Secria is fantastic
After using this email service for a bit, I can definitely say that the UX/UI design is very thoughtfully laid out, and if you're used to something like Google, it's both familiar and new. It's streamlined, with everything you need where you expect it to be. Dark mode was a welcome option, and right where I thought it'd be the moment I went looking for it.
I was worried at first about Secria being based in the US, but after asking ChatGPT about it, it became apparent to me that I shouldn't worry, because data privacy is less about what country it's stored in, and more about HOW it's stored.
Secria being based in Delaware, US isn't a non-starter for a security and privacy based email service like this. Delaware also has very strong personal privacy laws, some of which were enacted recently:
Encryption & Minimal Retention
Uses post-quantum end-to-end encryption so only sender and recipient can decrypt content.
Collects minimal metadata and no tracking pixels, reducing exposure even under legal compulsion.
Transparent Privacy Policy
Publicly commits to not monetizing or tracking user data.
These commitments are legally enforceable in the U.S. under FTC false-advertising rules.
Compliance with U.S. and State Laws
As a Delaware company, complies with the Delaware Personal Data Privacy Act (effective 2025).
Also follows applicable federal laws (COPPA, HIPAA, etc.) and stronger state laws like California’s CCPA/CPRA when serving users in those states.
Cross-Border Protections
For EU/EEA users, can rely on Standard Contractual Clauses and supplementary encryption to meet GDPR transfer rules.
Privacy-by-Design Architecture
Default privacy features include self-destructing emails, alias rotation, tracker blocking, and sender verification.
Zero-knowledge infrastructure means even if compelled to produce data, decrypted content is not accessible.
Bottom Line
Secria is still subject to U.S. law and possible government requests, but its combination of minimal data collection, strong encryption, and enforceable privacy commitments makes it difficult for anyone—including Secria itself—to access user content.
9 August 2025
Unprompted review