AI-powered smart toilets are moving beyond luxury bathrooms into preventive healthcare, but can they really detect disease? Here is what current research, clinical studies, and experts say about the future of toilet-based health monitoring.
The next big health tracker may not sit on your wrist. It may sit in your bathroom.
Researchers and health-tech developers are turning toilets into diagnostic tools capable of analyzing urine, stool, hydration levels, digestive patterns, and even early warning signs of disease. What once sounded futuristic is now entering real-world testing, with scientists arguing that human waste may contain one of the richest untapped sources of health data.
From detecting dehydration to flagging signs linked to diabetes, kidney disease, or gastrointestinal disorders, smart toilet technology is becoming one of the fastest-growing conversations in digital health. But how accurate are these systems, and can they truly replace medical testing?
Here is what the science currently says.
Doctors have used urine and stool analysis for centuries because waste products reveal important information about the body. Researchers now believe automated monitoring could make health screening more continuous and less invasive.
A Stanford-led project described a “precision health” toilet capable of automatically collecting and analyzing urine and stool samples during routine bathroom use. The system was designed to identify biomarkers linked to several health conditions while minimizing the need for manual testing.
The research paper Passive monitoring by smart toilets for precision health explained that these systems may allow passive health monitoring without requiring people to actively remember tests, appointments, or wearable devices.
Researchers say the biggest advantage is frequency. Most people use the toilet multiple times a day, giving these systems repeated opportunities to track changes over time.
Current smart toilet systems are not diagnosing diseases independently, but they can monitor biomarkers associated with several health concerns.
Many smart toilet systems use biochemical sensors or urinalysis strips to evaluate urine composition.
Researchers say these sensors can monitor:
Hydration levels
Glucose patterns linked to diabetes
Protein levels associated with kidney issues
Ketones and metabolic activity
Urine concentration and pH
Blood markers that may require further evaluation
Some experimental systems also track urinary flow rate and frequency patterns that could indicate urinary tract or prostate-related issues.
The Stanford research team demonstrated automated urine collection and testing integrated directly into a toilet-mounted device.
Smart toilet systems are also being designed to analyze stool appearance, consistency, frequency, and color.
The paper A mountable toilet system for personalized health monitoring via the analysis of excreta discussed how stool monitoring could potentially assist in identifying warning signs connected to colorectal and gastrointestinal diseases.
Some systems use cameras and optical sensors to classify stool using scales already familiar in gastroenterology, including the Bristol Stool Form Scale. Researchers say changes in stool consistency or visible blood patterns may help flag issues requiring medical follow-up.
Interest in this technology has increased alongside rising awareness of gut health and increasing colorectal cancer cases among younger adults.
This 2023 paper explored how smart toilets may continuously collect health data using built-in sensors capable of monitoring heart rate, oxygenation, temperature, and excreta analysis. Researchers argued that toilets may become a practical platform for long-term passive health tracking.
This research described a toilet-mounted system designed to automate urine and stool analysis using imaging systems, urinalysis modules, and biometric identification tools.
Stanford researchers introduced a system capable of identifying users through biometric methods while automatically collecting and analyzing waste samples. The project aimed to integrate disease monitoring into everyday bathroom routines.
In 2026, multiple consumer-focused toilet health trackers entered the market, showing how rapidly the technology is evolving. Reports suggest newer systems can monitor hydration, digestive health, urine clarity, stool consistency, and bowel movement frequency through AI-powered analysis.
Some systems also integrate smartphone apps that generate wellness reports and trend analysis.
Developers claim these tools may especially help people living with chronic digestive disorders, diabetes, kidney disease, or hydration-related concerns.
Not yet.
Most experts stress that smart toilets are currently designed for monitoring and early detection support, not medical diagnosis.
A smart toilet may identify abnormal trends or warning signs, but a healthcare professional still needs to confirm any condition through clinical testing.
Researchers also warn that many systems remain in early development stages. More large-scale validation studies are needed before toilet-based monitoring becomes part of routine healthcare.
Accuracy, false positives, and standardization remain major concerns.
The idea of cameras and sensors inside toilets has raised obvious privacy questions.
Some developers say their systems only capture waste-related images and avoid recording identifiable anatomy. Other systems use encrypted storage, fingerprint authentication, or anonymized data collection.
Still, researchers behind What’s going on at the back-end? Risks and benefits of smart toilets warned that health-monitoring toilets may create serious privacy and cybersecurity concerns if sensitive data is mishandled.
Because these devices collect deeply personal biological information, experts say strong safeguards will be essential before widespread adoption.
For now, the science suggests smart toilets hold real potential, but they are still evolving. The technology can monitor trends and detect warning signs, yet it cannot replace clinical diagnosis or medical expertise.
Still, one thing is becoming clear: the bathroom may soon become one of the most data-rich spaces in healthcare.
References:
1. “Passive Monitoring by Smart Toilets for Precision Health.” NPJ Digital Medicine 6, no. 1 (2023). https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10311987/
2. “Smart Toilet Monitors for Signs of Disease.” https://med.stanford.edu/news/all-news/2020/04/smart-toilet-monitors-for-signs-of-disease.html?
3. “Toilet Tech Is the Next Frontier of Health Data.”
https://nypost.com/2026/04/14/health/toilet-tech-is-the-next-frontier-of-health-data/?
4. Park, Seung-min, et al. “A Mountable Toilet System for Personalized Health Monitoring via the Analysis of Excreta.” Nature Biomedical Engineering (2020). https://www.researchgate.net/publication/340526613_A_mountable_toilet_system_for_personalized_health_monitoring_via_the_analysis_of_excreta
5. “What’s Going on at the Back-End? Risks and Benefits of Smart Toilets.”arXiv (2023). https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.15935
6. United States Patent. “Systems and Methods for Automated Excreta Analysis.” U.S. Patent US11604177B1. https://patents.google.com/patent/US11604177B1/en