WolksMail - Secure, zero-trust email client built for privacy

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WolksMail is a premium, zero-trust email client for Android built for privacy and complete control. All emails, account data, credentials, and databases are encrypted and stored only on your device—never on Rewolks servers. Features include PGP encryption, multiple accounts, delayed sending, swipe actions, customizable themes, and a clean interface. No trackers, no analytics, no data selling. Local-first design keeps your data private and supports GDPR compliance.

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Hey Product Hunt community! 👋 I'm the maker of WolksMail, and I’m incredibly excited to share it with you all today! What inspired me to build this? Standard email apps have a hidden catch: most of them route, parse, or cache your emails on their own middleman servers. This means your personal communications, login credentials, and attachments are sitting on a third-party server you don't control. I wanted an email client that respects the absolute privacy of its users. The solution: WolksMail WolksMail is a local-first, zero-trust email client. It connects directly from your phone to your email providers (Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, IMAP/SMTP). Your databases, accounts, passwords, and PGP keys are encrypted and stored strictly on your local device. We have no middleman servers, no trackers, and we never collect your data. Features you'll love: 🔒 Total Local Privacy: No secondary servers or caches. 🔑 Local PGP Encryption: Encrypt and decrypt emails directly on your device. 🚫 No Trackers: 100% free of analytics trackers and behavioral profiling. 🎨 Premium UI: Beautiful modern design, edge-to-edge support, and custom swipe actions. I’d love to hear your thoughts, feedback, and suggestions. I'll be here all day to answer your questions! Thank you for checking out WolksMail! 🚀

Local-first email clients on Android are pretty rare, so this caught my eye. The PGP support and no-server storage approach feel like exactly what I'd want for sensitive work emails.

The local-only storage approach is genuinely appealing, and the PGP support feels like it was built by someone who actually cares about privacy rather than just checking a box.

how does delayed sending actually work without it hitting some server first, is it purely scheduled locally on the device?