Best Notes App Without an Account in 2026 (No Sign-Up Required)

By · · 5 min read

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:

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

1. Scrib

Best for: No-account notes with automatic encryption. Zero setup.

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.

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.

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.

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

Try Scrib Free

Get it on Google Play

AES-256 encrypted. No account. No ads. No tracking.