Best Self Care Apps

Wysa Review: 2026 Overview

4.1/5 our score 4.8 App Store 4.5 Google Play

The verdict

4.1/ 5   An anonymous AI chatbot that walks you through CBT-style exercises, with optional human coaching.

Wysa is one of the more clinically-minded AI companions we tested: an anonymous chatbot that guides you through CBT and DBT-style exercises, with the option to pay for real human coaching. We scored it 4.1 out of 5, helped by a strong evidence subscore. Our overall #1, Liven, still covers more of self-care end to end, but if you mainly want a judgement-free place to talk and practise techniques, Wysa is a thoughtful choice.

See our #1 pick: Liven Full ranking

Talking to a chatbot about your feelings sounds odd until you try it at 1am, when no one else is awake. Wysa is built for exactly that moment: an anonymous AI companion that listens, then steers you into a short, structured exercise drawn from cognitive behavioural therapy and related methods. You don't need an account or your real name to begin, and that low bar is a big part of why people stick with it.

We tested Wysa over several weeks and found it more clinically-minded than most self care apps in this space. It's less about open-ended chat and more about guiding you, step by step, through a tool: reframing an anxious thought, grounding yourself, or unpacking what's actually bothering you. That structure is its strength — and, for people who want a real conversation, also its main limit.

What is Wysa?

Wysa is an AI companion app from the developer of the same name, available on iOS and Android. At its core is a penguin chatbot you message in plain language; it responds supportively and then offers a relevant exercise from a library grounded in CBT, DBT and mindfulness. Alongside the AI, Wysa offers mood tracking, journaling, guided audio and short self-help packs.

The AI chat and a good chunk of the exercises are no-cost. A premium subscription, around $99.99 a year, unlocks additional content packs, and separately you can pay for live human coaching — text sessions with trained coaches — which sits above the app subscription. So there are really three layers: the no-cost AI, paid premium content, and paid human support on top.

Who it suits

Wysa fits people who want to talk something through without talking to a person — at least not yet. The anonymity removes the friction of signing up or being recognised, which makes it easier to be honest. If you're curious about CBT but don't know where to start, the chatbot effectively hands you a technique at the moment you need one, rather than leaving you to dig through a library.

It's also a sensible middle step for anyone weighing up more support. You can start with the no-cost AI, and if you decide you want a human in the loop, the coaching tier is right there. That said, if you want one app that also builds habits, runs courses and tracks your whole self-care routine, Wysa is narrower than an all-in-one and you'll feel those edges.

What it does well

The exercise library is the real value. Wysa doesn't just sympathise; it moves you toward doing something — a thought-reframe, a grounding drill, a brief reflection — which is what makes a session feel like it accomplished something rather than just venting into the void. With a session-lift score of 4 from us, one short interaction usually does leave you a little steadier.

Its clinically-minded footing also stands out. For an AI app, Wysa has invested visibly in evidence and safety, and it earns one of the stronger evidence subscores (4.3) in our list. The anonymity, the calm tone and the way it routes toward crisis resources when needed all add up to a tool that takes the health-adjacent stakes seriously, without overclaiming what a chatbot can do.

Where it falls short

The conversation can feel on-rails. Because the AI is built to guide you safely toward structured exercises, it doesn't hold a free-flowing, open-ended chat the way some companion apps aim to. When you want to be heard more than coached, the scripted feel becomes obvious, and replies can miss the nuance of what you actually said.

There are gaps in breadth, too. Wysa has no habit builder and no widgets, and its all-in-one depth (a 3.9 subscore) trails the broadest apps. The most meaningful human support — live coaching — is a paid add-on beyond premium, so the genuinely useful no-cost layer is the AI and exercises rather than a person. None of this is a flaw exactly; it's the shape of a focused tool. Just know that shape before you commit.

Pricing & value

The no-cost layer is generous: the AI chat and a meaningful set of CBT-style exercises don't cost anything, which alone makes Wysa worth installing. Premium runs about $99.99 a year for additional content packs, and live human coaching is priced separately on top. You cancel through your app-store subscription, and the no-cost chat remains afterwards.

Our value subscore (3.9) is solid rather than spectacular — premium content is reasonable, but the coaching is where costs climb. The smart move is to lean on the no-cost AI and exercises first, then only pay if you find yourself wanting either the extra packs or a human coach. Prices are approximate as of June 2026; verify on the store before subscribing.

Wysa versus Liven

Liven, our #1 overall, is an all-in-one self-discovery app: mood tracking, journaling, courses, habits, guided audio and an AI companion called Livie, drawing on CBT, positive psychology, ACT, DBT and solution-focused methods. It simply covers more of real self-care in one place, which is why it leads our ranking, with premium from $59.99 a year.

Where Wysa holds its own is focus. Its anonymous, exercise-first chat is more squarely built around CBT-style self-help in the moment, and the optional human-coaching path is something Liven's self-guided program doesn't replicate in the same way. Wysa also edges Liven on low-pressure design (4 to 3). So: choose Liven if you want one guided app for the whole journey; choose Wysa if you specifically want an anonymous AI to talk things through and practise techniques. Neither is therapy or a crisis service.

Our verdict

Wysa earns its 4.1 by being a clear-headed, clinically-minded AI companion rather than a do-everything app. The anonymity lowers the barrier, the CBT and DBT-style exercises give each session a point, and the optional human coaching is a genuine bridge toward more support. It won't match the breadth of an all-in-one like Liven, and it isn't a replacement for professional care or a crisis line. But as a no-cost, judgement-free place to talk and practise, it's one of the more credible self care apps we've used. If you're ever in danger, contact 988 in the US and Canada (free, 24/7) instead of an app.

Maker: Wysa · Platforms: iOS, Android · Approach: Self-guided AI, optional human coaching · Methods: CBT, DBT, mindfulness

Wysa plans & pricing

Free tier: Generous no-cost AI chat and exercises.
Trial: Free core; paid for premium packs and human coaching.

Premium
~$99.99/year
coaching costs more

Prices approximate, as of June 2026 — verify on the App Store / Google Play. Premium content packs and live human coaching are paid; the AI chat is largely no-cost.

Cancellation: Cancel through your app-store subscription; the no-cost chat remains.

Feature checklist

Wysa pros & cons

What's good

  • Anonymous by design — no account or real name needed to start
  • Large library of CBT, DBT and mindfulness-style exercises
  • Generous no-cost AI chat and core tools
  • Strong evidence and safety footing for an AI app
  • Option to add real human coaching when you want more

What to weigh up

  • The AI is a scripted guide, not a free-flowing conversation
  • Human coaching costs extra on top of premium
  • No habit builder, widgets or deep all-in-one breadth

Support

Help is available in-app, and the optional human-coaching tier connects you with trained coaches for text-based sessions. Wysa also surfaces crisis resources when its safety system detects you may need them.

Method & credibility

Wysa draws on CBT, DBT and mindfulness techniques and has positioned itself as clinically-minded, with published research and safety work behind its approach. It's a self-help tool, not therapy or a diagnosis service, and it's clear that it isn't a substitute for professional care.

Privacy & data

Anonymity is a core selling point — you can chat without handing over your name, and Wysa emphasises that conversations are private. As always with a health-adjacent app, read the current privacy policy before sharing anything sensitive.

Third-party ratings

We report independent ratings with their source and date and never invent them. Figures here are approximate and pending verification before launch.

Our data: Wysa

Two numbers we measure ourselves, on the same 1–5 scale for every app — the things most roundups never score (see all 20 on the compare page):

Single-session lift: 4/5 (does one short session leave you feeling a bit better?) Low-pressure design: 4/5 (how gentle and guilt-free it is to live with)

Wysa FAQ

Is Wysa anonymous?

Largely, yes. You can start chatting with the AI without creating an account or sharing your real name, which is a core part of its appeal. Still read the current privacy policy before sharing anything sensitive.

Does Wysa replace a therapist?

No. Wysa is a self-help tool built around CBT and DBT-style exercises, not therapy or medical care, and it isn't a substitute for professional support. If you're in crisis, contact 988 in the US and Canada (free, 24/7).

What costs money in Wysa?

The AI chat and many exercises are no-cost. Premium (about $99.99/year) adds content packs, and live human coaching is a separate paid add-on on top. Verify current prices on the store.

A note on these apps: This site is for general information and everyday self-care. None of the apps here are a substitute for professional medical or mental-health care, and nothing on this page is intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition. If you're struggling, please speak with a qualified healthcare professional.
In crisis? If you're in crisis or thinking about harming yourself, contact your local emergency services now. In the US and Canada you can call or text 988 to reach a trained counsellor, free and 24/7. You are not alone, and help is available.
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Editor & lead app tester · Reviewed by Caleb Frost, Wellbeing writer & second reviewer

Nadia runs the testing desk here. She lives inside self-care apps for weeks before she will score one — installing them, finishing onboarding, then using them on ordinary days and bad ones. She owns the scorecard and edits every page on the site for accuracy.

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