Reframe vs Sunnyside: which approach fits your goal?
Reframe and Sunnyside are built for different goals. Reframe is education-first: a daily neuroscience curriculum, courses, and a large community, aimed at changing how you think about alcohol. Sunnyside is moderation-first: weekly drink plans, tracking, and human coaching by text, aimed at cutting back rather than quitting. Pick Sunnyside to drink less, Reframe to learn your way out, and read on for what neither covers.
The short answer
If your goal is cutting back while still drinking, choose Sunnyside; if you want a structured daily course that reworks how you think about alcohol, choose Reframe. They get compared constantly because both serve people rethinking their drinking, but they are not really rivals. One is a tracker with a plan. The other is a school with a community.
One disclosure before we go further: we make Orlyn, an iOS quit-drinking app, so we compete with both of these companies. Everything below comes from Reframe’s and Sunnyside’s own websites, checked in June 2026, and we will tell you plainly where each of them is the better choice, including where they beat us.
What does Reframe actually offer?
Reframe is a neuroscience-based alcohol reduction program built around daily learning: daily tasks, courses with recorded and live videos, a round-the-clock anonymous community, and a toolkit of craving distractions like meditations and games. The Reframe site says the program was developed with hundreds of medical and mental health experts and reports more than 4.5 million downloads and over a billion drinks eliminated, both as of August 2025. It runs on iOS and Android, and it serves both paths: mindful drinking and moderation as well as quitting entirely.
Two details matter before you commit. First, Reframe states plainly that it is not designed to treat alcohol use disorder; it points people who need treatment toward medical resources instead. Second, the price is oddly hard to pin down: Reframe’s own plans and pricing page currently shows "No plans available," so the real menu lives inside the app. Its US App Store listing sells subscriptions from $13.99 a month up to a $119.99-a-year Silver plan, holds a 4.7-star rating across about 41,000 US ratings, and carries an 18+ age rating.
Who it fits: people who change by understanding. If reading why alcohol disrupts your sleep makes you want to skip the nightcap, Reframe’s curriculum will work on you every single day, and it does structured education better than anyone in this category, including us. If you are weighing that curriculum against its price, we dig into the value question in is Reframe worth it.
What does Sunnyside actually offer?
Sunnyside is a moderation system: you set a weekly drink plan, log what you actually drink, and get accountability from human coaches over text. The Sunnyside site describes tracking your drinks as the foundation of the whole habit change. Every Sunday you get a personalized plan for the week ahead, the daily commitment is pitched at about three minutes, and the coaches are real people rather than AI. Since launching in 2020, Sunnyside says it has helped more than 600,000 people and counts 24 million drinks cut. Its App Store listing shows a 4.6-star rating across about 2,200 US ratings, with an 18+ age rating.
Two things shifted in 2026, and they change what you are buying. First, Sunnyside’s homepage used to be moderation-only but now leads with medication: it is titled around naltrexone, telehealth, and coaching to drink less or quit, and the hero says the program pairs naltrexone with habit change, community, coaching, and analytics to help you drink less or quit entirely. Yet its own basic-plan blurb still asks, "Ready to drink a bit less, but don’t want to quit?" So the moderation product and the newer quit-capable medication arm now sit side by side, and the tier you pick decides which one you get. Second, the same homepage claims a recent study showed Sunnyside cut weekly drinking by at least 33 percent. That figure is the company’s own and has not been independently published, so weigh it as a marketing claim, not peer-reviewed proof.
Pricing is published openly, which we respect: as of June 2026, the basic plan costs $99 a year, about $8.25 a month, the Cutback Coach tier with human coaching runs $298 a year, and both come with a 15-day trial and a money-back guarantee. One quirk worth a dollar: those are the web prices, while buying the same memberships through the App Store costs $99.99 and $299.00. Sunnyside also runs a telehealth arm where licensed providers can prescribe medication aimed at reducing cravings, and whether medication belongs in your plan is a conversation for you and a clinician, not something to decide from an app comparison.
Who it fits: people with a numbers brain and a moderation goal. If you want to go from twelve drinks a week to five and see the trend line prove it, Sunnyside is built for exactly that, and for that goal it is a better fit than Reframe or Orlyn. If you are weighing it against an abstinence-first tracker instead, see Sunnyside vs I Am Sober.
How do Reframe and Sunnyside compare side by side?
The clearest difference is the daily experience: Reframe asks you to learn something every day, while Sunnyside asks you to log and plan your drinks. Here is the head-to-head, drawn from what each company and its US App Store listing publish as of June 2026.
| Dimension | Reframe | Sunnyside |
|---|---|---|
| Core approach | Education: daily neuroscience lessons and courses | Moderation: weekly drink plans and tracking, now plus naltrexone telehealth |
| Best-fit goal | Rethinking drinking, cutting back, or quitting | Cutting back; quitting marketed via its medication arm |
| Daily experience | Daily tasks, courses, recorded and live videos | Logging drinks, about 3 minutes a day; new plan every Sunday |
| Craving support | Toolkit: meditations, distraction games | On-demand exercises plus a human coach over text |
| Community | 24/7 anonymous community, specialized groups | Member community |
| Pricing (June 2026) | Not on its website ("No plans available"); App Store tiers $13.99/mo to $119.99/yr | $99/yr basic; $298/yr with coaching ($99.99 / $299.00 if bought in-app) |
| Trial | None advertised on its website | 15-day trial, money-back guarantee |
| App Store (US, June 2026) | 4.7 stars, ~41,000 ratings | 4.6 stars, ~2,200 ratings |
| Age rating | 18+ | 18+ |
| Platforms | iOS and Android | iOS and Android, plus a text-message interface |
One row deserves a footnote: those review counts are not close. Reframe’s rating base dwarfs Sunnyside’s, which reflects scale more than quality. Reframe is simply the bigger app, while Sunnyside’s smaller, newer base skews toward committed moderation users, so a slightly higher star average on far fewer ratings is a different sample, not a better verdict.
Notice what the table cannot show: fit. A tracker you ignore and a curriculum you stop opening produce the same result. The honest question is not which app is better but which behavior you will still be doing on a rainy Tuesday in week six.
What does Reframe actually cost in 2026?
Most comparisons get Reframe’s price wrong, and that is partly Reframe’s doing. The plans and pricing page on its website says "No plans available," so the only number you can trust is the one on the in-app purchase screen. Here is the live subscription menu from its US App Store listing.
| Tier (as listed) | US price (June 2026) |
|---|---|
| Reframe Access (Monthly) | $13.99 |
| Reframe Access (Yearly) | $79.99 |
| Reframe Silver (Monthly) | $24.99 |
| Reframe Silver (Annual) | $119.99 |
| Reframe (Annual) | $99.99 |
Two things are worth reading off that menu. The Access tiers are the standard subscription, and Silver is the higher-priced plan, so the $24.99 a month some reviews quote as Reframe’s price is the Silver rate, not the entry point. And if you are asking which app is cheaper, Reframe’s lowest annual price ($79.99) undercuts Sunnyside’s $99 basic plan, though Sunnyside’s price buys a weekly plan and human coaching rather than a course library.
These are US App Store list prices as of June 2026 and can change in the app, so confirm the figure on the purchase screen before you subscribe. Reframe also advertises no trial anywhere on its site today, so treat any older claim of a 7-day trial as out of date.
Should you quit completely or cut back?
Choose a moderation app only if moderation is genuinely your goal, not a negotiation with yourself. This is the real fork in the Reframe vs Sunnyside decision, and it sits with you, not the apps. A few questions help:
- When you have tried to stop at two drinks before, did two reliably stay two? If yes, a drink plan with tracking can work with your habits instead of against them.
- Does one drink mostly function as a fuse for five? Then a moderation plan asks you to re-run the hardest decision, the one after the first drink, every single time.
- Is the 9:47 p.m. craving the thing that breaks your plans? Then neither a lesson library nor a weekly plan is aimed at your actual problem, and the next section is for you.
There is also a clinical version of this fork, and it carries more weight than any self-test. NIAAA’s Rethinking Drinking says quitting is strongly advised, not just cutting down, if you:
- have tried cutting down but cannot stay within the limits you set;
- have had alcohol use disorder, or have any symptoms of it now;
- have a physical or mental health condition that is caused or worsened by drinking;
- take a medication that interacts with alcohol; or
- are or might be pregnant.
If several of those describe you, a moderation app like Sunnyside is aimed at the wrong target, and a quit-focused approach is the safer place to start.
One safety line that matters more than any app choice: if you have been drinking heavily every day, stopping abruptly can be dangerous, so talk to a clinician before a hard stop and keep our crisis resources page at hand. Reframe itself says it is not designed to treat alcohol use disorder, and Sunnyside is not a treatment program either. Apps are scaffolding, not medical care.
Money can be a useful tiebreaker, too. Before paying for either subscription, run your drinking spend through our alcohol spending calculator: for most people, either app costs a small fraction of what the drinks themselves do.
What do both apps leave out?
Neither app is primarily built for the craving moment itself, the few minutes at 9:47 p.m. that decide whether tonight follows your plan. Reframe comes closest: its toolkit promises craving help at the touch of a button, with meditations and games, though the app’s center of gravity is still the curriculum. Sunnyside’s human coaching is real accountability, but it works over text with real people and publishes no response-time promise, which makes it a planning and reflection channel more than an instant rescue line. As we cover in how to stop alcohol cravings in the moment, an urge tends to crest and pass within minutes, so the tool that matters is the one you can open inside that window.
That gap is exactly what we built Orlyn around, which is why it exists alongside these two rather than as a copy of either. Orlyn’s craving SOS walks you through guided box breathing (4 counts in, 4 out), an urge-surfing timer, 5-4-3-2-1 grounding, and the why you wrote down on a calmer day. A 24/7 AI support coach, clearly labeled as AI and not medical care, is awake at 2 a.m. when a human coach may not be texting back. The live sober streak works on one-tap daily check-ins with streak freezes, so a slip lands as a data point instead of erasing your progress, and pseudonymous weekly leagues plus money-saved tracking keep the long game visible. It is iOS only and a paid membership with no ad-supported tier, so it is not the right pick for Android users or anyone who wants a moderation drink counter.
So which one should you choose?
Choose Sunnyside if your goal is drinking less, Reframe if you want to understand your drinking through a daily curriculum, and a craving-first tool if the hard minutes are what keep breaking your plans. Plainly:
- Sunnyside for moderation: published pricing, a weekly plan, human accountability, and a three-minute daily habit, and now also a naltrexone telehealth on-ramp if you want medication in the mix. The best tracker of the three.
- Reframe for learners: the deepest education layer in the category and a large community, whether you are cutting back or quitting.
- Orlyn, our own app, if quitting is the goal and cravings are the obstacle: in-the-moment tools, a coach that is awake at 2 a.m., and a streak that survives a bad night.
None of these choices is permanent, and the apps are cheap compared with the problem they work on. If you are still weighing the field, our 2026 quit-drinking app roundup covers all of them side by side, and Reframe alternatives digs into why people switch. Whichever you pick, the win condition is the same: a tool you actually open at 9:47 p.m., still in use when the novelty wears off.
One accuracy caveat, and the bottom line
One thing to flag before you choose: Sunnyside leans so far into moderation that its own damp lifestyle guide states that low to moderate drinking is associated with a lower risk of diabetes, stroke, and heart disease. That framing runs against the current science: the World Health Organization concluded in 2023 that there is no safe level of alcohol, and the US Surgeon General’s January 2025 advisory linked alcohol to at least seven cancers. It does not make Sunnyside a bad tracker, but it is a reason to read its health claims with care.
The bottom line, disclosed as ours: Reframe and Sunnyside answer different questions, and if your question is how to get through the craving rather than how much you read or how many drinks you budget, we think our own app fits better. Orlyn, on the App Store as Orlyn: Quit Drinking, is built around the craving moment, with a craving SOS, a 24/7 coach clearly labeled AI, and a slip-safe streak. If your goal is genuinely moderation, Sunnyside is the right call; if you want the daily neuroscience curriculum, Reframe is.
Frequently asked questions
Is Reframe or Sunnyside better for quitting completely?
Reframe leans education: a daily curriculum about alcohol and the brain, plus community. Sunnyside is built around moderation: drink plans, tracking, and accountability texts, which makes it a better fit for cutting back than for full sobriety. For quitting, compare what each gives you in the actual craving moment.
What do both apps leave out?
Reframe ships a craving toolkit and comes closest, but neither app makes the hard minutes its center of gravity. If your sticking point is 9:47 p.m. cravings rather than knowledge or counting, look for an in-the-moment toolkit: guided breathing, urge surfing, and a coach you can reach at 2 a.m. That focus is exactly what we built Orlyn, our app, around.
How much do Reframe and Sunnyside cost in 2026?
Sunnyside publishes its prices: $99 a year for the basic plan, about $8.25 a month, or $298 a year with human coaching, plus a 15-day trial and a money-back guarantee. Reframe's own pricing page currently shows no plans at all, while its US App Store listing sells subscriptions from $13.99 a month, with annual tiers from $79.99 to $119.99. Check the in-app price before you commit.
Can you use Reframe or Sunnyside to quit drinking completely?
Partly. Reframe supports both cutting back and quitting but says it is not designed to treat alcohol use disorder. Sunnyside built its program around moderation and now also markets naltrexone telehealth to help people drink less or quit entirely, though its basic plan is still pitched at people who do not want to quit. NIAAA advises quitting outright if cutting down keeps failing or a health condition is being worsened by drinking.
Is Reframe or Sunnyside better rated on the App Store?
They are nearly tied on score but not on volume. As of June 2026, Reframe shows 4.7 stars across roughly 41,000 ratings on the US App Store, and Sunnyside shows 4.6 stars across roughly 2,200. Reframe is the much bigger app, while Sunnyside's smaller base skews toward committed moderation users. Both listings carry an 18+ age rating.
Is there a better option than Reframe or Sunnyside for quitting?
For quitting specifically we think so, and we will disclose that it is ours: Orlyn, on the App Store as Orlyn: Quit Drinking, is built around the craving moment rather than daily lessons like Reframe or a weekly drink budget like Sunnyside. If your goal is moderation, Sunnyside is the better fit, and if you want a daily neuroscience curriculum, Reframe is.
Sources
- Reframe, Reframe
- Sunnyside, Sunnyside
- Reframe on the App Store, Apple
- Sunnyside on the App Store, Apple