The Invisible Posture Corrector
A soft sensor that sits between the shoulder blades and gently vibrates when you start to slouch. No straps, no harness, no obvious silhouette under clothing. We picked it for the quiet teaching mechanic — a small haptic nudge rather than a brace — which builds the habit rather than holding the body in place. Charges in roughly an hour. Pairs with an app for daily tracking, or works on its own.

A nudge, not a brace
A short haptic pulse when you slouch past your set angle. Subtle enough to feel in a meeting, clear enough to actually correct posture.
Reads as nothing under clothing
Coin-sized, magnetic backing, sits between the shoulder blades. Disappears under a shirt or knit. No straps, no visible hardware, no adjustment ritual.
Optional app, honest numbers
Pairs over Bluetooth to log slouch time and streaks. Or leave it unpaired and let the vibration do the work. Both modes are fine.
What's in it
- magnetic two-piece design, sits flat to skin
- haptic vibration feedback, three intensity levels
- bluetooth app pairing, optional
- usb-c charging, roughly one hour to full
- around eight hours of active use per charge
- calibrates to your upright in two seconds
Questions
Does it physically hold my shoulders back?
No. It teaches rather than restrains. The sensor reads your spine angle and vibrates when you drift forward, prompting you to correct yourself. Most people find the habit forms within a few weeks.
Will it show under a t-shirt?
Under a fitted single-layer tee you may see a small outline. Under a button-down, knit, or anything with structure, it disappears. The unit is roughly the size of a large coin.
How does it stay in place?
Two pieces with a magnet between them — one sits against the skin or undershirt, the other clips to the outside of the garment. No adhesive, no straps.
Do I need to use the app?
No. The device works fully on its own once calibrated. The app adds slouch-time graphs and daily goals if you want them, but it isn't required for the corrector to function.
We chose this one over the harness-style correctors because the teaching method holds up longer. A quiet cue, repeated, tends to outperform a brace you eventually stop wearing.
— The studio