All comparisons

PinkyBloom vs Paula: Your Cycle Data Shouldn't Fund a Supplement Company

Last updated: February 2026·Paula: Free (with IAP)·PinkyBloom: Free forever

Our verdict

Paula is a popular Brazilian period tracker built by FAMIVITA — a company that sells fertility supplements and products. It collects personal and health data and may share app activity with third parties. PinkyBloom keeps your data on your iPhone, has no commercial interest in your fertility, and costs nothing.

Feature comparison

FeaturePinkyBloomPaula
Price per year$0/foreverFree (with in-app purchases)
Data storageOn-device onlyCloud (FAMIVITA servers)
E2E encrypted partner sharing
On-device AI assistant
Voice logging
AI mood forecasts
Developer sells health productsNo (privacy-only company)Yes (FAMIVITA supplements)
Third-party data sharingArchitecturally impossibleMay share app activity + device IDs
Safety Mode
Screenshot import from other apps
Doctor visit report generator
Health vault with Face ID
AI-indexed medical records
Wearable data + AI integrationYes (Apple Health)
Home screen forecast widgetsYes (3 sizes)
AdsNo ads everIn-app promotions
Account requiredNo account neededSign-in required

Privacy and data handling

The most important thing to understand about Paula is who built it. FAMIVITA is not a privacy company or a health technology startup — it is a fertility product company based in São Paulo that sells supplements, ovulation test kits, pregnancy tests, and fertility-related products. Paula is their period tracking app. When a company that sells fertility products also collects your fertility data, the commercial incentive to use that data for marketing is structural and unavoidable.

Paula's Google Play Data Safety disclosure confirms that the app may share app activity, app performance data, and device identifiers with third parties. It collects personal information and health & fitness data. For a free app made by a company whose revenue comes from selling fertility and pregnancy products, your cycle data — when you ovulate, whether you might be trying to conceive, your fertility window — has direct commercial value.

PinkyBloom has no commercial interest in your fertility. There are no products to sell you, no supplements to recommend, no affiliate links. Your data never leaves your iPhone. The zero-knowledge architecture means PinkyBloom cannot access your reproductive health information even in theory — it exists only on your device, protected by Apple's Secure Enclave and Face ID. Brazilian users deserve an app that tracks their cycle without treating their data as a sales lead.

AI and intelligence

Paula provides basic period and fertility tracking — calendar views, period predictions, fertile window estimates, and symptom logging. It serves its primary purpose as a cycle calendar. For many Brazilian users, it was one of the first Portuguese-language period trackers available, and its local presence gave it an early advantage.

However, Paula's tracking intelligence is limited to statistical cycle predictions. There is no AI assistant, no voice-based logging, no mood forecasting, and no ability to analyze health patterns across multiple dimensions. The app functions primarily as a digital calendar with fertility estimates.

PinkyBloom offers a fundamentally more intelligent approach to cycle tracking. On-device AI powered by Apple Intelligence provides conversational health assistance, voice logging that lets you describe symptoms in natural language, and AI mood forecasts that predict emotional patterns days ahead. The doctor visit report generator creates professional health summaries — useful for Brazilian users navigating the SUS or private healthcare systems. PinkyBloom supports 71 languages including Portuguese, so Brazilian users get full AI capability in their language without the privacy trade-offs Paula requires.

How to switch from Paula to PinkyBloom

Switching from Paula to PinkyBloom is straightforward. Open Paula's calendar view, screenshot your cycle history, and use PinkyBloom's Screenshot Import feature. The OCR engine extracts your period dates, cycle lengths, and fertility markers automatically — no manual re-entry needed.

PinkyBloom supports Portuguese and works fully in 71 languages, so Brazilian users will find the experience familiar from the start. If you've been using Paula for years, your accumulated history can be captured through screenshots and imported into PinkyBloom in minutes.

After importing, consider deleting your Paula account and revoking FAMIVITA's access to your health data. With PinkyBloom, your cycle data lives exclusively on your iPhone. No fertility supplement company has access to your ovulation patterns, and no third party receives your device identifiers or app activity data.

Pricing and value

Paula is technically free, but it is built by a company whose business model is selling fertility products. The in-app purchases and the broader FAMIVITA ecosystem mean that your engagement with the app has commercial value beyond the app itself. When a supplement company knows your fertile window, your cycle irregularities, and whether you might be trying to conceive, that data informs product marketing — even if it happens indirectly through audience segmentation and ad targeting.

PinkyBloom is free with no hidden business model. There are no in-app purchases, no premium tiers, no ads, and no affiliated product lines. Every feature — AI assistant, voice logging, mood forecasts, doctor reports, encrypted partner sharing, widgets, and health vault — is included at zero cost.

The real cost of Paula isn't measured in reais — it's measured in what FAMIVITA knows about your reproductive health and how that knowledge serves their commercial interests. PinkyBloom offers more features, genuine privacy, and zero cost. Your cycle data is not a product catalog.

Frequently asked questions

Ready to switch to PinkyBloom?

Free forever. Private by design. Screenshot your Paula calendar and import your history in seconds.

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