Meet Inqrypt
— the most secure way to store your private notes.
No cloud
No internet
No accounts
All notes are encrypted locally and can only be accessed via your personal QR key.
If you lose the code — no one, including you, can unlock them.
That's real privacy.
What's Inqrypt?
A note-taking app built for absolute privacy.
No cloud. No internet. No registration.
Inqrypt stores your notes offline, encrypts them locally, and gives you the only key: a QR code.
Lose the code — lose access. No one can retrieve your data, not even us.
This is not just secure. It's yours.
Coming soon to iOS
How does Inqrypt work?
You write a note — anything you want to keep truly private.
The app encrypts it instantly, right on your device.
No internet. No servers. No cloud.
A personal QR key is generated just for that note.
That QR is the only way to unlock it. Not even the app can access your data without it.
There are no accounts.
No backups.
No recovery.
No one — not even you — can read the note without the key.
This is real privacy.
Offline. Encrypted. Yours only.
Passwords ≠ Encryption
Most note apps
- •Use passwords to protect access
- •Data still exists in readable form
- •Password just locks the screen — not the content
- •Malware, OS, or cloud provider could access your notes
Inqrypt is different
- •Notes are encrypted the moment you write them
- •There is no readable version
- •Without your QR, it's just noise
- •No cloud, backups, or "forgot password" links
Just encryption. Ownership. Consequences.
That's the cost — and the beauty — of real privacy.
Why QR instead of a password?
Because your data deserves better than a lock — it deserves a vault.
Each note is encrypted with its own unique key
That key is never saved — not in the app, not on the device, not anywhere.
Instead, it's embedded inside a QR code
No system ever stores your key. Not even Inqrypt.
To decrypt, you scan the QR
Lose it? The note is gone. No recovery. No backdoor. No compromise.
One note. One key. One QR.
Ready to experience real privacy?
Inqrypt is completely free and will always remain so.
The source code will be published at launch.