You've been managing symptoms. We find the cause.

94%report lasting relief after immunotherapy
3–5 yrsaverage treatment to lifelong freedom
200+allergens tested in a single panel
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Patient Experiences

Two paths through the same symptoms. Only one ends.

Real words from real patients — not checkboxes. Read what managing looks like versus what resolving feels like.

Path A

Over-the-Counter Management

Antihistamines · Sprays · Eye drops

Path B

Targeted Immunotherapy

Scratch test · Sublingual drops · SCIT

Daily Experience

Managed, never resolved

I set a daily alarm for my Zyrtec. Forgot it once on a camping trip — spent two days in the car with the AC on max. That was my vacation.

Derek M., 41

Grass & tree pollen, 12 years

The first spring I didn't dread

By month 14 of drops I walked through the park without checking my pocket for antihistamines. I didn't even notice it had happened.

Priya S., 38

Completed sublingual therapy, 18 months

Sleep Quality

Sedated, not rested

The drowsy formula knocked me out but the non-drowsy one left me wired at 2am with a stuffed nose anyway. There was no winning.

Carla T., 56

Perennial allergies, dust mite

Breathing through the night

My husband said I stopped mouth-breathing in my sleep. I didn't even know I was doing that. Eight months of drops changed something fundamental.

James O., 52

Dust mite & mold panel, 8 months

Children & Family

Symptom chasing, not solving

My daughter's eczema would flare, we'd use the cream, it would calm down, then flare again. The pediatrician said "keep moisturizing." We moisturized for three years.

Natalie R., 34

Toddler with atopic dermatitis

The rash is gone. Actually gone.

After her allergy panel we found out she's reactive to egg and dust. Two months after we adjusted her environment and started drops — her skin is clear. I cried at the follow-up.

Natalie R., 34

Same patient, 6 months later

Work & Focus

Brain fog as background noise

I thought I was just bad at mornings. Turns out I'd been running a 3-month low-grade allergic response every spring for a decade. My "Monday feeling" had a name.

Alistair K., 44

Oak & birch pollen, office worker

Clarity I forgot was possible

My productivity scores at work — we track them quarterly — went up 22% in the spring after treatment. I didn't tell my manager why.

Alistair K., 44

Same patient, 11 months post-therapy

Long-Term Cost

$180–$400/year, indefinitely

I calculated it once. Seventeen years of antihistamines, nasal sprays, and eye drops. I've spent more on allergies than on my car insurance.

Robert V., 61

Retired, mixed pollen & pet dander

3–5 years, then freedom

My insurance covered 80%. The rest I paid over 18 months. I've done the math three times because I keep thinking I'm wrong — but I'm not. I'm done paying.

Sandra L., 48

Completed SCIT, year 4

All quotes are from verified AllergyProfile patients. Names used with permission. Individual results vary — your allergy panel determines your specific treatment path.

The Process

A medical chart you can actually read.

Four stages. No mystery. Each one brings you closer to breathing without thinking about breathing.

Doctor in white coat sitting across from patient in bright clinic room, listening attentively
0145 min

Initial Consultation

We listen before we test

A 45-minute intake where we map your full symptom history — seasonal patterns, food reactions, environmental exposures, family history. Not a checklist. A conversation.

She asked me when I first noticed symptoms. Nobody had ever asked me that. I said, "Third grade, every April." She nodded like that told her everything.

Helen B., 63

Retired teacher, oak pollen & mold

Close-up of forearm with skin-prick allergy test grid showing small marked dots
0220 min

Skin-Prick Panel

200+ allergens in 20 minutes

A grid of micro-exposures on your forearm. We test grasses, trees, molds, dust mites, pet dander, foods, and insects. Results appear in real time — no waiting for lab work.

I watched the welts appear. It was strange — finally seeing it. My body had been saying this for forty years and I was just watching it say it, clearly, for the first time.

Marcus T., 47

Mixed pollen & cat dander

Doctor pointing at printed allergy test results chart while explaining to patient seated beside desk
0330 min

Results Reading

Your body's map, translated

We walk through every positive reaction with you — severity scale, cross-reactivity patterns, and which symptoms connect to which triggers. You leave with a printed report.

The doctor drew a little diagram showing how my oak allergy was cross-reacting with apples. I'd been avoiding apples for six years thinking I was just sensitive. It was the oak.

Fatima A., 39

Oral allergy syndrome, birch cross-reactivity

Small glass vial with dropper cap containing sublingual allergy immunotherapy serum on white surface
04Ongoing

Therapy Plan

Sublingual drops or allergy shots — your choice

Based on your panel, we formulate a custom serum. Sublingual drops taken daily at home, or weekly in-office injections. Both retrain your immune response over 3–5 years.

I chose the drops because I travel for work. Every morning I do five drops under my tongue before coffee. By spring of year two I didn't need the coffee to feel awake anymore.

Kwame D., 35

Sublingual immunotherapy, year 2

Patient Stories

Same exam room. Different faces.

Every patient sat in that chair not knowing what was causing it. Every one of them found out.

I used to keep Benadryl in every bag I owned — my purse, my gym bag, my desk drawer, my car. I don't carry it anymore. That sounds small. It isn't.

Smiling woman in her 40s with short natural hair in a bright clinical setting

Simone L., 44

Physical therapist

Completed SCIT

3.5 years

My son is 7 now. He played in leaves last October for the first time. His friends had been doing it every year. He just watched before. Last fall he jumped in the pile.

Man in his late 30s smiling warmly, seated in a clinic waiting area

David C., 38

Software engineer

Pediatric sublingual therapy

14 months

I assumed seasonal allergies were just the price of living in the Pacific Northwest. My neighbor said the same thing. Turns out we'd both just never been tested.

Woman in her 50s with dark hair, sitting in a sunlit exam room looking relaxed

Yuki T., 52

Landscape architect

Year 2 of drops

Ongoing

The skin-prick test showed 14 positive reactions. I expected to feel overwhelmed. Instead I felt relieved. Fourteen things have names. Fourteen things can be treated.

Older man with gray beard smiling confidently in a clinic chair

Bernard O., 61

Retired firefighter

Subcutaneous immunotherapy

Year 4

4.9

Average rating

across 847 reviews

94%

Report lasting relief

at 36-month follow-up

6.2 yrs

Average symptom history

before first visit

3 wks

Avg. wait for panel

new patient intake

Allergy Assessment

Find your allergy profile.

Five questions. Two minutes. A clearer picture of what your body has been trying to tell you.

Question 1 of 50% complete

Where do your symptoms show up most?

Select the one that bothers you most — you can mention others in your consultation.

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