We believe movement is a human right.
Every year, hundreds of millions of people lose the ability to move naturally — through injury, illness, or circumstance. Most of the technology that could help them exists. The problem is reach: the best restorative devices are designed for the wealthiest patients in the wealthiest countries. Everywhere else, the gap is vast.
ReAble Labs was founded to close that gap.
What we are building toward
We are building a full-stack restorative mobility platform — a suite of intelligent devices that restore different types of human movement, all built on the same core architecture. The ReAble Hand is our first product. It will not be our last.
We do not announce what we have not built yet. But our direction is clear: wherever movement has been lost, we want to give it back.
Our principles
Start with access.
The most sophisticated device in the world is worth nothing if it cannot reach the person who needs it. Every design decision we make is filtered through one question: will this still work at a price someone in Nairobi or Manila can afford?
Build the platform, not just the product.
We do not want to build a catalogue of unrelated devices. We want to build a platform — shared actuation architecture, shared AI control systems, shared clinical software — so that each new device is faster, cheaper, and better than the last.
Clinical trust is earned, not claimed.
We submit to the same scrutiny as any medical device. We work alongside clinicians from day one. We do not ship products into clinical settings without the evidence to back them.
Repairability is dignity.
A device that breaks and cannot be fixed leaves someone worse off than before. Every ReAble device is designed to be repaired by the clinician, the technician, or eventually the user.
Where we are now
The ReAble Hand is in active development and entering pilot trials. We are based in Dublin, supported by Enterprise Ireland, and building the engineering team to accelerate our roadmap.