I Am Sober alternatives: what to try in 2026
The best I Am Sober alternative depends on what is missing for you. I Am Sober is a strong sober-day counter with daily pledges and a large community. If you need active help during a craving, support at 3 a.m., or a streak that survives a slip, look at Orlyn (our app), Reframe for structured education, or Sunnyside for cutting back. We list the current US App Store price for each one below, so you can weigh cost against fit.
What does I Am Sober do well?
I Am Sober is a very good sober-day counter, and more besides: a pledge each morning, a review each night, milestone celebrations, and community groups organized by how far along you are. As of June 2026, the I Am Sober site reports more than 127 million daily pledges made and over 30 million addictions set up and tracked. The store listings back that scale up: a 4.9 rating from more than 175,000 reviews on the US App Store, and a 4.8 from more than 120,000 reviews with more than 10 million downloads on Google Play. It runs on both iOS and Android, lists a couple dozen languages, and includes a savings tracker so you can watch the money add up.
The pledge loop is the underrated part. Promising yourself one alcohol-free day in the morning and reviewing it at night gives the day a deliberate structure, not just a number. And the community is big enough that someone has almost always been exactly where you are now. The I Am Sober site itself still does not publish prices, so we pulled the current numbers from the App Store; they are in the next section.
One thing before we compare anything: Orlyn is our app, and it appears below as one of the alternatives. We will be plain about where I Am Sober and the others are the better choice.
How much does I Am Sober premium cost?
I Am Sober costs nothing to download, and the core counter, daily pledges, and community are included at no charge. On the US App Store in June 2026, its in-app purchases list premium at $9.99 a month or $39.99 a year, with a six-month option at $27.49, a separate $29.99 annual tier, and $0.99 milestone packs. Some roundups list the annual plan at $119.88, which is $9.99 multiplied by twelve rather than a real tier; the current US annual subscription is $39.99. Prices move with region and with promotions, so confirm the figure on the subscription screen before you commit.
Why do people look for I Am Sober alternatives?
People usually go looking for an alternative for three specific reasons: the app is built around tracking and community rather than in-the-moment craving tools, replies from the community can take hours at odd times, and a sober-day counter, by its nature, starts over after a slip.
Think about what a counter can do at 9:47 p.m. on a Friday. It can show you the number. The number matters, but it does not slow your breathing, walk you through the next ten minutes, or give you something to do with your hands. I Am Sober’s own pitch is that it is about more than counting days, and the pledges and milestones are aimed squarely at motivation. They are just not built for the moment the urge peaks.
Community has the same shape. The groups are warm and well organized, but they are asynchronous. Post at 3 a.m. and you are waiting on a reply that may arrive at breakfast, which is hours after the moment you needed it.
Then there is the reset. A counter that returns to zero after one drink is honest arithmetic, and for some people that bright line is exactly the motivation they need. For others it sets up the worst night of the month: one slip becomes “the streak is dead anyway,” and one drink turns into six. If you have felt that spiral, consider a different streak design instead of more willpower: one that records the slip without erasing the progress around it.
Which apps like I Am Sober fit which need?
Match the app to the thing that keeps breaking, not to the one with the biggest community. Here is the short version, with the honest caveats attached.
| App | Built for | Standout | Price (US, June 2026) | Fit note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I Am Sober | Counting days with a large community | Daily pledges and milestone groups | No cost to download; premium $9.99/mo or $39.99/yr (App Store) | Craving-moment tools are not the focus; a day counter starts over after a slip |
| Orlyn (ours) | Quitting, with help in the hard minutes | Craving SOS, 24/7 AI coach, streak freezes | Paid membership, no ad-supported tier | iOS only |
| Reframe | Understanding your drinking | Daily neuroscience program and courses | From $13.99/mo or $79.99/yr (App Store) | Lesson-based; states it is not designed to treat alcohol use disorder |
| Sunnyside | Cutting back rather than quitting | Weekly drink plan with human text coaching | $8.25/mo billed at $99/yr, 15-day trial | Moderation-first; now also sells naltrexone telehealth |
| Nomo | Minimalist counting at no cost | Multiple sobriety clocks, no in-app purchases | No cost | A counter only; no coaching, courses, or craving tools |
Orlyn: for the craving itself, and a streak that survives a slip
Orlyn is built around the minutes a counter leaves you alone in. Open the craving SOS and it walks you through guided box breathing (4 counts in, 4 counts out), an urge-surfing timer, and 5-4-3-2-1 grounding, then puts your own “why” back in front of you. When breathing is not enough, a 24/7 support coach is there to talk it through at 3 a.m. It is clearly labeled as AI and it is not medical care; it is company and tactics for a hard moment, awake when no forum is.
The streak works differently too. You check in once a day with one tap, and streak freezes cover the days that go wrong, so a slip lands as a data point instead of a demolition. Pseudonymous weekly leagues add a light competitive pull, and money-saved tracking shows what the change is worth in plain numbers. If you want the full playbook for riding out an urge, with or without an app, read our guide on how to stop alcohol cravings.
To be fair about fit: Orlyn is iOS only, and it is a paid membership with no ad-supported tier. If you are on Android, want a huge established community with years of shared milestone stories, or mainly want a counter that simply counts, I Am Sober remains the better pick.
Reframe: for people who want to understand their drinking
Reframe is the strongest alternative if you learn your way out of habits. Its core is a daily neuroscience-based alcohol reduction program built with medical and mental health experts, surrounded by recorded and live courses, a toolkit of meditations and games for cravings, and a 24/7 anonymous community, per the Reframe site as of June 2026. The same page reports more than 4.5 million downloads as of August 2025, and the program serves both people quitting and people moderating. On the US App Store, Reframe lists Access at $13.99 a month or $79.99 a year, with higher tiers running up to $119.99 a year, and it holds a 4.7 rating from more than 41,000 reviews.
The honest trade: Reframe is a curriculum. If a short daily lesson feels like an anchor, it will suit you, and on that need it beats Orlyn outright, since we do not teach courses. If lessons feel like homework, you will skip day 9, feel behind by day 12, and quietly stop opening the app. Worth knowing too: Reframe’s own site states the app is not designed to treat alcohol use disorder. We compare its approach with Sunnyside’s in detail in Reframe vs Sunnyside.
Sunnyside: for cutting back rather than quitting
Sunnyside is the right I Am Sober alternative if your goal is fewer drinks, not zero. You get a personalized plan delivered every Sunday, simple drink tracking, and human coaches (not AI) you can reach by text message, in a format the company pitches at about 3 minutes a day, according to the Sunnyside site as of June 2026. The site lists a Basic plan at $8.25 per month billed at $99 per year, with a 15-day trial, and is explicit that there is no pressure to quit.
One shift worth flagging: the Sunnyside homepage now leads with naltrexone telehealth, billing itself as “Naltrexone, Telehealth, Coaching to Drink Less Alcohol or Quit,” so a prescription option now sits alongside the coaching. If medication is something you are weighing, our guide to medications to stop drinking covers how naltrexone and the alternatives actually work.
That positioning is both the point and the limit. If you have already decided alcohol is done for you, a weekly drinks budget is the wrong instrument: tracking drinks you do not intend to have keeps the negotiation open. But if moderation is genuinely your goal, Sunnyside fits it better than any sobriety counter does, I Am Sober included. We put the two side by side in Sunnyside vs I Am Sober.
What if you want an alternative that costs nothing?
Some people just want a day counter that never asks for a subscription, and that is a reasonable place to start. Nomo is the cleanest option: it is listed on the App Store with no in-app purchases, holds a 4.8 rating from nearly 16,000 reviews, and can run several sobriety clocks at once for anyone counting more than one thing. I Am Sober’s own no-cost tier already covers the counter, the daily pledges, and the community, so you may not need to switch at all. And for planning rather than counting, NIAAA’s Rethinking Drinking site adds calculators and change-planning tools at no charge from a federal source.
The honest caveat: tools that cost nothing count days well, but in-the-moment craving support is the part that paid apps charge for, ours included. Orlyn is a paid membership, so if spending nothing is the priority, Nomo or the tier you already have is the better answer, and we would rather say that plainly than pretend otherwise.
Do sobriety apps actually work?
It is a fair question to ask before paying for any of them. The most useful single piece of evidence is a 2017 Cochrane review by Kaner and colleagues, which pooled dozens of trials of digital alcohol interventions and found that people using them drank about 23 grams of alcohol per week less than people who got no or minimal help, roughly three UK units, on moderate-quality evidence. In plain terms, the average person using one of these apps drinks somewhat less than the average person using nothing, which is worth something but is not the same as a cure. The effect is also measured mostly as drinking less rather than stopping outright. The honest reading: an app is support, not treatment. It can nudge the average in the right direction and hold some structure between sessions of harder help, but it does not replace a clinician or a mutual-support group.
The same honesty applies to safety. If you are drinking heavily every day, do not let any app talk you into stopping cold on your own: MedlinePlus warns that alcohol withdrawal can quickly become life-threatening. Talk to a clinician first, and keep crisis resources close; an app is the right tool for the ordinary hard evening, not for managing a medically risky detox.
How do you choose your I Am Sober alternative?
Choose by your failure mode, not by feature lists. Ask what actually went wrong on your hardest recent night, then pick the tool aimed at that moment.
- Counting and community kept you going, and still do: stay with I Am Sober. Switching has a cost, and the pledge ritual is hard to replace.
- Evenings are where it breaks: you want craving-first tools and a slip-tolerant streak, the approach described above.
- You do not really understand why you drink: Reframe’s curriculum is built for exactly that question.
- Your goal is honestly fewer, not zero: Sunnyside, and skip the sobriety counters entirely.
- You want to spend nothing: Nomo, or the no-cost tier you already have inside I Am Sober, will count your days without a subscription.
Two checks before you commit. First, run your own numbers through our alcohol spending calculator; whatever an app costs per month, set it against what drinking costs you, and the decision usually clarifies itself. Second, a safety note no app replaces: if you have been drinking heavily every day, stopping suddenly can be dangerous, so talk to a clinician before you stop and keep crisis resources close.
If you want the wider field beyond the apps we cover here, our roundup of quit-drinking apps covers it. Whatever you pick, give it two weeks of honest daily use before you judge it. The counter was never your problem; the empty minutes were. Pick the tool that fills them.
The bottom line
I Am Sober is a genuinely good counter with a large community, and if that already keeps you going, there is no reason to switch. The honest limit is the paywall: the no-cost tier covers the sobriety tracker, motivational tools, and community threads, but creating or joining curated accountability groups sits behind its paid Sober Plus subscription, as the Oar Health review describes. So the bottom line, disclosed as ours: if the counter was not enough and you needed active help in the hard minutes, we think our own app is the best alternative. Orlyn, on the App Store as Orlyn: Quit Drinking, leads with a craving SOS, a 24/7 coach clearly labeled AI and not medical care, and streak freezes so one slip is a data point, not a reset.
Frequently asked questions
Why switch from I Am Sober?
I Am Sober is a strong sober-day counter with daily pledges, milestone groups, and a big community. People usually look elsewhere when they want active help during cravings, coaching at odd hours, or a streak that does not feel destroyed by a single slip.
Which alternative fits which person?
Orlyn, our app, focuses on the hard minutes: a craving SOS, a 24/7 AI coach, and streak freezes so a slip is a data point rather than a reset. Reframe fits people who want a daily neuroscience curriculum. Sunnyside fits moderation and drink tracking rather than quitting outright.
How much does I Am Sober premium cost?
I Am Sober costs nothing to download, and its core counter, daily pledges, and community are included at no charge. On the US App Store in June 2026, its in-app purchases list premium at $9.99 a month or $39.99 a year, with a six-month option at $27.49 and $0.99 milestone packs. Prices vary by region, so confirm on the subscription screen.
Is there a no-cost I Am Sober alternative?
Yes. Nomo is listed on the App Store with no in-app purchases and tracks several sobriety clocks at once. I Am Sober's own no-cost tier already covers counting, pledges, and community. NIAAA's Rethinking Drinking site adds calculators and planning tools at no charge from a federal source. Tools that cost nothing count days well; what they lack is in-the-moment craving support, which is what paid apps, ours included, charge for.
Do sobriety apps actually work?
The evidence is modest but real. A 2017 Cochrane review found that people using digital alcohol interventions drank about 23 grams of alcohol per week less than people who got no or minimal help, roughly three UK units, on moderate-quality evidence. An app is support, not treatment. If you drink heavily every day, talk to a clinician before stopping, because alcohol withdrawal can quickly become life-threatening.
Which app is the best I Am Sober alternative?
If counting days was not enough and you needed active help in the hard minutes, our pick is Orlyn, our own app, on the App Store as Orlyn: Quit Drinking: a craving SOS, a 24/7 coach clearly labeled AI, and streak freezes so one slip is a data point, not a reset. I Am Sober stays excellent if its no-cost counter and community already work for you.
Sources
- I Am Sober, I Am Sober
- Reframe, Reframe
- Sunnyside, Sunnyside
- I Am Sober on the App Store, Apple App Store
- Personalised digital interventions for reducing hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption (Kaner et al., 2017), Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (PubMed)