Apple / social networking / 360 TRACKER - LOCATION TRACKER
REVIEW
360 Tracker is a Life360 silhouette without the network.
A late-2025 family locator from Defrasoft Labs that ticks every Life360 box on paper and almost none of them in practice.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 4 MIN READ
360 Tracker - Location Tracker
DEFRASOFT LABS
OUR SCORE
5.8
APPLE
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
The family-locator category has one winner and a long tail of clones. Life360 took the network — tens of millions of active circles, an acquired Tile hardware line, a brand parents recognise before they download anything. Find My is the free default Apple ships in the box. Everything between those two has to argue for its existence, and 360 Tracker, released May 2025 by a developer called Defrasoft Labs, doesn’t argue very hard.
The app is competently built. The map works. The SOS button broadcasts. Geofences fire on entry and exit. None of that is the question. The question is why a household already on Life360 or Find My would migrate to a fourteen-month-old app from a studio whose own privacy policy still loads under the product’s previous name. On the evidence in front of us, they wouldn’t.
Every screenshot looks like a slide from a Life360 pitch deck, only without the eight years and forty million households behind it.
FEATURES
The feature list is the genre standard. Live GPS sharing on a private map, last-seen pins, geofenced "places" with arrive/leave alerts, location history, a one-tap SOS that broadcasts to the circle, and a Find-My-Phone-style ring for linked devices. Account creation is email, Sign in with Apple, or Sign in with Google. Invitations go out by link or code.
Two details to flag. First, the App Store listing from this developer originally went out as "Family Guardian" — the privacy policy and terms links still resolve to familyguardiansoft.com, the previous brand. Second, the free tier covers live location and SOS; "extended location history, more alerts, and priority support" sit behind a subscription whose pricing the store listing declines to name.
Asset-wise, the screenshots are iPhone SE 1st-gen renders, no iPad layout, no Apple Watch complication, no Live Activity for an active SOS — a striking omission for a 2025 safety app on iOS 18.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
Onboarding is short. Three taps to a working map with a single family member on it, no setup wizard, no upsell wall before you've seen the product. The geofence creation flow is the cleanest part of the app: drop a pin, name the place, set a radius, done.
The privacy posture in the store copy is also better than the category average — explicit pause-sharing, explicit approval-required, no dark patterns visible in the consent screens. Whether the backend lives up to the copy is a different question, and one the privacy policy on a domain that doesn't match the app's current name doesn't help answer.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The whole product reads as a Life360 silhouette traced in less than a year. The May 2025 release date and April 2026 update history line up with a small studio shipping a category-template app and iterating on store metadata, not a product with its own point of view. Every screenshot looks like a slide from a Life360 pitch deck, only without the eight years and forty million households behind it.
That network effect is the missing feature. A family locator's value compounds when everyone in the family is already on it, which is exactly why Life360 won the category and why Apple's own Find My is the default fallback. 360 Tracker asks a household to migrate off one of those two for no functional gain, on a roster of one developer with no public track record in safety software. The 5-star App Store rating is from a review count too small for the store to even surface — treat it as noise, not signal.
CONCLUSION
Install this if you specifically can't or won't use Life360 and Find My doesn't cover your circle — an Android-heavy family on an iPhone parent's account, say. Everyone else should stay on what they have. Worth revisiting in 2027 if Defrasoft Labs publishes something past the template — a real differentiator, a transparent pricing page, a privacy policy on the right domain.