ShopCalc — Support

Last updated: 2026-05-18

App: ShopCalc — Real Price · Version: 1.0 (iOS) · Publisher: Shon Baranes (operating brand: SB Studio)

ShopCalc is a simple shopping calculator: unit prices, discounts, deal comparisons, tax/VAT estimates, basket totals, and a Price Memory for last-known prices. Free to use. No account. No tracking SDKs beyond Google's AdMob banner.

Need help?

Contact: sbs.app.supp@gmail.com

We typically respond within a few business days. When emailing, please include:

Common questions

Why is the bottom banner ad sometimes blank in Europe?

ShopCalc shows only non-personalized banner ads. In the EEA, UK, and Switzerland, Google's consent message must be acknowledged before ads are served. If consent has not been completed, the banner is suppressed for that session. ShopCalc itself continues to work normally.

Where are my saved Price Memory entries stored?

On your iPhone, in the app's local storage. ShopCalc does not have a server, so your entries are not synced or backed up. Deleting the app removes them.

Can I sync between devices?

Not in version 1.0.

Is ShopCalc paid?

No. ShopCalc 1.0 is free. There are no in-app purchases and no subscriptions.

Why is the tax estimate slightly different from my receipt?

ShopCalc's tax and VAT estimators are quick-math aids only. Real receipts may include rounding rules, regional surcharges, or item-level taxability that ShopCalc does not model. The in-app disclaimer applies: not tax, legal, or financial advice.

Does ShopCalc work offline?

The calculators work offline. The Amazon "Real-world deals" card requires a network connection because it opens Amazon in your browser. The banner ad slot also requires a network connection to load; if offline, the slot stays empty.

Privacy & Terms

Languages

ShopCalc 1.0 ships with four UI languages: English, Hebrew, Spanish, Portuguese. You can change the language from inside the app.

Currencies

ShopCalc 1.0 can display values in 16 currencies. The display currency is a preference only — ShopCalc does not perform foreign-exchange conversion; it just labels the numeric output.