privacy

What is my browser privacy score and fingerprint

See how fingerprintable your browser is — signals collected only on your device.

Reading browser signals…
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Signals are read in your browser. We do not upload your fingerprint to score it.

Solutions that can help in your case

How the privacy score works

We collect public browser signals already available to any website (UA, screen, timezone, canvas/WebGL when allowed, etc.) and turn them into an educational score. More unique high-value signals lower the score.

Nothing is uploaded to “compute” your grade. Canvas and WebGL hashes stay on-device. This is not a substitute for threat modeling or a VPN kill-switch test.

How to use it

  1. Open: Load the page on HTTPS.

  2. Read score: Check the 0–100 score and letter grade.

  3. Review signals: Scan the table for high-risk rows.

  4. Improve: Adjust browser privacy settings and re-scan.

Do you feel tracked everywhere you browse?

Ads and analytics often re-identify browsers even without cookies, using fingerprint combinations of hardware, fonts, canvas, and WebGL.

This page shows which signals your browser exposes right now. Pair it with the VPN leak test if you care about network identity too.

Practical ways to reduce fingerprint risk

  • Prefer browsers with anti-fingerprinting (strict modes, containers, or hardened builds).
  • Limit extensions — each one can add uniqueness.
  • Disable unnecessary third-party cookies and use HTTPS-only when possible.
  • Avoid installing random fonts packs that make your setup unique.
  • Use a reputable VPN for IP/network identity; re-test WebRTC leaks after connecting.
  • Keep software updated — old engines are easier to target.
  • Separate work and personal profiles or containers.
  • Remember: “score 100” is rare on mainstream browsers — progress beats perfection.

What browser fingerprinting is

Fingerprinting combines many small attributes (screen size, timezone, GPU string, canvas noise) into a likely-unique ID without storing a classic cookie.

Sites you never “logged into” can still recognize return visits when the combination is stable.

Why we score “risk” per signal

Not every attribute is equal. Canvas/WebGL and ultra-detailed UAs usually help trackers more than a simple language code.

We label low/medium/high track risk to explain trade-offs — not to scare.

Limits of this test

We do not enumerate fonts, AudioContext, or advanced client rectangles. Modern trackers may use more vectors.

We also do not judge VPN quality here — use the dedicated leak tool for IP/WebRTC.

Privacy vs convenience

Strict privacy modes can break banking or media sites. Choose a profile: daily driver vs high-privacy container.

Honest tools help you decide — not force a single lifestyle.

When a VPN still matters

Fingerprint reduction does not hide your IP. If you care about network location and ISP visibility, a reputable VPN with a kill switch complements this score — then re-run the leak test.

Privacy score FAQ

Yes — in this tool higher means fewer high-value fingerprint signals exposed.