Eating Glasses hello@eatingglasses.com

Understand your glucose patterns.

Eating Glasses is a general wellness app for people who use insulin. It reads the glucose data from your continuous glucose monitor and helps you see what's really going on — then suggests safe, everyday experiments to try and checks whether they actually helped. No manual logging.

Coming to iPhone and Android in 2026

How it works

01

Reads your patterns automatically

Connects to the health data on your phone and reads your glucose history automatically. Nothing to log, no meals to enter — it works from day one.

02

Turns numbers into plain language

It surfaces the patterns in your data — the recurring highs, lows, and steady stretches — and explains what they tend to mean, in context.

03

Suggests safe experiments

Small, everyday wellness ideas grounded in published evidence and tailored to your own data — never anything about insulin or medication.

04

Closes the loop

It checks whether a change actually helped, so over time you learn what works for your body — not someone else's average.

Built around safety

Your glucose stays on your device. Patterns are analyzed on your phone by a fixed, rules-based engine. Your glucose is never sent to an AI service, and we never sell your data.

Your care team stays at the center. Eating Glasses is a general wellness app — it never tells you anything about insulin or doses. Those decisions are always between you and your healthcare provider.

About Eating Glasses

Eating Glasses LLC is an independent company based in Washington, DC, building wellness tools for people living with insulin-dependent diabetes. It was founded by someone who has lived with type 1 diabetes for more than two decades — and set out to build the tool he always wished existed.

Questions or press: hello@eatingglasses.com

Eating Glasses provides general wellness and educational information only. It is not medical advice and does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition, and it does not recommend or calculate insulin or medication doses. Always work with your healthcare provider for treatment decisions.