Cookie Policy
Last updated: April 2026
EverydayTools.pro uses cookies, local storage, and similar browser technologies to keep tools working, understand site usage, and support advertising through Google AdSense.
How We Use Cookies
- Essential browser storage for tool preferences and interface state.
- Analytics and performance measurement to improve the site.
- Advertising cookies used by Google AdSense and related partners.
What This Means in Practice
Cookies and similar technologies help a website behave like a modern application. For example, they can remember your preferences, reduce repetitive prompts, and support basic security features like fraud prevention. Some cookies are set by EverydayTools (first‑party). Others can be set by third‑party services we use, such as advertising providers.
We aim to keep the experience simple: the core tools are designed to run in your browser, and most tool inputs are processed locally. At the same time, advertising and measurement technologies may still be loaded to support the site and understand usage patterns in aggregate.
Cookie Types You May Encounter
- Essential — required for core site functionality and remembering preferences.
- Analytics — helps us understand what pages are used and improve performance.
- Advertising — used by ad partners to deliver, measure, and protect ads.
Google AdSense and Advertising Cookies
Google and its partners may use cookies or identifiers to serve ads, measure ad performance, and prevent fraud. You can learn more at Google advertising technologies.
Your Choices and Controls
You are in control of cookies. Browsers typically let you block all cookies, block only third‑party cookies, or clear cookies and site data at any time. Blocking third‑party cookies is a common compromise that reduces cross‑site tracking while preserving many first‑party site conveniences.
If you use multiple devices or browsers, you may need to update settings in each one. Private browsing modes can also limit how long storage persists.
Local Storage and Similar Technologies
In addition to cookies, web apps sometimes use localStorage, sessionStorage, and other browser storage to remember UI preferences (for example, a selected tool option or display setting). These values are stored in your browser and can be cleared the same way you clear cookies.
Managing Cookies
You can block, delete, or limit cookies in your browser settings. You can also manage Google ad personalization at Google Ad Settings.
Retention and Updates
Different cookies can have different lifetimes. Some are session cookies that disappear when you close your browser. Others are persistent cookies that remain until they expire or you delete them. We may update this policy when our use of cookies changes or when partners and legal requirements evolve.
Quick FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
What are cookies?
Cookies are small text files that websites store in your browser. They can keep you signed in, remember preferences, and help websites understand how pages are used.
Does EverydayTools use cookies?
Yes. EverydayTools uses cookies and similar browser storage for essential functionality (like remembering UI preferences), and may use advertising/measurement cookies via Google AdSense and partners.
What is the difference between cookies and localStorage?
Cookies are sent to a site with each request and often have automatic expiration rules. localStorage is stored in your browser and is typically used to remember settings client-side. Both can be used to remember preferences.
Are EverydayTools tools private?
Most EverydayTools utilities run in your browser so inputs are processed locally. However, the site may still load analytics/ads scripts depending on your settings. For details, see the Privacy Policy.
What cookies does Google AdSense use?
Google and its partners may use cookies or identifiers to show relevant ads, measure ad performance, limit frequency, and detect fraud. Google explains these technologies in its advertising documentation.
How do I disable cookies in my browser?
You can block or delete cookies in your browser settings. Most browsers also allow you to block third‑party cookies while allowing essential first‑party cookies.
How do I control Google ad personalization?
You can manage ad personalization preferences in Google Ad Settings. If you are signed in to Google, these preferences may apply across devices.
Will blocking cookies break the site?
Blocking cookies can affect some features (like saving preferences). The core tools typically still work, but certain UI conveniences and ad/analytics features may behave differently.
How often is this cookie policy updated?
We update this page when our cookie usage changes or when legal/partner requirements evolve. The page shows a “last updated” date near the top.
Where can I learn more?
See our Privacy Policy for broader data practices, and our Terms/Disclaimer pages for usage rules and limitations.
Related Policies
Read our Privacy Policy, Terms, and Disclaimer.