Privacy Policy
July 2026
Introduction
We respect your privacy. This policy describes how the Life in the UK Test 2026 app handles your data. By using the app you accept this policy.
Data We Process
The app processes only the data needed to run the study experience: your progress, answered questions, mock exam results and readiness statistics. This data is stored locally on your device. No account or registration is required. We do not sell personal data.
Offline Use
The complete bank of 418 practice questions and the built-in study guide are bundled with the app, so you can practice without an internet connection and your progress stays on your device. A connection is only used for optional services such as ads in the free version and anonymous usage statistics.
Advertising
The free version shows a small amount of advertising via Google AdMob. To deliver and measure ads, Google may process device identifiers. In the UK and EEA the app may show a consent dialog where you can accept or decline personalized ads, and you can change that choice later; you can also limit personalized ads in your device settings. The one-time Premium purchase removes all ads permanently.
Analytics & Crash Reports
We use Firebase Analytics (provided by Google) and App Store Connect Analytics (provided by Apple) to understand how the app is used, and Firebase Crashlytics to diagnose crashes and technical issues. These services collect mostly aggregated and anonymous data.
In-App Purchases
The Premium upgrade (Lifetime Access) is a one-time purchase processed by the store where you downloaded the app (Apple's App Store or Google Play). We never see your payment details; the store only confirms your Premium status to us.
Your Rights (UK GDPR & GDPR)
Under the UK GDPR and the EU GDPR you have the right to access, correct, delete, restrict and export your data. Because your study data is stored only on your device, you can delete it yourself at any time by uninstalling the app. For anything else, contact us at the email above.
Right to Complain
You have the right to lodge a complaint with a data protection supervisory authority if you believe your data is being processed unlawfully. In the UK, that is the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO); in the EU, you can contact the supervisory authority responsible for your place of residence.
Contact
For privacy questions please contact us at the support email above.