sobriety.tools is a free, open-source recovery support app built by people in recovery, for people in recovery.
Recovery is hard. Finding meetings shouldn't be. Accessing crisis help shouldn't be. Tracking your progress shouldn't be.
We built sobriety.tools because we needed it ourselves. The existing apps were fragmented, outdated, or paywalled. We believe that the tools that save lives should be free, beautiful, and work offline when you need them most.
This app honors the traditions of anonymity that have kept recovery communities safe for decades. Your data is yours. We don't sell it, share it, or analyze it. We just want to help.
Search NA, AA, CMA, SMART Recovery, and Recovery Dharma meetings by location, day, time, and format. Save your favorites for quick access.
Breathing exercises, grounding techniques, and one-tap hotline access. Works offline because crises don't wait for WiFi.
HALT check-ins, journaling with AI reflection, safety plan builder, and milestone tracking. Build the habits that keep you well.
Your recovery is private. Journals are encrypted. We never sell data. Anonymous participation is always an option.
We aggregate meeting data from official fellowship sources to provide a comprehensive, up-to-date meeting finder. We don't host this data ourselves—we're just making it easier to search.
Data from BMLT (Basic Meeting List Toolbox), the official NA meeting list system used by regions worldwide.
bmlt.appData from the AA Meeting Guide API and individual area websites that publish their meeting schedules.
aa.orgScience-based mutual support. Data from SMART Recovery's official meeting finder.
smartrecovery.orgBuddhist-inspired recovery. Data from community-maintained meeting lists.
recoverydharma.orgMeeting data is refreshed hourly. If you notice incorrect meeting information, please contact the originating fellowship to update their records.
sobriety.tools is built with reliable, open-source tools:
We believe recovery tools should be transparent and trustworthy. Our privacy policy and security practices are always publicly available.
We're a small team of people in recovery who happen to be software engineers. We built this because we needed it, and we keep it running because others need it too.
In keeping with the traditions of anonymity, we don't put our faces or full names on this project. What matters is the work, not the personalities behind it.
"Anonymity is the spiritual foundation of all our traditions, ever reminding us to place principles before personalities."