Legal

Privacy Policy

Last updated: July 2026

What we collect

When you use BecomeFreelancer, we may collect the information you provide directly - such as your name, email address, and the CV/PDF you upload - along with basic account and payment information.

How we use it

  • To generate your Upwork profile, portfolio, and case studies.
  • To create and manage your account and dashboard access.
  • To process your one-time payment securely.
  • To provide customer support when you contact us.

Legal basis for processing

We process your information to perform the contract with you (to generate and deliver your Upwork profile and provide dashboard access), to comply with legal obligations (such as payment records), and, where applicable, based on your consent.

Third-party services

We rely on trusted providers to operate BecomeFreelancer: Supabase for account and database infrastructure (hosted in the EU), Paddle for payment processing, Resend for transactional email, and an AI provider (such as OpenAI) to generate profile content from the information you submit. These providers process data on our behalf and under their own security and privacy standards. See our Cookie Policy for details on cookies specifically.

International data transfers

Our core infrastructure is hosted in the EU. Where a provider processes data outside your country, we rely on that provider's own safeguards (such as standard contractual clauses) for the transfer.

Data retention

We keep your uploaded CV, generated profile data, and account information for as long as your account is active, or as required to provide the service and comply with legal obligations. You can request deletion at any time - see below.

Your rights

Depending on where you live, you may have the right to access, correct, delete, or export your personal data, or to object to or restrict certain processing. You can exercise any of these rights at any time by contacting hi@becomefreelancer.com. If you're in the EU/EEA or UK, you also have the right to lodge a complaint with your local data protection supervisory authority.