US-based but architecture designed around minimal data retention, transparent about what is and is not stored on servers.
- Weaknesses: Smaller user base means less research backing for algorithms. Some users report less polish on prediction accuracy compared to Clue or Flo.
- Best for: Users where privacy is the dominant criterion (e.g., users in jurisdictions where reproductive data could be legally weaponized).
Flo
The biggest app with the broadest feature set and the most-scrutinized privacy history.
- Strengths: Polished UI, large feature scope (period, fertility, pregnancy, parenting), large community features, broad integration with wearables.
- Weaknesses: 2021 FTC settlement over sharing user data with Facebook and Google. Privacy improvements since then but the track record remains. Aggressive premium nudges.
- Best for: Users who want the most-featured all-rounder and are willing to accept the privacy trade-off, or who pair it with the device's built-in tracking and ignore the community features.
Apple Health
Free, on-device by default, requires no new app.
- Strengths: Data stays on device (and in iCloud if you opt in, encrypted). No third-party sharing by default. Integrates with Apple Watch for temperature-based ovulation estimates. Good prediction once you have a few cycles logged.
- Weaknesses: iOS-only. Less behavioral and educational content than dedicated apps. UI is functional, not delightful.
- Best for: iPhone users who want zero new apps and zero extra privacy surface area.
Lumen
Different positioning than the others: cycle syncing, not period tracking.
- Strengths: No account required, no app install, fully local data in browser, free. Focused on translating cycle phase into work-week planning.
- Weaknesses: Not a long-term tracking app; does not store cycle history in the same way. Designed to be the calculator, not the journal.
- Best for: Knowledge workers who want a fast cycle-phase answer without installing anything. Pair with one of the trackers above if you want long-term symptom data.
Decision tree
To make this concrete:
| If you want... | Pick |
|---|---|
| Best research-backed general tracker | Clue |
| Cycle-based contraception (FDA-cleared) | Natural Cycles |
| Maximum privacy in 2026 | Stardust or Euki |
| Most features regardless of privacy | Flo |
| No new app at all (iPhone) | Apple Health |
| Just the cycle-phase answer, no account | Lumen |
What to skip
A few categories not worth using:
- Apps without published privacy policies. If you cannot tell where your data goes, assume the worst.
- "Holistic" apps making unsubstantiated claims (cures for PCOS, hormone-balancing predictions, etc.).
- Free apps from unknown publishers with aggressive ad models. Free with ads usually means selling data.
- Apps requiring social media sign-in (compounds the privacy surface area).
Pair with a wearable or not?
For users who want maximum prediction accuracy, the highest-leverage upgrade is a wearable that measures basal body temperature overnight: Oura, Apple Watch (Series 8+), or Whoop. The data feeds back into the tracking app and dramatically improves ovulation prediction.
See our best cycle tracking wearables comparison for the right device pick.