Ultrahuman Home has received a major software upgrade that transforms it from a simple ambient-tracker into a comprehensive, wearable-free sleep and respiratory monitor now offering an Ambient Sleep Score, snore and cough detection, and a full Respiratory Health Score to help users spot potential breathing issues like snoring or sleep-disordered breathing.
Glimpse:
With its latest update (rolled out November 2025), Ultrahuman Home uses dual-microphone AI audio analysis and environmental sensors (light, temperature, air quality, noise) to evaluate sleep quality, detect snoring, coughing or irregular breathing, and generate a night-by-night sleep-health report all without needing a wearable device. Users get a simple sleep score, a respiratory-health score, and contextual data (e.g. CO₂, noise, lighting) to understand what might be disrupting their rest.
The consumer-health startup Ultrahuman has rolled out a substantial update to its at-home device, Ultrahuman Home, aiming to bring clinical-grade sleep and respiratory monitoring into everyday bedrooms. The upgrade introduces a new “Ambient Sleep Score,” a metric that summarises how conducive your sleeping environment was overnight factoring in air quality, CO₂ levels, humidity, noise, light exposure, and temperature.
Beyond environmental factors, the device now includes dual microphones and AI-based audio analytics that can distinguish between different sound events: snoring, coughing, regular breathing, and external noises (like traffic or sirens). Using this, it generates a Respiratory Health Score potentially useful as a first alert for breathing irregularities or sleep-related disorders (e.g. snoring or sleep apnea).
According to Ultrahuman, the update also deepens integration with its wearables if you use their Ring AIR via a feature called UltraSync. This links internal physiological data (heart rate, movement, sleep stages) with ambient and respiratory data from Home, offering a comprehensive view of how both body and environment impact rest and recovery. Ultrahuman further plans — by December 2025 — to extend functionality: linking CO₂ data to stress indicators and even enabling smart-home automation (like triggering air purifiers or adjusting lighting) for optimal sleep.
For people who dislike wearing rings/wearables at night, Ultrahuman Home’s wearable-free monitoring offers a compelling alternative. At a reduced Black-Friday price (US$ ~399–549), the device could democratize access to sophisticated sleep and respiratory insights though experts still caution that it’s not a replacement for clinical sleep studies.
“With this upgrade, the bedroom becomes a health lab you no longer need a wearable or complicated setup to get actionable insights about your sleep and breathing.”
By
HB Team
