Private snoring alarm

A private snoring alarm that taps the snorer, not the bedroom

A snoring alarm should not punish the whole room. Acquiesco works like a private snoring alarm by sending the alert to the snorer's Apple Watch, so the person who needs to move gets the cue.

Who this is for

A focused fit for couples who need a quieter night.

  • Couples who need an alert but do not want a noisy bedroom alarm.
  • Snorers who can often quiet snoring by changing position.
  • Partners who want fewer wake-ups without becoming the alarm themselves.
How Acquiesco works

iPhone listens. Apple Watch taps. The snorer repositions.

Set up Acquiesco on iPhone and Apple Watch before bed. The iPhone listens for disruptive snoring, and the watch delivers a quiet haptic cue so the snorer can reposition.

Privacy

Real-time listening without saved recordings.

Acquiesco does not save recordings of the night. Detection happens on-device in real time, and audio is not uploaded to a cloud service.

Medical disclaimer

Not a sleep apnea diagnosis or treatment.

Acquiesco is not designed for sleep apnea diagnosis, treatment, or medical monitoring. Serious symptoms should be evaluated by a clinician.

Pricing

Sleep better for cents a night.

Try a private wrist cue before resorting to loud alarms, repeated wake-ups, or sleeping apart.

7-day trial

Monthly

$4.99/month

After 7 free days

Cancel anytime
Download on the App Store
FAQ

Common questions about this approach.

What is a private snoring alarm?

It is an alert intended for the snorer instead of the room. Acquiesco uses Apple Watch haptics for that private cue.

Does the alarm make noise?

The core alert is a watch vibration, not a room sound.

Can a private alarm stop snoring?

It can help interrupt and minimize snoring by prompting the snorer to change position.

Will it wake the snorer fully?

The goal is a small cue, just enough to encourage repositioning without fully waking the room.

Is this safe for medical snoring concerns?

Acquiesco is not medical care. Gasping, choking, pauses in breathing, or daytime fatigue should be discussed with a clinician.