Privacy
AI tarot reading privacy: what to check before you share a question.
Tarot questions can be tender. Privacy should not be a vague promise hidden behind a beautiful interface.
Quick answer
Before using an AI tarot app, check whether it explains AI processing, what account data it stores, how subscriptions are handled, how to delete your account, and what kinds of information you should not share.
| Privacy check | What you want to see |
|---|---|
| AI processing notice | A clear explanation before readings are generated. |
| Public privacy policy | Plain language about data, providers, deletion, and support. |
| Account controls | Sign out, deletion request, and support contact. |
| Boundaries | A reminder not to share emergency, medical, legal, or financial details. |
Private questions deserve plain answers
People bring real questions to tarot: the message they keep rereading, the decision they keep postponing, the pattern they do not want to name yet. That does not mean every detail belongs in an app.
A privacy-respecting tarot app should help you understand what is processed and why, without making you decode a legal wall before your first reading.
What not to share
Even in a reflective app, some information should stay out of the text box. Do not share passwords, government IDs, credit card numbers, private medical records, legal documents, emergency information, or details that could put someone at risk.
If a question involves immediate safety, medical care, legal rights, or money you cannot afford to lose, tarot is not the right tool for the decision itself.
Why consent is part of the ritual
AI processing consent should not feel like paperwork. It is a moment of orientation: this reading is generated by processing your question, your selected cards, and relevant reading context.
That moment matters because it gives you a chance to decide what kind of question you want to bring in, and what kind you would rather keep offline.
Subscription privacy is also privacy
Privacy is not only about text. A trustworthy app should also explain how subscriptions are managed, where cancellation happens, and how to contact support if something looks wrong.
For iPhone apps, subscription billing is usually handled through the App Store. The app should still make pricing and renewal language easy to find.
Key takeaways
- Read the privacy policy before sharing deeply personal questions.
- Look for clear AI processing consent and account controls.
- Do not share IDs, passwords, medical records, financial account details, or emergency information.
- Reflection tools should support judgment, not replace professional support.
Frequently asked questions
Are AI tarot readings private?
Privacy depends on the app. Check the privacy policy, AI processing notice, account controls, and deletion process before sharing a personal question.
What should I avoid sharing?
Avoid passwords, government IDs, financial account details, medical records, legal documents, and emergency information.
Why does AI processing consent matter?
It gives users a clear moment to understand that their question, selected cards, and relevant context may be processed to generate a reading.