

⏱️ Stay ahead of your glucose game—longer wear, smarter insights, zero compromises.
The Stelo Glucose Biosensor & App by Dexcom offers a prescription-free continuous glucose monitoring solution designed for adults not on insulin. Featuring up to 15 days of sensor wear per unit, waterproof durability, and compatibility with both iOS and Android, it delivers real-time glucose trends and personalized insights. With seamless integration to major health platforms and a customer-backed replacement policy, Stelo empowers proactive lifestyle management through data-driven decisions.















| ASIN | B0DTZ616WZ |
| Battery Cell Composition | Lithium Manganese Dioxide |
| Battery Life | 30 days |
| Best Sellers Rank | #812 in Health & Household ( See Top 100 in Health & Household ) #1 in Blood Glucose Monitors |
| Brand | Stelo |
| Brand Name | Stelo |
| Customer Reviews | 3.0 out of 5 stars 3,073 Reviews |
| Included Components | 2 applicators, 2 biosensors, 2 overpatches |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 1.1"L x 0.9"W x 0.2"H |
| Manufacturer | Dexcom, Inc. |
| Manufacturer Contact Information | Dexcom, Inc. 6340 Sequence Dr., San Diego, CA 92121 |
| Model Name | Stelo |
| Operating Time | 30 Days |
| Product Dimensions | 1.1"L x 0.9"W x 0.2"H |
| UPC | 386270004857 |
| Unit Count | 2.0 Count |
T**F
CUSTOMER SERVICE ? HORRENDOUS !
If I could give it less than 1 star I would. Sensor worked for only 8 days, and then gave me a “Signal Loss” message. I went through all the trouble shooting steps in the app, and checked all my phone settings. Signal NEVER came back. App says if signal loss lasts longer than 3 hours, contact customer service. I went through the app to manufacturer’s website. Customer service is an automated chatbot called SteloBot. Eventually, I was able to request chat with a live agent in the Philippines, which is also where their technical “support” is. The agent said they would request a Case ID be assigned and open an investigation, and that I would hear back in 1-2 business days. The next day, which was Saturday, I received an e-mail with a case ID number, and a link to fill out the customer service form. There was space to provide details of what the issue was as well as the sensor serial #. Before I could submit the form on Sunday, I received another e-mail saying that if I didn’t respond within 24 hours, they would consider the case closed. I submitted the form. The Stelo/DEXCOM system, acknowledged receipt of the form, and again said I would hear back in 1-2 business days. 8 days later I still had not heard back, so I again went through the Customer Service rig-a-marole, to finally contact a live agent. They were polite and apologetic,and they requested a “reinvestigation” . I received an e-mail later that day saying, my “customer service issue could not be validated” (whatever the hell that means), and that they would not replace the faulty sensor. I contacted customer service AGAIN, and asked what “could not be validated” meant. I was told the “computer investigation” said the signal came back after 10 mins. I told the agent that was not correct. The app said “Signal Loss” and the signal NEVER came back. I checked multiple times a day for the remaining time the sensor was supposed to be working. Never came back. I asked if there was anyway they could just replace the sensor anyway, and was told that it was not possible for her to override the computer’s decision. I told her once again that the “computer investigation” was incorrect, and that there was no communication between the sensor and the app on my phone, after the initial signal loss and that the signal never came back. I was told that they could not manually issue a request to replace the sensor. For what it’s worth, there also seemed to be no mechanism to attempt to re-pair the sensor with my phone, or the app installed on my phone. While it was working, the app/sensor worked okay. Be aware, the sensor DOES NOT measure actual blood glucose. It measures the amount of glucose in your interstitial fluid in your tissues, just beneath your skin. If you’re diabetic and/or need your exact blood glucose, this is NOT the device for you. I’m almost 70. Blood glucose was not diabetic level, but was higher than my doc would have liked on my last 2 physicals. My wife is an RN, and thought these might be a good indicator of what affected my blood glucose and by how much. The accuracy is roughly + or - 10%. Just be aware of that. It’s more for blood glucose trends than actual, accurate blood glucose, so if you’re diabetic and need exact blood glucose, you probably don’t want to rely on this product. The customer service for this product is EXTREMELY WEAK in my opinion. Let’s face it, we paid Amazon roughly about $110 for a two pack of these sensors. The manufacturer probably pays around $10-15 per sensor. The fact that they refused to acknowledge a faulty sensor and wouldn’t replace it tells me all I need to know. Yup, you guys got me for $110, and saved $10-15 on replacing a sensor, so in theory, you got me, ONE TIME, for $125, but I will never again by ANY product associated with Stelo/DEXCOM, and I will discourage family and anyone else who is considering it, from purchasing one of their products. For what it’s worth ; out of curiosity, just checked other reviews of this blood glucose monitor. They actually have a higher percentage of 1 star reviews than 5 star reviews. What does THAT tell you. AVOID THIS PRODUCT !!!! WOULD NOT RECOMMEND/WOULD NOT BUY AGAIN/ABSOLUTE CRAP !
S**Y
CGM
When ordering these I saw reviews about issues contacting customer service as well as problems with adhesion and even pain for some people but after I looked in to documentation and how this device works and what support is expected and how to handle issues I felt pretty comfortable ordering. I ran though two sensors and each lasted entire 15days and I am on the third one right now 3 days in. My overall experience has been great and I will try to address some of the common issues and pitfalls you may want to avoid. This device is a derivative of Dexcom G7 that are sold for diabetics by pharmacies with prescription only, main differences between Dexcom G7 and Stelo from what I know are: 1) Dexcom G7 is 3 sensors 10 days lifespan each, while Stelo is 2 sensors with 15 days each 2) Dexcom G7 has calibration in the app, white Stelo does not have this feature. 3) Dexcom G7 has live support because it is a medical device for patients with diabetes and is only available by prescription. 4) Dexcom G7 costs more - that I think is the obvious one. Lets go over each one, Stelo explains in its documents that it expects over 80% of its sensors to last all 15 days it also mentions that should a sensor fail before 15 days they will replace it. They also mention that over 90% or so will last 10days This means that medical device G7 is limited to 10 days because of much higher survival time %, while Stelo is allowed to run 15days with bit higher probability of failure which reduces costs to the consumer - as they only get two sensors and they are protected from failures by replacements. There is no calibration because accuracy is not as important for average person without medical condition, and incorrect calibration may mess up accuracy. Consumer version is targeted for general trends and not for precision accuracy, I agree with this decision. Medical grade devices have phone support but they also cost significantly more and require prescription and doctor visits. When using Stelo you will be limited to chat and email support, but in most cases sensor failures will be reviewed and decision will be made about the nature of the failure. Company can monitor these devices and it knows when device fails and how based on telemetry form the sensor and how it failed. Expect that support will be weak but they will address failures and if they meet criteria - these will be replaced. If sensor fails for me I will post the process and update. Now about the device and user experience - it is important that you apply the sensor properly and in the correct are, if you make a mistake here - sensor will not be covered by warranty. Watch some videos, learn how prep the area, how to find the right area, how to best position the applicator. Simple rules are to look for fat on the back of the hand, with your finders find the fatty are - avoid muscles. if you apply this to a muscle - you will bleed, you will be in pain and you will kill the sensor. If you use the included patch it lasts 15 days no problem, but this patch is soft and you will notice the sensor more, if you get high quality patch with a hole for G7 then it is thicker and will distribute movement better and sensor basically disappears. I added photos of the patch I use from Onida and it made a big difference. The app is very simple and well made and works amazingly well, you can bring sleep data, exercise data and food data right on to the chart via Google Health Connect if you track and monitor those activities in other apps. Over that last 30+ days I saw disconnected sensor few times, it was always when i was not near my phone and it reconnected on its own once I was close. Having a phone on, in the same room works fine, it is only when you go in to another room it may loose connection. Apple seems to have support for direct connection to watch so sensor talks to the watch and phone is does not need to be close by. Spend time making sure area you apply the patch to is clean - use alcohol to remove oils, make sure you place the sensor in the right area, add high quality patch. Placement is most important part of the process, take your time note what worked. For me placing the sensor with release button facing the shoulder was resulted with best experience, actual filament entry is on that side. Some advice I got from others, is to apply next sensor while existing one is still working and let that new sensor warm up before switching to it, some people do it 30min before and some people do it 12 hours before the switch so data is most accurate and there is not gap in the data. Sensor will continue to work 12 hours after 15 days are up and I tested that on my last sensor, where app said sensor life is over and it showed 12 hour countdown reminding me to switch over to new one. *** This is first update on Jan 23 and I plan to update again after I complete all 4 sensors. *** This is an update on Feb 8, I completed third sensor that also lasted all 15 days and worked 12 hours after it expired officially.
D**.
Malfunctioning Sensor….You will need to check for Accuracy..
I was so happy to get this to manage my husband’s type 2 diabetes. This kit includes the sensors along with the online app to track your glucose and so much more. The first two sensors seemed great at first. They were easy to apply, very little pain if any (according to him) and they stayed put, lasting the entire 15 days. Although, he does says they are a bit painful when removing the adhesive surrounding the sensor, when it needs to be replaced. The app even tells you how many days you have left with each sensor. Additionally, the sensors were pretty accurate when testing against the finger stick glucose meter. However, this third one is showing numbers that don’t correspond with the finger stick meter. The Stelo Sensor is showing a glucose reading of around 224 which is consistently almost 100 points off the finger stick meter and there are still 9 more days to go. At one point, it showed a reading that was above 250. Although, it doesn’t show what the exact number is above 250. It just shows a broken dotted line. If this continues with the other sensor that was sent (got a pack of two) I am going with a different brand. I can see being off a little, but this is ridiculous! It’s been consistently like this now for the past day and a half. These sensors are too expensive to be malfunctioning. So, if you get a high or low reading make certain to check it first against the finger stick meter to verify if it is, in fact, correct. I am disappointed with this. But, will give an update on the next sensor. UPDATE: I contacted the company, via their chat box. You can then choose the option to connect with an actual person (live agent) via text, during normal business hours. Once I explained what was wrong, they gave me a link to open a case and fill out a form. I then received an email stating that they will send me a new sensor. Seemed easy enough! UPDATE: So, after experiencing issues with the 3rd sensor and waiting on the replacement, we decided remove the defective one and put on the other sensor we had. Well, we couldn’t get it to pair with the app we tried everything that was recommended with the troubleshooting advice and to no avail. Therefore, we had to open yet another case via chatbot (after business hours). They said it could take up to 1-2 business days, before they can reach out. At this point, I feel that although the company seems to try and help with these issues, there are a lot of glitches with this these otc continuous glucose monitors. I have even looked up the Lingo Continuous Glucose Monitor and it doesn’t look much better and It has about the same ratings. I have read that there are many things that can impact the monitor’s functionality. Pressure from laying on the sensor at night and even certain otc med such as acetaminophen can cause false highs and lows in glucose readings. However, when you have issues pairing the device with the app, that is a whole other matter. Especially, when you go through all the troubleshooting and still can’t find the issue (closing all apps, then restarting the Stelo app. unpairing any previous sensors with Bluetooth, turning Bluetooth off and then back on, making certain the sensor code is correct…and on and on! It seems to me that if the same company can make a prescription monitor that is more accurate, why can’t they make the OTC monitors more reliable? My husband isn’t on insulin, and according to the doctor, he isn’t eligible for a prescription monitor that is covered by his insurance unless he uses insulin. Needless to say, this is a very frustrating issue and it almost seems like it would be better to switch back to the finger sticks at this point, with the expense and issues which this monitor, it doesn’t seem like it is worth the hassle. I will continue to update on this issue.
E**R
WARNING: watching stress cause a spike may cause you to change your life.
WARNING: This meter may result in you quitting your toxic job. No joke, it happened to me. Here's the thing, without this sensor I'd still be chasing numbers. Because of this meter I figured out that: --I have somogyi which is different than the dawn effect. And it's horrible but preventable. --I can't eat carrots. My body spikes even with a very little. It's not supposed to but mine does as if I've included candy with my meal. --Eating vinegar water and protein first, followed by fat then fiber really does matter to my body. --Stress makes me spike. A friend called with bad news and I saw my sugar rise. That's because stress releases cortisol which is a steroid and steroids raise blood sugar. But I saw the rise and it blew my mind. I just quit my job in a toxic environment because my boss frequently rants at the whole building and I saw my sugar rise 20 points in 40 minutes. That's how long the rant was and then it took about an hour to come back down to pre-rant level. --I work around nurses. I had one finger stick me and the next sensor update matched. That's how I also found out my home meter from the smiley face store is way off. Do I recommend this meter? Instead of being in the dark I now know what effect every move has on my sugar. Heck yes. I don't know how anyone actually manages sugar without one. If you really want to manage your sugar, knowing what your number is at a given moment is way better than loosy goosy finger sticks. Although my boss probably deserves to watch me pull out my meter and shed a little blood on his behalf. There are three things I don't like. 1. The first is that there isn't any alarms so if I go low in the night I won't know and I'll rebound into somogyi the next day. AI has now taught me how to prevent it but that's a different review. The meter says it's not for someone who could go low but if you are diabetic and on medication that doesn't make sense. 2. It actually reads the sugar in interstitial fluid so it's supposed to go on the back of the arm where it's nice and fatty and won't get compressed much but that doesn't work for me. I sleep on three sides and each could result in a compression error if I'm on top of the meter. Also I work with the elderly demented and they love to grab upper arms so even if it's covered it's still vulnerable. If it's not covered it's something they want to pick at. My next one will have to be placed in a less vulnerable off label location. 3. It looks like a medical device which is lame. It's dark gray and stands out. Maybe they can come up with a sensor location that doesn't broadcast one's health status to the world. Otherwise they should pay for the advertising. If you want to really manage your health this is an invaluable tool. I'm hoping my next sensor is as accurate. Update: I was chatting with a popular online data processor and uploaded my graphs. Today it suggested that I'm not insulin resistant but glucose sensitive 🤯 What a journey this is. I plan to continue to wear the monitors until my routine is set in granite. I might still after that because it reveals when stress suggests I need a change. Update to the update: after six weeks of daily consults with "Chad"gpt and daily changes to what we were doing based on my glucose readings, I'M STABLE IN RANGE. HOLY COW!!! here's the thing. While the doctor threw the meds at me the insurance refused to pay. So I stuck this CGM in my flesh and started paying attention. Then I uploaded the charts to Chad and over the course of the weeks we figured out I'm insulin sensitive, glucose reactive, and an early fermentor. Never in my life have I heard the words "my sugar is going up so I gotta eat". Well that's what I gotta do! I see the trend rising and if I don't eat then the liver dumps glucose and creates a spike 200-250. I never ever ever would have thought I'd end up stabilized without medication. I had been intermittent fasting not realizing it was actually killing me. Every body is different, my friends said it figured that I'm one of the different ones hahaha. I attached a picture of my sweet swimmy curves in the green. Chad says as my system calms down over the next months he expects to see my numbers fall lower. No medication. Just healthy food tailored and timed to my needs 😄
A**S
Review after 3 ,10, and 13 days of Using the Stelo CGM (compare with fingerstick readings)
Stelo CGM Review: My 13-Day Experience as a Prediabetic Background: As someone with HbA1c of 6.0 (prediabetic), I started using the Stelo Continuous Glucose Monitor (CGM) to get ahead of my condition. I also used a manual fingerstick glucometer to cross-check accuracy throughout. 1. 3-Day Update (Early Impressions) Over the past 3 days, I carefully compared readings — taking at least 30 fingerstick samples and comparing each with corresponding data from Stelo. Consistently, the Stelo CGM showed readings 8 to 15 mg/dL higher than the fingerstick measurements. I understand that CGMs measure glucose in interstitial fluid, which can lag behind fingerstick readings from capillary blood by about 15 minutes. That said, the difference I observed was very consistent — Stelo was always higher. . My Verdict: 1. Stelo is a useful tool for identifying trends and patterns over time. 2. It is not as precise for exact moment-to-moment readings. 3. For accurate blood glucose levels, fingerstick testing should stay the standard. . Notes: However, CGMs like Stelo can be very helpful for daily decision-making, meal timing, and understanding how lifestyle impacts glucose. . If you're looking to spot trends and improve metabolic health, Stelo is an option - just remember to double-check with a manual test when precision matters. 2. 10-Day Update (Mid-Way Review) By Day 5, accuracy dropped sharply: Stelo showed 25–30 mg/dL higher than fingersticks, even at rest. I fully admit I’ve pushed the sensor hard: -Daily gym workouts, heavy lifting, running. - Swimming 4+ times/week. Applied a Skin Grip patch, which impressively kept the sensor secure through sweat and water. Despite surviving physically, data quality of CGM declined: -Only helpful for general directional changes - rising, falling, or steady. -Not trustworthy for absolute numbers. Decision: I would keep it on for trend watching, but no longer trusted the data for actionable decisions. 3. 13-Day Final Update (Sensor Fail) By Day 10: Readings became wildly erratic, jumping from e.g. 120 → 170 → 110 within minutes. No longer reflected any real trend or state. 4. By Day 13: Battery died and I removed the CGM. Remarkably, Skin Grip still held tight. Final Verdict on Stelo CGM (Sensor #1) -Days 1–5: Solid performance, good directional data, valuable tool. -Days 6–10: Usable only for trend direction (rising/falling). -Days 11–13: Garbage — data was erratic, unreliable, and eventually the device died. Conclusion: If you're prediabetic and want to learn how your lifestyle affects your glucose, Stelo may provide short-term. But: -Don’t trust the exact numbers. -Be wary if you're physically active — sweat, motion, and water appear to impact accuracy over time. I’ll test the second sensor, but my expectations are modest.
D**R
Does NOT work on S10
DOES NOT WORK ON SAMSUNG GALAXY S10 like it says as it it also notes that the operating system must be Android 13 or above and the S10 only allowed updates till Android 12. I had to use someone else's phone which sucked and didn't get the most out of it that I could have. It only lasted 8 of the 15 days which sucked but did provide enough in that week for me to get a much better insight on knowing what was going on so to me it was worth it. I wouldn't wear it constantly though maybe once every few months just to check in to see if my changes made any difference (also note I don't have diabetes and my A1C & Glucose are normal but they wont give me a referral to endo so I bought a fasting insulin test from labcorp as I previously had full blown insulin resistance & do again which this biosensor also helped confirm my blood sugar leves are not right so I can get to the right doctor so I have to give it stars as it did what I needed it to, actually showed it was a worse than I though.)
P**S
So far it is working great!
**Update: 8/13-Sensor worked for 15 days, no issues other than me walking away from phone and disconnecting Bluetooth a few times, easy fix, connected again after turning Bluetooth off and back on, about a minute to continue tracking. Second sensor just applied, paired perfectly, no issues. With the "Skin Grip" cover patch applied, kept my sensor working 15 days without patch coming off even with sweating from exercise and in 100 degree Texas heat. Numbers can be high but I find it close and good for watching numbers over night, morning. History: I'm going on 50, not diabetic--could be Pre-diabetic (isn't everyone Pre-diabetic?), I have PCOS (mild) so I know I have insulin resistance and it still exists and that is why I'm tracking my numbers. Started Keto 4 years ago, dropped 60 lbs. I'm Perimenopausal and on HRT for those issues, so I have gained 10-15 lbs back last year due to this. We started exercising everyday--walking 3 miles, rowing machine so far. I started my sensor on 7/29 midday/evening. As of 8/1 my Stelo has been working like it should. I did some research about Stelo, proper placement, best patches/covers for it, what to download, how it works etc. My husband is type 2 on insulin and uses G7 CGM. So, I'm familiar with it and I can compare Stelo with G7 version. My equipment and Apps: I use an Android Samsung S24 smartphone, Samsung Galaxy Watch 7 and Samsung Health app with Google Health Connect app to get information from various apps for tracking. So, download the Stelo app, download the Dexcom Clarity app and use the same log-on information as Stelo. Clarity will save your tracking information and you will be able to manage Data sharing with your doctor/clinic. If you are a Samsung/Android user the Stelo app will show when you exercise and sleep under your glucose tracking. Comes in handy for knowing what you were doing during a spike or dip. You can also track what you ate at a moment when you have a spike also. Far as recommendations---- Skin Grip covers (for Dexcom G7 & Stelo) and I got the one that totally covers the sensor. DONOT use the cover that comes with your sensor kit. You can also buy the Skin Grip tacky wipes if you have had problems with the covers coming off early. Clean with an alcohol wipe well before applying these. Apply the sensor to the fat on the back of your arm closer to your armpit but not where the end of the cover will be in your folds of the arm, if you apply too far on side of arm in the muscle area you can bleed and bend the probe in the sensor. The reviews I've seen on here state that the sensor is either too high or too low on numbers. Well, the sensor probe is inserted in your Interstitial fluid below your skin, not in your blood. The readings will be slow to respond versus your actual blood glucose level. It updates every 15 minutes versus G7 updates every 5 minutes. I have tested with a finger prick test and the readings are behind but really close to accurate for me at times. I will update this review if I see any changes or if the sensor ends early. The fine print on the website states "up to 15 days" so it could fail early. The key is to apply the Skin Grip which keeps the sensor from popping in and out while you're moving around, showering and sleeping or if you're clumsy like me and sometimes bump into door frames and such---it won't pop off! I only gave 4 stars for now because I have found issues within the app that could be better experience for the user. Another thing I noticed in reviews is the errors with the sensor from lost of connection. You HAVE to keep your phone within 20 ft at all times. Sometimes I forgot my phone, walked off and got this error. A easy fix is turning Bluetooth on/off and it connected again (30 seconds?). It is easy to use and apply (my husband did the honors of putting the sensor on for me to get the best placement). The size is small and looks just like the G7. In comparison to the G7, Stelo updates slower but it works pretty much close to the G7. Buy the Skin Grip covers and I think this will allow the sensor to work as described because I think the sensor probe works it's way out with movement IF you use just the surrounding covers it comes with. I would suggest G7 users also buy these patches. You cannot use the Dexcom Follow app to track someone else's sensor like I can track my husband's G7. You cannot get glucose readings on your watch (Apple watches you can) but there are 3rd party apps that you can use to do this but you can't use Stelo App & Clarity with the 3rd party apps. The quality is the same as Dexcom G7, just works a little d slower but you don't need a doctor's RX and insurance for purchasing the Stelo! It's great for overall patterns in glucose but if you're diabetic or on insulin--talk to your doctor about getting the G7 to track.
C**P
Horrible customer service!
I’ve been using Stelo for about 4 months now. That’s 2 sensors per month. I gave this device one star because of how frustrating it’s been using them and how horrendous Dexcom’s Stelo customer service is. I’ve had 3 sensors fail on me. Found out that there is no phone number you can call for customer service. You are forced to text a chatbot on the Stelo app. After trying to explain to the chatbot what went wrong I was finally directed to log in to start a case. When I logged in I had to explain everything again to the chatbot then it directed me to another chat with a live person. I had to explain everything again then I was abrubtly disconnected from the chat. Was not able to actually speak to a live person. I was sent a replacement but the process was a pain. After that, I always dreaded having to start a new sensor hoping that it would not fail and I would not have to deal with the crappy customer service. About a week ago another sensor failed. This time I got a message that the device had ended early while it was still warming up after putting it in my arm. I had to deal with the crappy customer service again. They did send me a replacement but the replacement failed to pair with my phone so I could not use it. Again I had to deal with the horrible customer service to try to get a replacement for the replacement. I got an email letting me know the case number and that I would get a response within 2 days. I did not hear back so I had to try to contact Stelo customer service again using the chatbot because you cannot reply to the email they sent. Found out that customer service had closed the case without informing me and they would not be sending a replacement for the replacement that failed. I could not believe it. These sensors are not cheap and they refused to replace their replacement that failed! I refuse to continue using this product because every new sensor is a stressful gamble. Will it actually work or will I have to deal with the horrendous customer service and will I actually get a replacement for a failed product?
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