Built for a cat named Haiiro
Cats evolved to survive, and in the wild, showing pain means becoming prey. That instinct is still there, even in the safest apartment. Your cat will purr while hiding a urinary blockage. It'll eat normally while its kidneys decline. By the time you notice something is off, the problem has been building for weeks.
It started with a cat named Haiiro. Her name means grey in Japanese, and she's the reason Ayro exists. Not because she got sick, but because I realized how little I actually knew about her day-to-day health. Between annual vet visits, everything was a guess. Was she sleeping more than usual? Was her grooming pattern normal? Was she moving less? I had no way to know without watching her every minute of every day.
The idea was simple: if a small sensor could continuously track behavioral patterns and learn what normal looks like for each individual cat, it could catch the subtle shifts that signal something's wrong. Not with cloud servers or subscription-locked features, but with on-device AI that processes everything locally. Private by design, not by policy.
That's what Ayro became. A tiny health monitor that sits on a collar, learns your cat's unique baseline, and alerts you when something changes. It generates clinical-grade reports your vet can actually use. It works for every cat in the house under a single plan. And it keeps all your cat's data exactly where it belongs: in your home.
I built Ayro so you never have to wonder.

Your cat's next checkup doesn't have to be a surprise.
Join 300+ cat parents who decided guessing wasn't enough.
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