Why “I feel fine” falls short
Most of us trust how we feel. We count drinks. We wait an hour. We drink water. But by the time you actually feel impaired, your number has been climbing for a while — and feeling has almost nothing to do with it. The internal gauge that's supposed to warn you is the first thing alcohol switches off.

- “I feel fine” is the first thing alcohol switches off
- Counting drinks is already wrong by the second round
- “Wait an hour per drink” is folklore, not science
- Coffee and water do not lower your BAC
- You’re left with a guess, not a number

- Your real BAC on a clear digital readout
- The fuel-cell sensor class the pros rely on
- A true number in about 5 seconds
- Tells you when you’ll be clear, not just if
- You decide with a number — before the keys
Know your number before you turn the key
Two drinks at dinner can put you over the legal limit and still leave you feeling completely fine. Body weight, food, sleep, medication, and the time between drinks all change your number — and none of them tell you what it actually is.
Your BAC can keep climbing after your last drink. Seeing your real number before the keys are in the ignition is the whole difference — the moment you decide to wait it out, call a cab, or hand someone else the keys.
What changed after TrueRead

I’m 65 and I have been having wine with my husband at dinner for forty years. Three weeks in with this thing I have learned that two glasses puts me over the limit more often than not. The number on the screen is the only thing I trust. Bought a second one for my daughter.

Bought this after my golf buddy got a DUI driving home from the same dinner I was at. Three beers, blew a 0.09, his lawyer cost him $11,000. I keep mine in the glove box. Same sensor cops use. For 85 bucks this is the best money I have spent in years.

I have three kids in their twenties and two grandkids with new permits. I bought five of these — one for each kid. My oldest son called me three weeks later and said he had used it twice and taken an Uber both times. That phone call was worth every penny. Buy one for everyone you love.

Bought this skeptical. First time I used it I had two beers and a bourbon over three hours and blew a 0.07. I would have sworn I was fine. The number is almost never what I would have guessed. If you are wondering whether you need it, you do. Buy it. Stop guessing.
Don’t wait to find out the hard way.
Drunk driving is one of the most preventable causes of traffic death in America. The real risk is believing you’re safe because you feel fine — when feeling fine is the very first thing alcohol takes away.

Get your number, or get every penny back.
Try TrueRead for 100 days. If it doesn’t earn its place in your pocket, send it back for a full refund — and it’s backed by a 3-year warranty on top.
Frequently asked questions
How accurate is TrueRead?
How accurate is TrueRead?
TrueRead uses a fuel-cell (electrochemical) sensor — the sensor class professionals rely on because it reacts to alcohol and little else, unlike cheap semiconductor units and phone apps. Every device ships factory-calibrated. It is accurate to within ±0.005 of professional police-grade devices. It's a personal decision tool, not a legal or evidential device.
What if I'm having issues with my device?
What if I'm having issues with my device?
Most issues are simple: charge it fully, let it warm up, and wait at least 15 minutes after any drink, mouthwash or cigarette before testing so mouth alcohol doesn't skew the read. If it still isn't behaving, reach out — your TrueRead is covered by a 3-year warranty and our support team.
Can I return it if it stops working?
Can I return it if it stops working?
Yes. Try TrueRead for 100 days — if you're not satisfied, send it back for a full refund. Beyond that, every unit is backed by a 3-year warranty: if it stops working, we'll make it right. Orders ship free.



