If you thought the bathroom had been fully monetized — scented candles, loofahs, Bluetooth speakers for shower karaoke — welcome to the next frontier: the bowl that watches you back. Kohler, the seventy-year-old-ish titan of faucets and fragile porcelain dignity, has launched Dekoda, a clip-on optical sensor that clamps to your toilet rim and takes pictures of whatever you deposit therein. Yes, really.
Dekoda is a $599 hardware device that mounts to a standard toilet rim, points a camera/spectroscopy sensor into the bowl, and promises to decode three things: hydration, gut health, and whether there’s blood in your output. It identifies the user via a fingerprint scanner before each session, analyzes the visual data with machine-learning models, and pushes results to a phone app so you can track trends over time. Kohler says the data is protected with end-to-end encryption and that the optics are “discreet” — i.e., the camera looks at what’s in the bowl, not your anatomy. Pre-orders opened recently and shipments are slated to begin on October 21.
Cost outline, because you were going to ask: $599 up front, plus a subscription that sits somewhere between the “mildly annoying” and “this is getting expensive” tiers — roughly $70 to $156 per year depending on plan. So, like every health gadget these days, it’s hardware followed by a steady trickle of subscription revenue.
How it works
Kohler describes the sensor as optical spectroscopy plus computer vision: the camera captures color, consistency and other visual markers; algorithms compare that data to a personal baseline and spit out readable advice (e.g., “Drink more water” or “Check with a doc about blood in stool”). There’s a removable rechargeable battery and a USB port for charging, and — disco moment — fingerprint authentication so the device knows who’s sitting down. Kohler also notes Dekoda works best on light-colored, standard toilets; dark-coloured bowls can confuse the optics.
One important health-policy line: Dekoda is not an FDA-approved medical device and Kohler is careful to position it as a wellness insight tool rather than a diagnostic replacement for your doctor. If it flags blood or something else concerning, the company recommends clinical follow-up.
A quick primer on the category (because you’re not the only one with questions)
Kohler isn’t inventing the idea of the toilet that spies on your biomarkers. Startups and other gadget makers have already experimented with urine-and-stool sensors — Withings and a handful of smaller companies have previously tried similar approaches — but having Kohler’s manufacturing scale and distribution in the bathroom category pushes this into mainstream retail consciousness. In short, the idea used to be eccentric; now it’s glossy.
Privacy theater or reasonable precaution?
Kohler’s messaging leans heavily on the “we only look at the bowl” line. That matters — privacy is the obvious, legitimate concern here. Kohler says sessions are gated by fingerprint ID and the data flow is encrypted end-to-end, which is exactly the kind of thing anxious early adopters will cite when explaining why they bought a $599 accessory that watches their waste. Critics will note that scope creep is a real thing: today it’s hydration graphs, tomorrow it’s targeted ads for probiotic gummies in your feed. Kohler insists the optics are “discreet” and that the sensors “see down into your toilet and nowhere else.” Whether that will satisfy privacy advocates remains to be seen.
Naming: Dekoda? Dek-who?
Who named it Dekoda? I don’t know, and Kohler hasn’t supplied a legend about the brand name that involves ancient Greek sanitation gods. The name reads like “decode” with a sprinkle of designer minimalism: Dekoda — decode + oda? A friendly robot that decodes your dignity? Whatever the etymology, the name does what a product name needs to do: it is pronounceable, oddly serious, and hard to explain to your mother. (“Yes, Mom, it’s for tracking whether I drank enough water.”)
Upsells, imagined features, and a tiny product roadmap you didn’t ask for
If Kohler gets real about monetization, there are obvious things they could sell next:
- A bowl-ring light for “better optics” (because dark toilets already give the sensors cold feet).
- A scent sensor, because smell is a very old and underpriced biomarker.
- A “session length tracker” that competes with your watch for guilty-pleasure metrics.
- A subscription tier that pairs your poop-score with a curated list of gut-friendly recipes and supplement deals.
None of the above is confirmed. But if the app shows hydration score streaks, expect to see leaderboard plugins shortly after.
So, should you buy one?
If you are a metrics person who already tracks sleep, steps, and electrolytes, and you have a standard white toilet, a spare $599 lying around, and a sense of humor about living in a surveillance-first era, Dekoda will feel like a small, clever miracle — passive, noninvasive data collection at the seat of everyday life. If you are privacy-conscious, rent a dark-colored apartment toilet, or are baffled by why your plumbing needs a fingerprint scanner, you should probably sit this one out.
Practical reminder: if Dekoda flags blood or sustained abnormalities, that is not a time to consult app forums; it is a time to consult a clinician. Kohler’s tool is an early-warning signal, not a definitive diagnosis.
The last laugh (and yes, the bathroom is still funny)
There’s something deliciously absurd about tech that turns our most private acts into charts and trendlines. We have smart lights that dim when we say “movie,” watches that judge us for napping, and now a device that gives daily feedback on how well we swallowed our vegetables. If you wanted the bathroom to feel more like a lab, Dekoda delivers: it is tidy, white, polite, and slightly judgmental.
Kohler brought a camera to a toilet fight. The question now is whether the rest of us will sign our fingers, stare at hydration graphs, and whisper to our spouses: “Did you see my fiber score?” If we do, at least there will be tasteful lifestyle photos to go with our new, very modern bowls.
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