Nutrisense is a health technology company delivering a personalized metabolism training program led by registered dietitians and powered by 24/7 glucose data from a wearable biosensor.[1] Members use continuous glucose insights and 1:1 guidance to build habits that fit real life, with goals that include weight loss, higher energy, and craving control.[2]

Coaching transforms data into actionable steps, making progress practical and sustainable. Nutrisense supplies Stelo sensors through a strategic partnership with Dexcom.[3]

Background and Services

Nutrisense delivers a metabolism training program that combines 24/7 glucose data from a wearable glucose biosensor with 1:1 coaching from registered, glucose-certified dietitians.[4]

Members connect a compatible sensor to the app, view continuous trends, and log meals, activity, sleep, and stress. Analytics cover glycemic variability, fasting, and structured experiments so members can identify patterns tied to weight, energy, and cravings.

The program focuses on transforming data into actionable steps rather than mere interpretation: dietitians translate glucose responses into concrete actions, such as meal-timing adjustments, macronutrient targets, activity experiments, and habit goals, following the C.A.R.E. framework.

Sessions use 1:1 video calls, with in-app messaging available between scheduled calls. Video calls may be insurance-covered depending on eligibility. Hardware access includes over-the-counter Stelo sensors via Dexcom and a bring-your-own-sensor option in the Nutrisense app. Supported devices are Dexcom G6 and G7, and FreeStyle Libre 1, 2, and 3.

Funding

In July 2022, Nutrisense announced the completion of a US$25 million Series A funding round led by the healthcare investment firm 1315 Capital.[5] The funds were intended to expand operations and increase access to its metabolic health platform. At the time of the announcement, Nutrisense reported employing more than 120 people and having several thousand active subscribers.

Application and Features

Members who already use a compatible glucose device can link it in the app through a bring-your-own sensor (BYOS) option. The app also connects with services like Apple Health or Google Fit to combine activity, sleep, and food data with continuous glucose readings.

  • Logging and experiments - Members connect the biosensor to the app, log meals, activity, sleep, and stress, then run structured experiments. Analytics include glycemic variability and fasting metrics with trend views.
  • Meal scores and comparisons - The app calculates meal scores, highlights trends, and supports barcode scanning and side-by-side meal comparisons to help identify patterns.
  • Action plans over interpretation - Dietitians turn readings into steps such as meal timing, macronutrient targets, activity experiments, and habit goals, delivered through action plans and video calls.
  • Integrations for richer context - Syncs with MyFitnessPal for food logs and with Apple Health, Fitbit, and Oura for activity and sleep, so glucose trends sit next to daily behaviors.

Context in biosensor-enabled metabolic health

Nutrisense operates in a growing market for consumer biosensors and CGM services aimed at people without insulin therapy who want insight into glucose patterns and related behaviors.

Independent coverage by The Verge has noted the category’s expansion, as well as the limited evidence for weight-loss or metabolic improvements in non-diabetic populations, so expectations should remain measured.

According to company materials, Nutrisense frames the service as a health program that translates CGM and other biosensor readings into dietitian-guided habit changes, rather than tracking alone.

References

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