Google Play / education / PRIVACY POLICY CREATOR
REVIEW
Privacy Policy Creator solves a chore nobody wants to think about, then asks you to think about it less.
A boilerplate generator for the legal page every Play Store submission requires. Useful exactly once per app, and that's the whole pitch.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
Privacy Policy Creator
BRIGHT BYTES SOLUTIONS
OUR SCORE
6.2
GOOGLE PLAY
★ 4.5
PRICE
Free
In-app purchases
Every Play Store submission hits the same wall at some point in the checklist: paste the URL where your app’s privacy policy lives. For a hobbyist developer shipping a flashlight app or a weekend side project, this is the moment the project stalls. You don’t have a lawyer. You probably don’t have a website. You just want the submission button to turn green. Privacy Policy Creator exists for exactly this moment.
The app’s value proposition is narrow and the developer has not oversold it. You spend four or five minutes in a questionnaire — name the data categories your app touches, name the third-party SDKs you’ve wired in, name a contact email — and out comes a document long enough to satisfy a Play Console reviewer skimming for keywords. You host the HTML somewhere free, paste the URL into the Console, and your submission moves forward. As a chore-completion device, it works.
What it isn’t, and what the developer doesn’t claim it is, is a substitute for a real privacy policy reviewed by a real lawyer. The output is template boilerplate. Two unrelated apps will produce documents that diverge mostly in the app name and the SDK checklist. For a side project that will never have meaningful users, that’s defensible. For anything monetised, shipped into the EU under the AI Act’s transparency rules, or handling sensitive data, it isn’t. The app’s correct user knows this going in.
It generates a privacy policy in under five minutes — long enough to clear Play Console review, short enough that a real lawyer would wince.
FEATURES
Privacy Policy Creator is a single-purpose Android utility for indie developers and small studios who need to publish a privacy policy URL before the Play Console will accept their app submission. You answer a short questionnaire — app name, developer name, contact email, data collection categories (analytics, advertising, crash reporting, location, camera, contacts), third-party SDKs used (Firebase, AdMob, Facebook SDK, etc.) — and the app stitches together a templated policy document.
Output is plain HTML you can paste into a hosted page, plus a copyable plain-text version. There's no built-in hosting; the developer expects you to publish the result on your own site, GitHub Pages, a free Carrd page, or wherever your app's marketing footprint lives. Templates cover the GDPR, CCPA, and COPPA disclosures that Play Store submissions are screened against.
Free with banner ads. No subscription, no in-app purchase, no account required. The questionnaire runs entirely offline once installed — nothing about your responses leaves the device unless you choose to share the generated text.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
The scope is honest. The developer has not pretended this is a legal product; it's a fill-in-the-blanks template generator, and the questionnaire flow makes that obvious. For the indie developer who needs a Play Store submission unblocked at 11pm before a launch deadline, that's exactly the right shape.
Offline operation is a quiet win. Your draft policy — which by definition lists every SDK and tracker you've integrated — never gets uploaded anywhere. Compared to web-based generators that ask you to enter the same details into a form on someone else's server, this is the more privacy-respecting option, which is at least thematically appropriate.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The generated text is generic enough that two apps with completely different data practices can produce nearly identical policies. That's a problem if Google's Play Console review picks up the boilerplate (it sometimes does, sometimes doesn't) or if a regulator ever takes a closer look. The output reads like every other auto-generated policy on the Play Store because it largely is one.
Template coverage hasn't kept pace with the Digital Markets Act, the EU AI Act's transparency clauses, or the 2025 updates to the California CCPA enforcement guidance. A developer shipping into the EU in 2026 needs more than what this app produces. The banner ads are also tonally awkward — a privacy-policy generator served alongside an AdMob banner that itself requires a privacy disclosure is a small irony the app does not acknowledge.
CONCLUSION
Install it if you're an indie developer about to submit your first Play Store build and you need a placeholder policy at the URL the Console is asking for. Replace the output with something real before your app accumulates users or revenue. For anything regulated, paid, or carrying user data of substance, pay a lawyer or use a dedicated service like Termly or iubenda — this is a stopgap, and the developer would probably agree.