Businessly gives you two levels of control over your data. You can delete your whole account (everything, everywhere), or you can manage your data by removing it from one device while keeping your account and cloud backup. Both are explained below.
This permanently erases everything tied to your account — on your phone, on our server, and in your Google Drive backup — and signs you out. This cannot be undone.
Everything listed in the table below is removed immediately and the app returns to the sign-in screen.
Email zubair530@gmail.com from the email address you used to sign in, with the subject "Delete my Businessly data". We will verify the request and delete your data within 30 days, and confirm by email.
| Data | Deleted? |
|---|---|
| Local data on your device (your encrypted ledger, settings, session) | Yes |
| Your synced ledger on our server (Supabase) — every record tied to your account | Yes |
| Your device registry entries on our server | Yes |
| Your backups in your Google Drive (the app's private backup folder) | Yes |
| The app's access to your Google account (OAuth grant revoked / signed out) | Yes |
If you're selling, replacing, or handing off a phone — but want to keep your account and restore your ledger later on another device — use this option instead. It removes Businessly's data from the current phone only; your cloud backup and account stay intact.
Before wiping the phone, the app takes a fresh backup to your Google Drive so nothing is lost. You can sign in again on any device to restore your ledger from that backup.
| Data | On this option |
|---|---|
| Local data on the current device (encrypted ledger, settings, session) | Removed |
| Your synced ledger on our server (Supabase) | Kept |
| Your backups in your Google Drive | Kept (a fresh backup is taken first) |
| Your account / Google access | Kept |
After you delete your account (option 1) we do not retain copies of your ledger or account data. We keep no analytics or backups of it. (If any minimal record is ever required by law, it would be limited to what the law requires and described here; today, none applies.)