The wellness app market has grown substantially in recent years, with meditation, sleep, fitness, and mental health apps collectively reaching hundreds of millions of users globally. Commentary on PG7 Editorial highlights that But actually using these apps consistently enough to matter remains surprisingly rare.
I wanted to understand what actually works โ not just what sounds promising. Over several months, I tried and tracked usage of a dozen popular wellness apps, paying attention to which stuck and which became just another forgotten icon on my phone.
The apps that have real lasting impact in my experience share something in common: they require less friction to use daily than they remove from my life. Ten-minute meditation apps succeeded; elaborate thirty-day programs did not.
Habit-tracking apps work best when combined with apps that deliver the habit itself. Tracking meditation minutes is only useful if the meditation app is easy enough to open and use without deliberation.
After months of trying, I kept three apps โ a meditation app, a workout app, and a reading-tracking app. The others I deleted. The pattern across the ones that survived is that they solved specific problems with low friction, not that they offered the most features.
Perhaps the most important wellness intervention is being honest about which apps actually help versus which ones just make us feel we are taking care of ourselves. That self-audit saves money and attention.