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How To Pick Mental Health Apps

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Evidence-based first

Mental health apps range from legitimate therapy platforms to data-harvesting mood journals. Knowing the difference matters — because the wrong choice costs you money, privacy, or worse, real care.

Trackers vs structured programs

There are thousands of mental health apps in the stores. A small slice are genuinely useful; most are glossy wrappers on questionnaires; some are actively harmful. Here’s how to evaluate one before you hand over your credit card and your most sensitive data.

The privacy nightmare

Start by asking what the app is actually doing. Therapy-backed platforms like BetterHelp and Talkspace connect you to licensed clinicians — that’s real therapy over video or text. CBT-based self-help like Moodfit, Woebot, or structured courses inside Calm and Headspace can help with mild to moderate symptoms, but they’re tools, not clinicians. If an app can’t describe the clinical framework it’s built on, that’s a red flag.

Pricing traps

Mood trackers (Daylio, eMoods) are journaling tools — great for noticing patterns, useless on their own for acute symptoms. Structured programs guide you through exercises over weeks, modeled on protocols like CBT or ACT. Meditation apps are their own category and work best for stress and sleep, not for depression or PTSD alone.

When an app is not enough

The free trial that auto-renews at $89 is the oldest trick in the app store. Set a calendar reminder two days before any trial ends. Watch for “lifetime” deals that quietly become annual. Therapy platforms often charge weekly — do the math: $80/week is $4,160/year, more than most in-network therapy copays.

Common mistakes

Apps are not sufficient for suicidal ideation, active self-harm, psychosis, bipolar episodes, severe eating disorders, or trauma that keeps resurfacing. These need a clinician, often medication, sometimes inpatient care. If you’re in crisis in the US, call or text 988. In the UK, call 111 or Samaritans at 116 123. Other countries have their own lines — look yours up now, before you need it.

Bottom line

The two biggest errors: using an app as a therapy substitute when you actually need a clinician, and not reaching out in a real crisis because the app felt like “doing something.” Also common: chasing streaks instead of insight, downloading five apps and using none, and ignoring the privacy policy because the UI is pretty. An app that profits from your anxiety is not your friend.