Most popular notes apps — Google Keep, OneNote, Notion, Apple Notes — want an account before they'll let you write a single word. An email address. A Google account. A Microsoft account. Sometimes a phone number for verification.
It's friction you didn't ask for, tied to an identity you didn't want to hand over, syncing data to a cloud you didn't choose.
There are better options. Here are the best notes apps for Android that work without any account at all.
Full disclosure: I built Scrib, the first app on this list. Every app here earned its spot. I'm listing real trade-offs for all of them, including mine.
Why Accounts Are a Privacy Problem
When an app requires an account, a few things happen automatically:
- Your identity is tied to your notes — the company knows who you are
- Your notes are typically synced to the company's cloud servers
- The company can read your content (unless it's end-to-end encrypted, which most aren't)
- Your data can be subpoenaed, breached, or sold as part of a company acquisition
- Deleting your account may not actually delete your data on their servers
None of that happens with an account-free, offline notes app. Your notes stay on your device. No identity. No server. No exposure.
What I Looked For
- No account required: Works immediately on install, no sign-up
- Offline-first: Notes stored locally, not dependent on internet
- Actually usable: Clean UI, fast, reliable
- Free to use: No paywall for basic functionality
- Privacy-respecting: Minimal or zero data collection
1. Scrib
Best for: No-account notes with automatic encryption. Zero setup.
- No account, no email, no sign-up — install and write
- AES-256 encryption on every note automatically, key stored in the Android Keystore
- 100% offline — no server, no networking code whatsoever
- PIN lock + Private Vault for sensitive notes
- 16 note colors, dark mode, voice input, 10 languages
- Zero data collected. Free, no ads
Trade-offs: Android only. No cloud sync — notes exist only on your device. No cross-device access. If you lose your phone without a backup, notes are gone. That's the honest trade-off of true offline, account-free storage.
2. Notally
Best for: Clean, minimal, no-frills notepad with zero fuss.
- No account required
- Offline-first — no cloud features
- Open source (available on F-Droid and Play Store)
- Material Design with dark mode
- Labels, pinned notes, lists, basic rich text
- Free, no ads
Trade-offs: No encryption. No PIN lock. Privacy comes from being offline, not from encryption — if someone accesses your phone's file system, notes are readable as plain text. But if you want a clean, fast notepad with zero overhead, Notally is excellent.
3. Joplin
Best for: Power users who want full control — no account required locally.
- No account required to use locally
- Optional end-to-end encryption
- Markdown editor with notebooks, tags, to-do lists
- Optional sync via Nextcloud, Dropbox, OneDrive, or self-hosted server (account required for those services)
- Open source
- Free
Trade-offs: Encryption is optional and disabled by default — you have to set it up. The interface has more complexity than a simple notepad. Sync (if you want it) requires a third-party service account. But locally, it works entirely without any account and is one of the most capable free note apps available.
4. Standard Notes
Best for: Encrypted sync — but it does require an account.
Standard Notes is an exception on this list. It requires an account — but I'm including it because it offers true end-to-end encryption, which most account-based notes apps don't. If your reason for avoiding accounts is privacy rather than friction, Standard Notes is worth knowing about: the company cannot read your notes even with an account. Paid tiers ($90/year) unlock advanced editors.
Trade-offs: Requires an email and account. Free tier is plain text only. But the encryption model is genuinely private in a way most apps aren't.
Quick Comparison
| Feature | Scrib | Notally | Joplin | Standard Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Account required | No | No | No (local) | Yes |
| Encryption at rest | AES-256 (auto) | No | Optional | End-to-end |
| Offline-first | Yes (no server) | Yes | Yes (local) | Needs account |
| Data collected | Zero | None | None | Minimal |
| PIN lock | Yes | No | No | Yes |
| Cloud sync | No | No | Optional | Yes |
| Open source | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Free | Yes | Yes | Yes | Freemium |
| Platforms | Android | Android | All | All |
What About Google Keep, OneNote, and Notion?
None of these work without an account. That's by design — they're cloud-first apps built around account-based sync and storage.
- Google Keep requires a Google account. Notes live on Google's servers.
- Microsoft OneNote requires a Microsoft account. Notes live on OneDrive.
- Notion requires an account. Notes live on Notion's servers.
- Apple Notes requires an Apple ID on iOS/macOS. Notes sync through iCloud.
These are fine apps if cross-device sync matters to you. But you can't use them privately without handing over an identity and trusting a company with your data.
Bottom Line
If you want encrypted, account-free notes with no setup — Scrib is the answer. Install it, open it, write. AES-256 encryption happens automatically. Nothing ever goes to a server.
If you want minimal and simple without encryption — Notally is clean and fast.
If you're technical and want maximum flexibility locally — Joplin is the power-user pick.
If you need cross-device sync and actual end-to-end encryption (and don't mind an account) — Standard Notes is the honest choice.
Accounts are a convenience feature, not a requirement. You don't need one to take notes securely.
Common Questions
Can I use a notes app without a Google account on Android?
Yes. Scrib, Notally, and Joplin all work on Android without any Google account. You can download them directly from the Play Store (which requires a Google account to browse, though Joplin and Notally are also available on F-Droid, which doesn't require one at all).
What happens to my notes if I uninstall an account-free app?
For offline apps like Scrib and Notally, uninstalling the app deletes your notes along with it — they're stored only on your device, not in the cloud. Export your notes before uninstalling if you want to keep them.
Is a notes app without an account less convenient?
You lose cross-device sync and automatic cloud backup. That's the real trade-off. For people with one phone who don't need to access notes on a laptop or tablet, it's no inconvenience at all. For people who work across devices, a sync solution matters.
Are offline notes safe if my phone is stolen?
It depends on the app. Notally stores notes as plain text — someone with physical access to your phone's storage could read them. Scrib encrypts all notes with AES-256 and stores the key in the Android Keystore hardware — even with physical device access, your notes are protected.
Keep Reading
- Best Private Notes Apps for Android — a broader comparison of encrypted and offline notes apps
- Is Google Notes Safe? (And Is Samsung Notes Any Better?) — what the preinstalled apps on your phone actually do with your data
- Why Your Notes Need Encryption in 2026 — what's at risk when your notes aren't protected
- Google Keep vs Encrypted Notes — a direct comparison of cloud notes vs on-device encryption
- Scrib Desktop Is Now Open Source — an encrypted text editor for Windows with AES-256 and rich text