Flo vs Glow 2026: Privacy, Features & Price Compared
Our verdict
Flo paid $8M in a class action for sharing data with advertisers. Glow exposed 25 million users' data in a 2024 breach after years of documented security failures. Both apps store your data in the cloud; both have failed to protect it. PinkyBloom keeps everything on your iPhone — nothing to breach, nothing to share.
Flo vs Glow vs PinkyBloom
| Feature | Flo | Glow | PinkyBloom |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | ~$49.99/yr premium | Varies (quarterly/yearly premium) | Free forever |
| Users | 440M+ | 25M+ | Growing |
| Data storage | Cloud (Flo servers) | AWS cloud (default) | On-device only |
| Privacy track record | $56M class action settlement | 25M user data breach (2024) | Zero-knowledge architecture |
| AI assistant | Cloud-based chatbot | On-device AI | |
| Voice logging | |||
| Mood forecasts | |||
| Community features | Forums and stories | Community forums | |
| Offline data mode | Anonymous Mode (still cloud) | Opt-in Offline Data Protection | Always on-device |
| Account required | Email required | Account required | No account needed |
| Doctor visit reports | |||
| Ads | Ads in free tier | Ads in free tier | No ads ever |
Overview
Flo and Glow are both major players in the women's health app space, each with large user bases and community features. Flo is the undisputed market leader with 440 million users, a health chatbot, and the most extensive content library. Glow has 25 million users and is particularly popular among women trying to conceive, with fertility tracking, BBT charting, and active community forums.
Both apps emphasize social features — Flo has its community stories, Glow has its forums. Both offer fertility tracking, symptom logging, and predictions. The experience is broadly comparable for core tracking needs.
Where they diverge is in their failure modes. Flo intentionally shared data with advertisers. Glow repeatedly failed to protect data through security vulnerabilities. The distinction between intentional data sharing and negligent data exposure matters little when it's your reproductive health data at stake.
Privacy comparison
Flo and Glow have both failed spectacularly at protecting user privacy, but in different ways.
Flo's failures were intentional. The FTC found Flo shared menstrual data with Google, Facebook, and Flurry Analytics despite privacy promises. A $56M class action settlement followed. Flo chose to monetize user data through advertising partnerships.
Glow's failures were negligent. Consumer Reports flagged "serious security and privacy flaws" in 2016. A California settlement in 2020 covered security failures dating to 2013. Then in February 2024, TechCrunch reported a bug that exposed the personal health data of 25 million Glow users. Three incidents over eight years — a pattern of systemic security failure.
Glow offers an opt-in "Offline Data Protection" mode, but research shows fewer than 5% of users change default settings. By default, data goes to AWS. Flo's "Anonymous Mode" still uploads data to servers.
Both apps' attempts at damage control — Flo's Anonymous Mode, Glow's Offline mode — are opt-in patches on fundamentally vulnerable architectures. PinkyBloom's on-device architecture makes these patches unnecessary. There's no data to protect on servers because there are no servers.
Features and intelligence
Flo is the more complete platform: AI chatbot, 70+ symptoms, community stories, pregnancy mode, and educational content from 120+ medical experts. It's designed to be a comprehensive health ecosystem.
Glow focuses on fertility with BBT charting, ovulation tracking, cycle predictions, and community forums. The forums provide genuine peer support for the TTC community. However, Glow's intelligence layer is statistical, not AI-driven.
Neither app offers on-device AI, voice logging, or predictive mood forecasting. Both require cloud processing for any intelligence features.
PinkyBloom provides genuine on-device AI: conversational health assistance, voice logging, mood forecasts, and doctor visit reports. No community forums (which would require cloud accounts), but encrypted partner sharing through PinkyBond provides private one-to-one support instead.
Pricing comparison
Flo costs ~$49.99/year for premium. Glow's pricing varies by plan. Both have ad-supported free tiers. Over several years, both apps cost meaningful sums for products that have demonstrably failed to protect your data.
PinkyBloom is free forever. Every feature included, no ads, no premium tier. For apps handling reproductive health data, the price comparison should include the cost of data exposure. Flo and Glow have both proven that cost is real. PinkyBloom's architecture ensures it's zero.
There's a better option
Flo intentionally shared your data with advertisers. Glow accidentally exposed 25 million users' data through security failures. PinkyBloom prevents both: zero-knowledge architecture means nothing to share and nothing to breach. On-device AI, no servers, free forever.
በአፕ ስቶር ላይ አውርድ