For busy women who want answers

Understand your gut.
Feel more like yourself.

Track meals, bloating and energy in minutes — then Glean reads them against your blood tests, hormones and DNA to show what's really behind the off days. Made for women, open to anyone. No calorie counting, no complicated food diary.

Download on theApp Store
Quick to track. Real answers. Better days.
9:41
Sunday · 18 May
Good morning, Sydney.
A small bouquet of how you're doing today.
A small notice
Dairy may be behind the afternoon bloating.
Read it ›
Log a meal
Note how you're feeling
Supplement
Water
Alcohol
Earlier today
08:20Scrambled eggs on sourdough
12:45Chicken & avocado salad
14:30Sleep · 7h 12mHealth
A handful of ways in, one steady habit

Capture it however the moment suits.

Write
“Two eggs, sourdough, salted butter.” Glean reads it back as tidy items — no dropdowns, no maths.
Speak
Tap once and talk. Glean transcribes in your own words while you get on with your morning.
Photograph
Snap the plate. Glean names the dish and breaks it into its ingredients, so you can tweak anything it didn't quite catch.
Notice how you feel
A simple scale for bloating, stool, fatigue and wind — plus a short note if it helps. Two taps in the evening is plenty.
Health app sync
Whatever your phone already measures — sleep, activity, heart, cycle and more — flows in read-only. Apple Health now, Android to follow.
Medical reports — our specialty
Upload any blood test, thyroid, hormone, DNA or allergy report. Glean reads every marker against your food and symptoms — the part other gut apps can't do.
Where it clicks

It connects the dots you can't.

Every few days, Glean refreshes your rhythms — patterns across your food, sleep and symptoms, each built only from your own entries and shown with its confidence in plain sight. No guessing, no fearmongering.

Once a week it goes further — a considered written report that ties everything together: your meals, your health-app stats, even the lab and DNA reports you've added, into how the week really went.

Then it offers a small, optional experiment, and checks in to see if it helped.

Medium · 14 days
Onions may be behind the bloating.
5 of the last 7 days you ate onions. Bloating followed within four hours.
"Try a four-day onion break — we'll check whether the bloating eases."
An honest deal

Two plans. No surprises.

Free
$0
Everything you need to start noticing.
Log by text, voice or photo
Symptoms, bowel & how you feel
Health-app sync, read-only
Fresh rhythms — patterns every few days
Export your data any time
Pro
$20 / yr
or $3 a month · 2-week free trial
For when you want the fuller picture.
Everything in Free, with unlimited history
Your week, read in full — the deep weekly report
Two-week experiments that track themselves
Upload any test — bloods, hormones, DNA, scans
Allergy panels, read in context — all woven together
What Glean surfaces is never medical advice — it's there to help you have a better conversation in the doctor's office.
Questions, answered

Before you begin.

Why "Glean"

To glean is to gather what's left in the field after the harvest — slowly, by hand, missing nothing that matters. That's the pace we wanted for paying attention to your body: not another tracker shouting numbers, but a quiet companion that notices, and tells you gently.

Begin gently.

Open it, and start noticing — gently, at your own pace.

Glean
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Notice slowly.