About

You can't see a year of sobriety. So we made something you can.

In recovery, the milestones are everything. Thirty days. Ninety. A year. People count them out loud, in rooms, with strangers who become family. And when you hit one, you earn a coin — a small metal disc that says "Hell YES, you did this!"

Then the coin goes in your pocket, or worse, a drawer.

That's the gap Recovewrist exists to close. A milestone shouldn't live in a drawer. It should live on your wrist, where you see it at 7am on the hard mornings — and where the person next to you at the gym sees it too, and maybe asks.

So we built a milestone wearable: a bezel and a band for your coin. It celebrates the days you've earned.

Why us

I'm Matt — I build things. My co-founder Toma has spent years inside recovery communities, and he's the reason this exists. People kept asking him for something like this. Not a product pitch — a want, repeated, from people who'd earned their days and wanted to wear them.

We incorporated Recovewrist as a Colorado public benefit corporation on July 9, 2026. Public benefit, not a marketing line: this is a product about a community, so the company is structured to answer to it.

How we're building it: in the open

We had an idea and so I bought a 3D printer to do the prototyping. I had it running for days. hundreds of bezels in different configurations, different types of plastics. I printed coins to test with as well. They were stacked up on my desk, beside the printer, on the floor. That was the beginning of the iteration process. No warehouse, no minimum order quantity, no six-month tooling cycle — a spool of filament, an ADHD brain and a machine that wouldn't stop.

We're going to build this publicly — the printing, the packing, the coins, the store, the mistakes. Partly because that's how I work. Mostly because a brand for a community that runs on honesty shouldn't be built behind a curtain.

What's next

The store went live in days, not months. First units go to the people who asked for them in the first place — because they should be first, not last. We have a big event for a recovery community who is near and dear to Toma and I coming at the end of July, Toma will be there. I will be in bed recovering from surgery. In September 2026, National Recovery Month, we go loud.


Until then, we are manufacturing, printing, organizing, packing, and making community. All things we do well.

If you're in recovery, or you love someone who is: this is for you. And if you're hitting a milestone soon — or you know someone who is — that's the whole point. Wear your recovery.