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You are here: Home / Diabetes Technologies / Why is my continuous glucose sensor reading different from my fingerstick?

Why is my continuous glucose sensor reading different from my fingerstick?

Why are my finger pokes and CGM different? Written in the top left. Red haired woman looking questioning to the left.

As much as we wish it weren’t true, there can be times when the reading from your continuous glucose sensor can be different from your finger stick. While it could be that your sensor is no longer working, there are also several other reasons why there could be a difference. Here are just a few other possibilities.

Sensors and finger sticks measure different things.

cell in interstitial fluid with glucose moving from the blood through the fluid to the cell.

It is important to remember that your sensor and finger sticks are measuring different things. The sensor in your continuous glucose or flash monitor takes readings from what is known as your interstitial fluid.  This is the fluid that surrounds the cells of your tissue just below your skin. 

A fingerstick is measuring the glucose in your blood.  Glucose moves from your blood vessels and capillaries first and then goes into your interstitial fluid. This explains why there can sometimes be a lag between fingerstick results and sensor results.

Medtronic explains it best by asking you to think of it like a rollercoaster.  The front car is the blood glucose reading from a fingerstick and the car in the back is the reading from your glucose sensor.

rollercoaster with the text "glucose level from a finger poke" written in red at the front of the rollercoaster and "glucose level from a CGM" written in blue with an arrow pointing to the back

How much of a lag is there between sensors and fingerstick readings?

The amount of lag time between results can depend on a lot of things including

  • Location of sensor: most glucose monitors are only recommended for use on the back of the arm. Despite that, some people will use alternate sites which may not offer reliable readings.
  • Brand of sensor being used: Each brand of glucose sensor has different accuracy levels and warm up times which may cause a discrepancy in your readings.
  • If blood glucose is dropping: because sensors read the interstitial tissue’s glucose levels, it may not be as accurate during a rapid drop in bg levels.
  • If blood glucose is rising: because sensors read the interstitial tissue’s glucose levels, it may not be as accurate during a rapid increase in bg levels.
  • The individual: as with everything in diabetes care, your diabetes may vary.
Reasons for lag between CGM and fingersticks: Location of sensor
Brand of sensor being used
If blood glucose is dropping
If blood glucose is rising
The individual

Are the readings ever the same?

African American man with fists in the air in excitement

Yes, your fingerstick and glucose sensor can be the same or exceptionally close in readings.

For optimal results, if your sensor requires calibration, make sure to do this when your blood glucose are relatively stable.  Calibration during rapid swings such as following a meal or an insulin dose can cause accuracy problems.

Why use a sensor?

Continuous glucose monitors displayed. Dexcom G7 at top right. Eversense 3 on the top left. Libre 3 sensor on the right bottom. Medtronic Guardian sensor on the bottom left. Blue border on a white background with the sensors in the middle.

One of the biggest advantages of a glucose sensor is that they are designed to show you trends.  A fingerstick alone cannot tell you if your blood glucose levels are rising or falling without multiple follow up checks.

Continuous glucose or flash monitoring systems are built to help you track patterns and visualize rises and drops in blood sugar levels. The algorithms used in these systems attempt to smooth out the differences between the interstitial glucose values and what the expected blood glucose reading would be.

Ideally this means that you can plan ahead to avoid blood sugars spiking or plummeting and therefore spend more time in range.

Learn more about time in range >>>

Time in range

When not to calibrate your sensor

As we have said, there are sometimes when it is less than optimal to try to calibrate your sensor.  You should always follow the guidelines of your diabetes clinic and the manufacturer but you may also want to avoid calibration

  • Immediately after dosing insulin
  • After eating a meal
  • After exercising
Do not calibrate your CGM Immediately after dosing insulin
After eating a meal
After exercising

When in doubt, use a fingerstick

No matter what system you are using, if you feel that the sensor is not accurate fall back on a fingerstick.  If you aren’t 100% sure of the fingerstick, thoroughly clean your hands, make sure that they are dried properly, grab a fresh test strip, lance your finger and try again.

If you find that your sensor is not accurate, contact the manufacturer of your glucose sensor. Manufacturers have staff who are trained to help you troubleshoot the problem. In some cases they may also send you new sensors if they feel that the one you are using is faulty for any reason.

Download our free CGM comparison.

grey back drop. Laptop sitting open on while desk. On the screen is an CGM comparison chart from Diabetes Advocacy

Compare Continuous Glucose Monitor options

Access now.

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fingerstick vs sensor accuracy

Filed Under: Diabetes Technologies Tagged With: blood glucose test strips, blood sugar test strips, blood sugar, blood glucose, blood sugar reading, blood glucose reading, Continuous Glucose Monitor, CGM, flash meter [post_date}

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Joe McCoy says

    September 30, 2021 at 3:39 am

    Why was my Dexcom6 always 40 points higher than fingersticks? I check my blood sugar every 3 hours. (Before eating and before insulin). Over a 20 day period (2 sensors) approximately 150 tests, only 2 had less than plus 40 discrepancies! I am very slender (22BMI) and I think the sensor canula is going into the muscle because the surrounding muscle gets very sore! Could this be the problem?

    Reply
    • Barb Wagstaff says

      October 4, 2021 at 2:34 pm

      I reached out to someone at Dexcom and first, they ask that you report this issue to Dexcom technical support. This allows them to check into things on a deeper level. My contact also noted that “being lean and having the sensor possibly touch/close to the muscle wall can make a difference with results for sure physiology plays a part here. Equally problematic can be the meter as well. 40 points (2.2 mmol/L) is strange, especially with the fact this has been going on for a while.” Again, please contact contact Technical Service and ask for escalations, they may be able to help out as this is quite complicated as there are many variables. I hope that this helps you!

      Reply
      • David says

        November 19, 2022 at 2:01 pm

        Same issue

        Reply
  2. Jeff says

    November 3, 2021 at 2:50 am

    My Lebre 2 is usually 50 points different than my fingers sticks.

    Reply
    • JoeD617 says

      July 10, 2022 at 6:36 pm

      So is mine, now I know why

      Reply
    • Linda says

      August 6, 2022 at 8:18 am

      My son’s libre 2 is as much as 150 points lower than his finger stick and if had believed it he would have been in perfect range…instead the finger stick put him at 270

      Reply
      • Flores says

        September 28, 2022 at 11:31 pm

        I’m curious so what are you treating the libra2 or finger stick. Trying to help my mom to figure out since she’s on a sliding scale lantus.. Trying to not bottom her out.. please advise. Thank you in advance.

        Reply
        • Barb Wagstaff says

          September 29, 2022 at 11:05 am

          Educators always say to use the fingerstick readings. Remember that there can be a lag, so when in doubt, go with the fingerstick.

          Reply
    • V Cox says

      September 5, 2022 at 3:12 pm

      This is what we are finding and not sure we can trust it to properly treat my spouse. The doctor says to stick to one testing method and wait for the A1C to be updated in 3 months.

      Reply
      • Lisa says

        January 28, 2023 at 1:00 pm

        ALWAYS compare CGM to finger stick if in question or symptoms don’t match what your CGM reading is!

        Reply
    • Erick Brengle says

      November 16, 2022 at 9:50 am

      Mine to it’s 20 points off all the timey Libra 2 reads lower than my finger sticks

      Reply
      • ANN TODD says

        April 3, 2024 at 1:01 pm

        My Libre 3 is 20 points lower than finger sticks and that’s when I check it’s reading steady.

        Reply
        • Erica says

          July 1, 2024 at 4:16 pm

          My Libre 3 never matched the finger stick glucose readings the entire time I used it

          Reply
    • John says

      October 31, 2023 at 5:49 pm

      Me too. As high as 100. At least 10

      Reply
    • Nicholas Laudani says

      August 8, 2024 at 8:33 pm

      Very often i have a 30 to 40 pt diference.. My libee for 10 days is reading in the low 70s while my BG is reading 110.. and this kind of thing has been going on more then not for this year.. what is the physiological issue here? Not the sensor..whatv in my body is causing this discrepency?

      Reply
  3. Susan Fern Mengel says

    January 16, 2022 at 12:18 am

    Why is my dexcom reading 46 and finger stick 90?

    Reply
    • Barb Wagstaff says

      January 17, 2022 at 5:29 pm

      Susan is this something that is consistent? I would try to recalibrate the sensor and also contact Dexcom support about the issue.

      Reply
  4. Monica says

    March 5, 2022 at 12:31 pm

    How do you change the Dawn phenomenon? My sensor shows a huge rise at 4 am, low numbers at bed.

    Reply
    • Barb Wagstaff says

      March 14, 2022 at 2:13 pm

      I am so sorry Monica! I am not sure how this was overlooked. The Dawn Phenomenon is a huge battle for a lot of people. There are a variety of different tactics including exercise, changing what you have for breakfast or tweaking insulin rates. This is something that you should definitely speak with your diabetes team about. They should be able to offer you a variety of options.

      Reply
  5. Nasako says

    April 17, 2022 at 11:34 pm

    Thank you for writing this article! I had no idea why my libre2 is almost always between 20-60 off from my finger tests.

    Reply
  6. Christy Lange says

    April 27, 2022 at 5:15 pm

    I have idiopathic gastroparesis and my readings are all over the place. Is there anything that I can do to improve my blood sugar levels?

    Reply
    • Barb Wagstaff says

      May 2, 2022 at 9:54 am

      That is a tough one Christy. In reading a bit about this, it can be a huge challenge and there isn’t a lot of information out there. I did find this document which looks pretty helpful. Everything seems to point to eating smaller meals more often and working with your diabetes team to match your insulin to your gastric emptying.

      Reply
      • Delores Richardson says

        March 8, 2023 at 6:21 am

        I have just been diagnosed with this same thing just recently, but the problem started long time ago, so now it’s either sensor it reading high when I’m starving and low low when I know I have had my fill for the day it’s 3am now and the motor just woke me reading low sugar low sugar and I check it it reads 66 but I stuck my finger and it was 132 ,I just wasn’t to sleep without the meter going on and off evert 15 mins I mean what was the point of getting it really signed Sleep in Savannah !!!!

        Reply
  7. Marc says

    May 19, 2022 at 7:34 pm

    I’ve only had my first Freestyle Libre sensor on for 5 days. So far, every single day the alarm has gone off telling me my glucose has dropped below 70. It scares the bejesus out of you when it goes off. I run and do a finger stick and the results couldn’t be more different. Sensor says 69, finger stick says 100 to 111. This is a huge difference. The support desk couldn’t really offer an explanation or help — saying call back if it keeps happening or call your doctor. Ugh….. I really do love this thing but I won’t keep wearing it if the alarm goes off every day 2 hours after lunch. They went through the normal check list with me and all is being done correctly.

    Reply
    • Barb Wagstaff says

      May 19, 2022 at 9:23 pm

      Have they offered to give you a replacement for them? Some people do seem to have issues while others have them work perfectly.

      Reply
      • V Cox says

        September 5, 2022 at 3:16 pm

        My husband’s was exactly the same with the replacement one they sent. Abbott told us it’s perfectly normal to have a 20% error on the sensors but we are getting a 40-50% error.

        Reply
        • Barb Wagstaff says

          September 5, 2022 at 4:19 pm

          That is a huge error. I have heard of using these devices to watch for trends rather than actual readings, but that is terribly disappointing…and scary!

          Reply
          • Erica Edfort says

            October 28, 2022 at 5:52 pm

            I am a Medtronic 770G and. Guardian 3 sensor user for many years. I have recently experienced issues (within last 2 weeks) with a great variation in FSG readings and sensor readings (40-100+ pts). I have been in touch with Medtronic tech support, obtained replacement sensors and transmitter- I am still having the same issues. They. sent me a replacement pump which I will begin using this weekend – pump still under warranty (I change sensors each Sunday). Hoping this will resolve the issue.

        • ANDREW GILBERT says

          June 24, 2024 at 9:34 am

          Yes Abbott say20% is acceptable and i believe one can work with this differance in glucose…Here is the real problem one sensor to another can give drastic differences in the percentage from sensor to actual blood reading at times making the sensor to a point useless and possibly dangerous to use giving the wearer no choice but to change the sensor …you must always check your blood with a figer prick before administering insulin to stay safe…Another issue with Libre2 is the fluctuations when you are entering a area with a temperature change…winter sensor reads high outside..drops back down after entering the house…from my experience..my sensor reading jumps up in the cold(false reading) AND drops low in the heat(false reading)heat example ..direct sun hitting my sensor …they are far from perfect ..I sure hope the company can figure out how to fix these problems…a great tool..they just need a little fine tuning from the company..

          Reply
    • Michelle says

      September 14, 2022 at 3:23 pm

      I have a freestyle libre 2 and I get the same results. I don’t know which to trust anymore as my meter is older. The company replaced a sensor once when I called and told them about the issue but since it is an ongoing issue, I don’t think every sensor is flawed. I don’t know what to think or do anymore.

      Reply
      • Barb Wagstaff says

        September 15, 2022 at 2:59 pm

        Are you able to get a newer meter through your pharmacy or your diabetes center? When in doubt, they always say to trust your glucometer.

        Reply
      • Erick Brengle says

        November 16, 2022 at 9:54 am

        Same here I had four sensors read lower than my finger sticks by 20 points this month they replaced the senors but Wich to believe I think I’m going back to finger sticks

        Reply
      • Erick Brengle says

        November 16, 2022 at 9:54 am

        Same here I had four sensors read lower than my finger sticks by 20 points this month they replaced the senors but Wich to believe I think I’m going back to finger sticks I’m ask my Dr today wish one I should go by

        Reply
    • Maggie mae says

      November 30, 2022 at 8:36 am

      I have same experience with their customer care group .. call back is not what I need to be hearing every time I that I do csll them back

      Reply
    • Cindy P says

      October 29, 2023 at 12:14 pm

      I had the same thing happening to me. I finally lowered the volume on the alarm, and after a while of consistently checking and finding the difference between the sensor and the finger stick I turned off the alarm. Now I just checked it every couple hours.

      Reply
  8. Jut says

    May 31, 2022 at 9:29 pm

    I too am on day 5 of my very first Libre2 sensor and have been getting mixed readings. I have done a lot of research and understand the potential differences in readings between the libre and my finger sticks. Mine usually read much higher, around 40mg/dl more than my finger sticks but on my triple digit readings. My lower readings can be off 5-20 mg, always higher and never consistent. I get high alarms in the morning saying I’m 181 (180 alarm set) yet my finger stick will be around 140. This happens every morning when my liver is releasing glucose. My readings NEVER get as high as the libre readings, so it’s not a matter of lagging behind real numbers. These readings are definitely where I may want to dose insulin, skip a meal, change my exercise routine, wake up earlier or go to bed later, CONSTANTLY, die to the higher readings! It’s not a good sense of trust for this new user! I hate to think I have 3 weeks of this to endure before trying a new sensor. I can’t afford to waste them. I’m a bit bummed.

    Reply
    • Barb Wagstaff says

      June 1, 2022 at 2:31 pm

      That is horrible. Have you tried contacting Abbott to see if they can offer any help?

      Reply
  9. Amii Garner says

    June 30, 2022 at 9:50 am

    My sensor reads 86 but when I prick my finger it read 201.

    Reply
    • Barb Wagstaff says

      June 30, 2022 at 11:13 am

      You would definitely want to recalibrate the sensor. If it continues to be off like that, contact the manufacturer for assistance.

      Reply
      • Noelea D’Antonio says

        May 6, 2023 at 6:09 pm

        I have Libre 3. How do you recalibrate the sensor. The first reading was what the finger prick said but after that there is a 20 point difference, the sensor reading being lower.

        Reply
        • Barb Wagstaff says

          May 23, 2023 at 12:19 pm

          Contact support. I don’t see any way to calibrate the Libre 3s unfortunately. Hopefully they can offer you an option that works.

          Reply
    • Shannon says

      August 18, 2022 at 5:28 pm

      I have put a new sensor on and the number are different i tested it on the libra and it was 3.9 and tested it on my finger pricker and it was 4.9 is that bad

      Reply
    • Kenneth Henderson says

      January 18, 2023 at 12:42 pm

      My libre2 cgm says 54 and finger stick is 131, totally useless way to monitor blood glucose levels. I can’t put up with the constant alarms going off every day and night. I am disgusted with freestyle libre 2 and as of now I’m discontinuing its use…..

      Reply
  10. Vince Leone says

    September 7, 2022 at 8:11 pm

    I appreciate the above mentioned comments concerning the differences in gathering data regarding numbers received from finger sticking vs using the sensor. I am a new user of Freestyle Libre 2 and was concerned over the difference in glucose readings.

    Reply
  11. Sam says

    September 29, 2022 at 11:05 pm

    Ugh, I also have readings that are super off. My fasting (i.e., should be stable) CGM readings are 12-20 pts below my finger readings… consistently. If my CGM readings were correct, I’d be in good shape… but the finger stick readings are telling me I’m in need of insulin. It’s super frustrating, and Abbot was horrible on the phone–condescending, kept telling me that a lag was normal–even after I kept telling him that even accounting for the lag, the CGM readings were never peaking even close to the finger stick readings. He also kept telling me that ‘both readings were right’ within margin of error (20 points is well above their margin of error), that he was not a doctor and to talk to my doctor, and my tentative request for a better calibrated sensor resulted in him hanging up on me. So… not sure what to do with the rather-expensive CGMs with readings that make no sense.

    Reply
  12. Julie says

    October 10, 2022 at 8:06 am

    I just checked my glucose with a test strip and it was 187 although the freestyle Libre said 137 that’s a 50 point difference. I do have Dawn syndrome but the Libre never catches up to an actual finger stick. During the day it’s much closer even acceptable but this is way off. I feel sorry for the people that are on insulin at least I don’t have to worry about that yet.

    Reply
  13. Miley Fisher says

    December 24, 2022 at 12:30 pm

    My boyfriends constant monitor said he was at Urgent Low, which was odd because he didn’t feel low. So he used the finger prick and it said he was at 260 which is obviously a very extreme difference. If he takes insulin and the monitor was right, he’s dead. He also didn’t want to risk exploding his blood suger. He decided to trust the finger prick, but this is still very scary.

    Reply
  14. Tim says

    January 25, 2023 at 2:29 pm

    I use Libre 3 and have issues with it reading extremely low. I am constantly be woken up by alarms telling me that I am at 50 when a finger stick shows 120. Change sensors, no difference. If tends are what they are good at, redesign the thing to do so without alarms or numbers. Or better yet, allow the user to calibrate the system by performing finger sticks that are used to calibrate the damn thing.

    Reply
    • Sunnie says

      June 14, 2023 at 3:23 pm

      I have the exact same issue. In fact, I just got a low glucose alarm saying 65. Did a finger stick and it came back at 101.

      For the last year that I’ve been using the sensor, I’ve just assumed the sensor was accurate (or pretty close). Alarms startle me out of a dead sleep and I’ll jump out of bed and down a can of root beer or orang juice.

      Until very recently, I didn’t realize that the Freestyle Libre 3 and a finger stick could be so dramatically different. Now I’m starting to use my Verio Reflect everytime I get a low glucose alarm on the Freestyle… And there’s a lot.

      This is getting expensive, and honestly is starting to feel dangerous. I’m Type II and take Trulicity. I am completely asymptomatic to highs and lows which is why a sensor is so important in my diabetes care.

      On top of that, Kaiser is now refusing to cover a CGM since I’m not Type I. I’ve tried to appeal the decision, but even that was denied. My previous insurance covered it, and my doctors have prescribed it (even my Kaiser doctor). Trulicity has really helped get my diabetes under control for the first time in my life. If I can’t get the sensors covered, I’m worried that I’ll have to stop the Trulicity and watch my A1C go back up to 8.5%+.

      Sorry for the long-winded rant… I’m just so frustrated and tired of dealing with all of these issues.

      Reply
  15. Lisa says

    January 28, 2023 at 1:34 pm

    I have used Dexcom 6 and am currently using Eversense and just had my second one implanted. I didn’t have as many off times with D6 but I also wasn’t calibrating or rechecking with finger sticks as often. Eversence has been all over the chart. It doesn’t matter if I’m fasting it can still be sometimes as much as 80 points off from a finger stick. These devices are too expensive for these known deviations in appropriate readings!
    I have compared D6, Freestyle Libra, and Eversence (ES) on various points. Here are the key reasons I have gone with ever since. Even though it frustrates me to no end about the difference between the CGM reading and my finger stick reading.
    1. Cost – ES overall is a bit cheaper. At least with my current insurance. Up front it costs more because you aren’t able to stagger the expense over multiple months. But long-term and for the year it is less.
    2. Lost or messed up transmitters – when I had D6 I had multiple transmitters that either got knocked off or in some way messed up. I would have to remove it and put my next one on. That meant at the end of my 90 days I might spend anywhere from 10 days to an entire month without a transmitter. Because you don’t get spares for those issues! The same issue applies to Libre. ES is the same transmitter for about a year. You have little stickies that stick it to your skin. You have to take it off about every two days to charge. It does charge very quickly. Mine will usually fully charge in less than an hour. I usually get plenty of stickies and if I needed more I probably could contact my doctor to get another box. This is probably the biggest reason I’ve continued with ES.
    3. Calibrating – ES requires the most calibration! This is the biggest reason I almost did not continue with it. When you initially have it inserted you have to calibrate with finger sticks four times and 12 hours. And not just any four times, but the four times the system tells you to calibrate. That could mean overnight. The problem with this is if you miss the calibration window you have to start the process all over again! This happens every time you miss the 4-Hour calibration window throughout the life of the device! The meter will not continue to read if you do not calibrate. D6 only required initial calibration and recommended daily calibration after that. However, it would still continue to read even if you did not calibrate. Considering the amount that I have had to spend on test strips, this may even the cost between ES and the others.
    4. CGM v. Finger stick Accuracy – as the above article says fingerstick is always more accurate than CGM. So when in doubt finger stick! I was very frustrated with ES when I found out that it really wasn’t necessarily any more accurate than the other option. Because that is one of the biggest things that they claim for it. With ES, I have had days where there is little to no difference between the Monitor and the finger stick. I have had times where it was as much as 80 points difference. Just frustrating!
    I hope some of this information helps some of you too.

    Reply
  16. Kevin says

    February 17, 2023 at 1:46 am

    My Libre3 is 100 to 150 points off on a regular basis! My finger stick right now shows me at 110 and the Libre3 alarm is screaming at me showing 253! Dealing with the continuous alarms telling me my sugar is high when I’m actually in my ideal range is unbearable!! I guess this is considered acceptable to expect me to keep my blood sugar dangerously low so my alarms are not screaming at me. The CGM is a great idea in theory. However, I have used the Libre1, 2 and 3. They all have been more than 50 points off on average. I refuse to continue to use these as they do not help in blood glucose monitoring for even semi accurate readings. I still have to do finger sticks multiple times a day. I was thinking that the CGM was designed to help reduce finger sticks and monitor blood sugar. The sensors are actually more of a stress on me than are helpful! I have to constantly turn my phone off at night to keep from being woke up, to keep from disturbing meetings at work, church ext…. After seeing from all the negative reviews from multiple sites. I would think the focus would be more on accuracy than making a smaller sensor.

    Reply
  17. Denise says

    April 2, 2023 at 8:52 pm

    It seems that individuals and insurance companies are paying quite a bit for CGM technology. I wonder why these faulty devices are not being pulled off the market or at least investigated. I’ve been using the Libre for about a year. It is all over the place compared to finger sticks.

    Reply
  18. Ell Jay says

    May 19, 2023 at 3:10 pm

    Ok, I recently starting using Libre 2 and I have the same problems as all of you. The STRESS from these “faulty” meters and their technology is enough to mess up your blood sugar! I am going to dump the Libre and go back to fingersticks. At least then I can rely on consistency and accuracy!

    Reply
  19. Brad says

    May 21, 2023 at 11:50 pm

    Using tge Dexcome G-7. Started 2 days ago. Biggest discrepancy between tge two has been 16 points. Smallest discrepancy 4 points. I assume there will always be some discrepancy because the measure different things. My plan: ever few days to stick but primarily rely on the G7. It is invaluable in showing how foods impact me. In particular it is showing me how food suppliers lie about sugar in the foods they market. Astounding the FDA allows them to get away with that practice.

    Reply
  20. Richard Eugene Neal says

    May 22, 2023 at 9:43 pm

    My Libra 2 alarm said I was at 67 but I felt is was lower because I started shaking and feeling dizzy so I did finger prick and it was 50. Not impressed

    Reply
  21. Laurel Schmitz says

    May 28, 2023 at 4:02 am

    Type 1 diabetic 43 years. I was so excited to start this and settling into I had a sense of relief. Was awesome to know my blood sugars and patterns. The problem is I keep pooping them off. In tanktops and bras. I have hit them on the door frames. I have ruined 6 sensors in a month. The spot they are on is not ideal and honestly I’m ready to give up. I realize I’m clumsy. But that’s not intentional. How sad.

    Reply
    • Robert Kuhn says

      July 21, 2023 at 4:04 pm

      Use a cover. I had the same issue. 3 in one week. Then I got a patch that covers it completely and it helps a ton.

      Reply
    • Cynthia Young says

      December 10, 2023 at 9:23 am

      I had that problem until I moved the sensor to right under my bra band in the front. I also use the over lays you can buy on Amazon. They are decorative and stay in place well. Good luck.

      Reply
  22. Jennifer D Brock says

    May 28, 2023 at 8:23 pm

    I am a new user of Libre 2 and my finger sticks will read around 110 when the Libre reads 65. It wakes me during the night saying I’m critical at 53 and I’ve bern shoving glucose tablet in my mouth like crazy. I’m just realizing that so many other people are having issues too. I had stopped pricking my finger as much over the last couple of days trusting the Libre was right and literally within a hour of eating a healthy meal it will alarm that I’m at 65 or less so I would drink juice or hard candy or glucose tabs then eat nuts and other fibers. I’ve never ate so much in my life since wearing this thing because it’s making it seem like my sugar has dropped so low. A couple of times I actually felt a little lightheaded and shaky but usually when the alarm goes off I feel fine but have trusted it’s reading. The past two days I have been comparing with finger sticks and my sugar is never low like libre says. I’ve even waited for 30mins or more and checked libre again and it doesn’t raise up much higher. It’s scary to think someone could either that too much insulin or too much glucose trusting this device. My nerves have been shot since I put this thing on. Every few minutes a critical alarm. That’s enough to cause a person other health problems. Ridiculous

    Reply
  23. Jean says

    June 5, 2023 at 10:03 am

    So I had a meal replacement shake. 30 minutes later my freestyle libre two sensor is going off saying “high glucose alert.” When I scan it comes back to 245 for a reading. I instantly took the same freestyle libre 2 reader but used a test strip and needle instead of the sensor itself. The reading came back to 100. Same exact device. Same time. Why is my reading 145 points off from the sensor?! I could understand a few points here and there. Perhaps 50 points or something but 145? That doesn’t make sense. I tried this on multiple occasions where my sensor was beeping due to a high glucose alert and I got the same result. The difference was over 100 points.

    Reply
  24. Becky says

    June 21, 2023 at 1:04 am

    How do you recalibrate the Libre 2?

    Reply
    • Barb Wagstaff says

      June 30, 2023 at 12:40 pm

      It appears that it cannot be recalibrated.

      Reply
  25. Meg says

    July 13, 2023 at 11:44 pm

    I love the Libre sensor but I can’t use the Libre with my monitor and the Libre2 isn’t compatible with my phone. I’ve been using the Libre because I can use it with my phone but it doesn’t have any alarms like Libre2 does. I’m still using it but the sensor runs 30 points higher than the finger stick. Thankfully I finally know why. Great article and very informative.

    Reply
  26. Melissa says

    September 11, 2023 at 9:15 am

    The best thing about the DexCom G7 is you can silence the alarms for a period of time. I only use it for trending. Thinking about giving it up and just doing finger sticks as I am not using insulin. Very expensive for something that doesn’t really help because you cannot depend on it being right.

    Reply
  27. Rid says

    September 12, 2023 at 6:00 pm

    This is like a natural maintenance of glucose in the intercellular fluid due to the physiology of the body.
    Apparently sugar is maintained due to the work of the liver and this is well regulated and the red line on monitor of cellphone is approximately at the same level half the night. It shows well adjustment of Libre 2.
    The body reacts to glucose in the intercellular fluid and not in the blood. The fact that blood glucose measured in finger is high compared to measurements at the point where the sensor is located may still damage blood cells or other places in the body. And apparently for some people with age crossing the vascular line along the glucose gradient is reduced.

    Reply
  28. Yongping Gai says

    November 23, 2023 at 2:41 am

    My Libra 2 is 100 pint higher than fingers pick stick. . It cause me to take more insulin and low down my auger lever too low. I’m almost dead.!!! Now I don’t trust it.

    Reply
  29. Neil Dornacker says

    December 18, 2023 at 2:35 pm

    My Libre 3 is off 30-90 points from my finger prick. This is a constant issue. If it is that far off, why use it? Is there someway you can place a meter adjustment button on the meter reader to set the meter to the finger prick. This would make a lot of sense, users would be greatfull, your sales would increase, as you have increased the confidence in your product by matching calibration, to the finger prick to meter. Hope you will take this advice ,and have prosperous sales.

    Reply
  30. Zbigniew Urban says

    July 29, 2024 at 6:37 pm

    My data from 29.07.2024
    Libre 2 Bayer fingers pick sticks
    16:00 8.6 6.7
    17:00 9.6 7.2
    17.08 9.4 7.6
    17:15 9.5 7.6
    18:00 8.2 6.9
    18:05 8.5 6.8
    20:40 6.4 4.9 after my daily routine of 30 min exercise with dumbbells – that is impossible, this sort of
    exercise lowers glucose radically
    21:30 7.9 6.2 40 min after light supper

    I think a legal action against Abbot should be started. These discrepancies are not due to time lag.

    Reply
  31. Dave m says

    September 4, 2024 at 9:09 am

    As I type this from my bed in the hospital, for the past several days my finger stick readings from the nurses have all been in the 170s even though I’ve fasted twice over 13 hours. Yet. my glucose level from a blood draw shows only 111, that being drawn 4 hours earlier and I’ve had nothing to drink or eat.
    I’ve been told that it might be caused by stress on my body having a mild heart att two days ago and a stent put in. I wanted to share this strange event simply to let others know that things can simply be out of whack regarding readings for no truly known reason.

    Reply
  32. Jeff Cranston says

    July 17, 2025 at 4:51 pm

    I’m beginning to think CGM technology is just not worth it. I know some people claim success and accuracy and even use a pump device with them. My experiences are not as good. Which leads me to believe two things. Either they technology isn’t perfected enough to be safe or CGMs differ from one persons chemistry to another. I started with both Libre and then Dexcom and gave up on both due to wide innacuracy, such as +/- 40 points on a regular basis. As an insulin taking diabetic, you learn quickly that you can’t rely on them for insulin dosing. Especially if the value the CGM reads is higher than a finger stick, where the finger stick is always immediate and accurate. Now, for the past 3 weeks, I’ve been using the Eversense 365. I’ve had some times when it’s been accurate compared to the fingerstick, but mostly 20% off, usually on the low side. But then, yesterday, I did both a fingerstick and read Eversense prior to insulin dosing and the numbers were close. And hour or two after dinner, and watching my reading drop via the Eversense down to 145 from 230, I felt bad. So I did a fingerstick and I was at 76! A 70 point difference! That’s ridiculous. Thankfully I knew the hypoglycemia feeling and could react quickly with a glucose tablet and some food. And I was at home where I could do it. One woman who has had a lot more years with Eversense told me how rapidly dropping or rising blood glucose will increase the lag time. In my case, we are talking about 45 to 90 minute lag time! Again that is unacceptable for reaction to a fast drop in blood sugar, which can be attributed to just 1 or 2 units of too much insulin. So now with Eversense, to me it’s another pointless gimmick that simply is unsafe and I will focus again back on fingersticks for accuracy. As a diabetic I know that it is accuracy for medication and accuracy for A1C are the only two things that matter. Some erroneous alarm that is innaccurate becomes the boy who cried wolf in short order.

    Reply

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