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Privacy

Does Granola Save Your Recordings? What Happens to Your Meeting Audio

Short answer: no, Granola does not save your meeting recordings. Granola's own security FAQ says meeting audio is cached temporarily while the meeting is transcribed and deleted once transcription is complete — "we do not retain audio recordings" (as of July 2026). If you're searching for how to replay a call you took notes on with Granola, the audio is already gone.

That one design decision has consequences in both directions — some good for privacy, some bad for you — so it's worth understanding exactly what Granola keeps, what it discards, and what to do if the recording itself is the thing you need.

What happens to your audio, step by step

Granola doesn't send a bot into your meeting. It captures the audio playing on your Mac (both sides of the call), transcribes it on your device, and uses the transcript — plus whatever rough notes you typed — to write up clean notes. During this window the audio exists as a temporary local cache. Once the transcript is finalized, the audio is deleted. There's no setting to keep it (as of July 2026).

So three different things have three different fates:

What happens Where it ends up
Audio Cached during the meeting, then deleted Nowhere — it's gone
Transcript Kept Granola's cloud, tied to your account
Notes Kept Granola's cloud, tied to your account

That second column matters. Deleting the audio is a genuine privacy win — nobody can leak a recording that doesn't exist. But the content of your meeting doesn't stay on your Mac: transcripts and notes sync to Granola's servers — AWS, in the United States, retained indefinitely unless you delete them or set a retention policy. And on Free and Business plans, anonymised meeting data may be used to improve Granola's models by default, with an opt-out in Settings → Data & sharing (as of July 2026). We walk through all of this in Speechmark vs Granola.

Why "the audio is gone" can bite

For most standups and syncs, you'll never miss the recording. The cases where you will are precisely the high-stakes ones:

  • Verification. Transcription is good, not perfect. When the note says the client agreed to "$40k" and your memory says $14k, the recording is the referee. Without it, an AI-generated note is the only record — and no way to check which of you is wrong.
  • Exact wording. "We'll try to hit March" and "we commit to March" transcribe similarly and mean different things. Nuance, hedges, and tone live in the audio.
  • Disputes. If a commitment made on a call is ever contested — scope, price, who said what — a note written by an AI is a weak exhibit. The recording is the evidence, and with Granola there is nothing to produce.

Consultants scoping engagements, founders negotiating terms, and anyone in a legal- or compliance-adjacent seat should treat the raw audio as the record, not a byproduct.

If you need to keep your meeting audio

You have three honest options:

  1. Keep Granola, accept the trade. If you love its augmented-notes workflow and your meetings are low-stakes, audio deletion is arguably a feature. Just flip the data-sharing opt-out if the training default bothers you.
  2. Run a separate recorder alongside. Clunky — two apps, two permissions, and the recording lives apart from the notes it belongs to.
  3. Use a notes app that retains the audio. This is the case Speechmark was built for: it records and transcribes on your Mac like Granola does — no bot, on-device — but keeps the original audio next to the transcript and summary, as local files with no account and no cloud copy. One purchase, $79 per Mac. If you want the full field, including free options like BB Recorder that also store recordings locally, see our Granola alternatives roundup.

The bottom line

Granola deletes your meeting audio by design and keeps your transcripts and notes in its cloud. Whether that's the right trade depends on what your meetings are worth: if a transcript-quality note is always enough, Granola's approach is clean and genuinely privacy-conscious. If the recording is sometimes the record, you need a tool that treats it that way.

See how Speechmark works → · Pricing →

Frequently asked questions

Does Granola record your meetings?

Granola captures your Mac's audio during a meeting in order to transcribe it — no bot joins the call — but it does not keep the recording. Per Granola's security FAQ, audio is cached temporarily and deleted once transcription is complete (as of July 2026). What persists is the transcript and the AI-written notes.

Can you replay a meeting in Granola?

No. Because the audio is deleted after transcription, there is nothing to play back. If you need to re-hear exactly what was said — a number, a commitment, a tone — you'd need a tool that retains the recording, or a separate recorder running alongside.

Where are Granola transcripts and notes stored?

In Granola's cloud, tied to your account. Granola's security FAQ says meeting data is stored on AWS servers in the United States and retained indefinitely unless you delete it or an admin sets a retention policy (as of July 2026).

Is there a meeting notes app that keeps the audio on your Mac?

Yes. Speechmark records, transcribes, and summarizes entirely on your Mac and keeps the original audio next to the transcript — nothing is uploaded, and there's no account. BB Recorder (free) also stores recordings locally. See our roundup of private Granola alternatives for the full field.