The way people handle mental health support has changed, and not in the way most expected. Many now pick up their phone before they ever think to call a friend, tell a family member, or schedule anything with a doctor. A 2026 survey put that figure at 43.75%, which is a lot of people working through something hard in private. Getting help used to mean telling someone. Now, for many, it means opening a mental health chatbot.
The market moved fast, and not always carefully. Some tools were built with clinical input, clear privacy standards, and honest limits. Others are a chat window, a soft font, and a wellness tagline. You usually cannot tell the difference until you are already using one.
Those risks of AI chatbots for mental health go beyond bad UX. Many can miss warning signs, handle data poorly, or quietly stand in for care that someone actually needs. A chatbot cannot read tone of voice, notice that you have not eaten, or catch the things people say without saying them. For serious distress or thoughts of self harm, no app replaces a real person. That line matters throughout this guide.
The best AI mental health chatbots do something harder than they look: they make it easier to understand what you are feeling without overstepping what they can actually do. Here is how the strongest options in 2026 compare.
Wysa
Wysa is a good starting point for someone who is not ready to book therapy but still needs somewhere to put the mess in their head. It launched in 2016 for a very specific kind of user: someone who is basically fine, except they are not really. It does not try to be a friend or a therapist. It just helps you get a clearer look at what is going on.
You describe the situation, it helps reframe it, and somewhere in that process suggests a small practical step. The methods come from CBT and DBT, with mindfulness or coaching depending on where the conversation goes.A lot of apps in this space look credible until you start asking questions.
Wysa has 45+ peer-reviewed studies behind it and over 6 million users across 105 countries. Most apps skip the research entirely. Wysa did not. It is a big part of why this tool sits at the top of the list rather than somewhere in the middle.
There is a free version with full AI chat access. Paid tiers add exercises and human coaching, usually through employers, health plans, or care programs. Works best before things get too heavy. Crisis care, self harm risk, and medical decisions belong with a real person.
- Best for: stress, anxiety, sleep, and daily emotional support
- How it helps: guided chat, breathing tools, journaling, and CBT based exercises
- AI style: structured chatbot with human support in some care paths
- Price: free version available; Premium at $99.99 per year; coaching from $19.99 per session
- Safety note: not for emergencies, crisis care, or diagnosis
Youper
Youper is an AI mental health chatbot for people who want emotional support and mood tracking without committing to formal therapy. Psychiatrist Jose Hamilton founded it in 2017, and the clinical foundation shows. A Stanford study confirmed it reduces anxiety and depression symptoms. A JAMA analysis named it the most engaging digital health tool in its category. Few consumer mental health apps have that kind of research behind them.
Each session opens with one question about how you are feeling. The app takes that answer and runs with it, using CBT, ACT, and DBT techniques to guide you through reflection and thought-checking. Keep at it over weeks and something shifts. The mood data stops being a log and starts feeling like a mirror.
Most people who stick with it use Youper between therapy sessions, or as a way to keep tabs on their mental state without talking to anyone. Not ideal for someone who just wants to talk freely. The structure is the point, and that will not suit everyone.
- Best for: mood tracking and private emotional check ins
- How it helps: CBT style chat, mood logs, symptom reflection
- AI style: conversational support with mood based prompts
- Price: 7-day free trial, then $69.99 per year; no monthly plan available
- Safety note: crisis support must come from emergency services
Ash
Ash came out of Slingshot AI in 2025. Daniel Cahn built it alongside Neil Parikh, who most people know as the Casper guy. Eighteen months of development, 50,000 beta users before anyone outside could touch it, and $93 million raised from a16z, Forerunner Ventures, and others. That kind of investment does not go into a mood tracker.
The model underneath was built for therapy, not general chat. CBT, DBT, ACT, psychodynamic work, motivational interviewing. It absorbed all of them. Which one it uses depends on you, not on what you ticked at signup. No fixed script. The memory piece is where it gets interesting. Ash holds onto what you told it last time. Come back a week later and it already knows where you were. Weekly insights pull patterns across sessions, so the picture builds rather than resets.
Currently free on iOS and Android, no paid tier yet, though one is expected eventually. Not built for crisis situations.
- Best for: long term emotional growth and personal patterns
- How it helps: text, voice, weekly insights, goal based support
- AI style: psychology foundation model trained across multiple therapeutic styles
- Price: currently free; no paid tier yet, though one is expected as the product scales
- Safety note: not designed for crisis situations
Earkick
Earkick is an AI mental health app built around one idea: make emotional health measurable in real time. It was founded in 2021 by Dr. Herbert Bay, a computer vision expert who previously led user sensing at Magic Leap, and Karin Andrea Stephan, whose master’s thesis was literally titled “Therapist in the Ear.” The product reflects both backgrounds.
You speak or type how you are feeling, and Earkick turns that into mood insights, trend reports, and coping prompts. Ten seconds of voice input is enough for a session. The app pulls in data from Apple Watch too, combining heart rate, sleep, and exercise alongside what you say, so the picture it builds is more than just self-reported mood. That multimodal approach is what separates it from most simple chat companions in this space.
The panda companion is a small but effective design choice. It makes daily tracking feel lighter than a clinical tool without undermining the data underneath. User totals are not publicly confirmed, though the app has been featured by Apple and carries thousands of ratings across app stores.
- Best for: mood tracking, stress checks, burnout awareness
- How it helps: voice notes, mood reports, coping prompts, wearable data integration
- AI style: AI coach with real-time tracking and pattern detection
- Price: free trial available; Premium at $14.99 per month or $89.99 per year
- Safety note: a wellness tracking tool, not a medical diagnosis platform
Yana
Yana started in Mexico in 2017. Andrea Campos built it after her own depression, named it You Are Not Alone, and launched it the same week Mexico went into quarantine. It became widely known in Latin America because it made emotional support feel simple and close. The app helps with anxiety, self esteem, mood, hard days, and mental health learning.
Yana uses AI conversation, emotional tracking, gratitude tools, and CBT based psychological exercises. Users can talk about feelings, track patterns, and receive simple guidance in a familiar tone. That familiarity is the whole point. By 2024 the app had reached 15 million users across 35 countries and passed 2 billion conversations. None of it came from paid marketing. Its main value is language access. For many users in Latin America, it feels more natural than English first mental health apps. English support arrived in 2024 when Yana expanded into the US.
Yana offers a free version and Yana Premium, with monthly or annual subscription options. Premium includes unlimited messages, more emotional records, and a larger gratitude vault. Pricing varies by region.
- Best for: Spanish-speaking users and daily emotional support
- How it helps: AI chat, emotional tracking, gratitude tools, CBT exercises
- AI style: friendly companion with guided mental health exercises
- Price: free version available; Yana Premium adds unlimited messages, emotional records, and gratitude vault. Monthly and annual plans, pricing varies by region
- Safety note: serious distress or crisis needs human emergency support
Headspace Ebb
Ebb launched inside Headspace in 2024. Most AI companions sit on their own. Ebb sits inside an app with a full library of meditations, exercises, and sleep content, so when you tell it what is going on, it can point you toward something that actually fits.
Ebb was designed with mental health experts, product teams, and data teams at Headspace. It uses conversational AI to help members sort thoughts and see a situation from another angle. Headspace says Ebb does not provide clinical mental health services and does not replace therapy or coaching. No independent clinical studies on Ebb specifically have been published to date, separate from the broader Headspace platform research.
The Headspace app has over 105 million downloads, which gives Ebb a large possible user base, though Ebb-specific numbers are not public.
- Best for: reflection, sleep worries, work stress, daily support
- How it helps: chat, gratitude, content suggestions, mindfulness tools
- AI style: conversational AI inside a larger wellness app
- Price: included in Headspace subscription at $69.99 per year after free trial
- Safety note: not monitored in real time by humans
Flourish
Flourish is ideal for the moment when you are not falling apart, but you are not exactly fine either. You open it to check in, write things down, get a little direction. Think of it less as a therapy room and more as somewhere to catch yourself before things quietly pile up.
It launched in 2024, built by a team of psychologists with roots at Stanford and Harvard. The research is more rigorous than you typically see at this end of the market. Two randomised controlled trials with over 1,600 participants showed real gains in wellbeing and resilience, and lower loneliness and anxiety scores. Then a Harvard auditing study found something harder to claim: Sunnie was the only AI companion tested with no sign of emotional manipulation. In a category where many tools prioritise time-in-app over actual user health, that finding carries weight.
Sunnie, the AI companion at the centre of the app, keeps things simple. It asks questions, listens, and guides users through reflection using evidence-based techniques. Over time it builds memory of your patterns and surfaces insights from them. The free version covers chat, journaling, and exercises. Flourish Plus unlocks unlimited conversations and more advanced personalisation.
- Best for: daily reflection, stress awareness, habit building, and emotional clarity
- How it helps: check-ins, journaling prompts, wellbeing exercises, and habit support
- AI style: psychologist-designed companion with evidence-based coaching
- Price: free version available; Flourish Plus as paid upgrade
- Safety note: built for everyday wellbeing, not crisis intervention
Rosebud
Rosebud started in 2023 in Santa Monica. Chrys Bader had previously co-founded Secret, a social app that reached 15 million users before shutting down. Sean Dadashi studied cognitive science at UC Berkeley. They met at a men’s group, started talking about therapy and coaching, and built something out of those conversations. The seed round came to $6 million, led by Susa Ventures, with Y Combinator among the backers. Over 150,000 people use it now.
Calling it a journal undersells it slightly. You open it, write about something that has been sitting on you, and it writes back. Not with advice exactly. More like the question a good therapist would ask next. The techniques come from CBT, ACT, and IFS, shaped with professional therapists who send their own clients to it between sessions. The memory piece matters too. It carries what you have shared before, so the longer you use it, the more it has to work with.
No peer-reviewed clinical trials exist yet, which puts it behind the evidence base of tools like Wysa or Youper. For people who process through writing rather than talking, it is one of the better-built options in this space.
- Best for: journaling, self-reflection, emotional pattern tracking, between-session support
- How it helps: conversational journaling, AI insights, habit tracking, goal setting
- AI style: therapist-backed AI journal with CBT, ACT, and IFS techniques
- Price: free tier available; Bloom plan at $8.99 per month on annual plan
- Safety note: self-help and personal growth tool, not a crisis resource or therapy replacement
Elomia
Elomia is an AI mental health chatbot designed by clinicians and made for private, always available emotional support. It is often used for anxiety, stress, depression symptoms, loneliness, and difficult thoughts. The app presents itself as an anonymous chat companion that can support users through hard moments at any time.
Elomia’s responses are described as therapist developed in study material, and research has tested it for college students with mild to moderate depression or anxiety. The chatbot offers supportive conversations, reflection, and coping strategies. It does not replace therapy. But it can make self help easier for people who avoid formal care. User totals are not publicly disclosed. Its appeal is privacy and direct emotional conversation. Users who want a simple chat space may like it more than apps full of long lessons.
- Best for: private support for stress, anxiety, loneliness
- How it helps: AI chat, reflection, therapist developed responses
- AI style: clinician designed conversational chatbot
- Price: free access available; $28.99 per month or $98.99 per year, lifetime plan also offered
- Safety note: no substitute for therapy or crisis care
Sonia
Sonia is an AI emotional support app built around text and voice sessions. Three friends founded it: Dustin Klebe, Lukas Wolf, and Chris Aeberli, all computer science graduates from ETH Zurich who later did AI research at MIT. They went through Y Combinator’s Winter 2024 batch and raised $3.4 million. The thinking behind Sonia is simple enough. Therapy helps, but most people can’t get it easily or pay for it regularly.
Sessions run on CBT methods. After each one, the app gives homework to carry the conversation into real life. What happens technically is interesting: for every response Sonia gives, about seven separate model calls run in the background, each analysing the situation from a different therapeutic angle before a reply gets chosen. It does not feel like a scripted chatbot. Mood tracking sits alongside the sessions too, so patterns in your stress show up over time.
Pricing is $20 a month or $200 a year. Three sessions are free to start. User totals are not publicly disclosed. People who prefer voice over text tend to get the most from it.
- Best for: voice based AI support and guided CBT style sessions
- How it helps: text chat, voice sessions, homework, mood reflection
- AI style: multi-model AI with CBT methods and therapeutic personalisation
- Price: 3 free sessions, then $20 per month or $200 per year
- Safety note: use human help for crisis or severe distress
Noah AI
Noah AI is a mental health companion app built by Feelgood Labs and designed by licensed psychologists. It is available in five languages across 50 or more countries, with a 4.7 rating across app stores. The focus is daily emotional support through text and voice, without waitlists or appointment pressure.
One feature is worth singling out. After a session, Noah can generate a PDF covering your mood trends, recurring themes, and coping patterns. You can hand that directly to a human therapist. Most apps in this space exist entirely outside clinical care. This one built a door between the two. Session memory works the same way — it carries everything forward, so you never have to catch it up on who you are or what happened last week.
The techniques come from CBT, DBT, and mindfulness, developed with psychologists. No independent clinical studies have been published yet, which puts it behind Wysa or Youper on the evidence side. What it has instead is a set of practical features, voice calls, memory, and that therapist export, that make it more useful day to day than apps with better research but fewer tools.
- Best for: private daily support with a bridge to human therapy
- How it helps: text chat, voice sessions, mood tracking, therapist-ready PDF exports
- AI style: psychologist-designed AI wellness companion
- Price: limited free use; approximately $9.99 per month or $44.99 per year
- Safety note: no independent clinical studies publicly available; not a substitute for professional care
Nuna
Nuna is a Danish AI mental health assistant developed by psychology professionals and built around early stress prevention. It was co-founded by Jacob Beckmann and sits closer to a wellbeing tracking system than a traditional chat companion. The app helps with stress, anxiety, and burnout through a combination of AI conversation, 55 evidence-based therapeutic tools, and a face scan feature that most apps in this space do not have.
That face scan is worth explaining. Nuna partnered with IntelliProve, a facial scan technology company, to add a 30-second analysis that reads physiological stress signals from your face rather than asking you to self-report. A wellbeing score comes back at the end. The reported accuracy is 94%. Sit with that number for a second. Most apps ask how you feel on a scale of one to ten. This one reads it. The AI chat and sentiment tracking layer on top of that, so what builds over time is not a mood log but something closer to a stress map.
Therapeutic tools number 55, drawing from CBT, ACT, and mindfulness-based stress reduction. GDPR compliance is baked in. For a European product handling sensitive biometric data, that is not a small detail. Pricing is not publicly listed and user totals are not disclosed, with access running through business or wellness programs.
- Best for: workplace stress prevention and employee wellbeing
- How it helps: stress checks, face scan analysis, sentiment tracking, wellbeing insights
- AI style: AI assistant with biometric stress data tools
- Price: business focused, no public consumer pricing listed
- Safety note: a prevention and tracking tool, not a diagnosis platform
Mindsera
Mindsera is an AI journal for mental wellbeing, mindset, and cognitive skills. It is not a classic therapy chatbot. It gives AI reflections that can support mental health. Users write entries, and the app analyzes thoughts, emotions, patterns, and habits. The official site says it is trusted by over 80,000 users.
Mindsera works best for people who process emotions through writing. It detects emotional tone, suggests prompts, and helps users understand repeated thoughts. The pattern tracking is where it earns its place. Write about anxiety every Sunday night for three weeks and the app will surface that. Most people miss those connections on their own. This makes it useful for stress, self awareness, burnout prevention, and creative blocks. It gives more value when users write often and honestly.
At $129 per year, it sits at the mid-range of AI mental health tools. That is roughly what you would pay for two therapy sessions in most cities, without the scheduling pressure. It may be less useful for people who need real time crisis help or direct therapy style conversation. Its strength is gradual self-knowledge through writing, tracking, and reflection over time.
- Best for: journaling, self awareness, emotional pattern tracking
- How it helps: AI reflections, prompts, emotion analysis, habit tracking
- AI style: AI journal with chatbot like feedback
- Price: $129 per year
- Safety note: reflection tool, not crisis or medical care
Mindspa
Mindspa started in 2018, built by a team of psychologists who wanted self therapy to feel less like homework. It has passed 1 million users. Every piece of content goes through a clinical safety officer before it goes live, which is not something most apps bother with. In 2024 it picked up ORCHA and DHAF quality certifications for the fourth year in a row.
The chatbot is not the main event here. It handles the immediate stuff, guided prompts, quick coping steps, an emergency chat for when anxiety spikes and you need something right now. What Mindspa actually built is a course library. Over 35 programs, each written by psychologists, covering relationships, self-esteem, anxiety, eating behaviour, family problems, and more. The methods run across CBT, Gestalt therapy, EMDR, positive psychology, and mindfulness. Each course mixes theory, exercises, and meditations in a structured sequence.
Most of the app is free. The diary, coping exercises, emergency chatbot, and articles cost nothing. The paid courses are where the deeper work lives. Pricing varies by program and market.
- Best for: guided self therapy and coping exercises
- How it helps: diary, emergency chatbot, courses, meditations, articles
- AI style: guided chatbot inside a psychologist-built self therapy app
- Price: free tools available; paid courses vary by program and region
- Safety note: useful for coping and self-growth, not a therapist replacement
Limbic
Limbic is built for healthcare providers, not individual users. It sits inside mental health services to handle intake, assessment, triage, and between-session support. The operational parts of care that consume clinician time without always needing a clinician to run them.
The product has two main components. Limbic Access handles the intake side, gathering patient information through conversation and feeding structured assessment data back to the clinical team. Limbic Care adds a chat layer for support between sessions. Between them, the two tools have now reached over 650,000 patients across 45% of NHS Talking Therapies services in the UK. On the regulatory side, Limbic Access earned Class IIa UKCA medical device certification — the first AI mental health chatbot anywhere to clear that bar for clinical safety and effectiveness.
Access is through provider contracts, not app stores. Clinics, health systems, and care organisations book demos and negotiate access directly. Patients encounter Limbic through their care provider, usually without knowing they are using it.
- Best for: clinical intake, referral support, provider workflows
- How it helps: assessment chat, triage support, between-session care
- AI style: clinical AI with provider integration
- Price: provider contract, no public consumer plan
- Safety note: designed to support clinicians, not replace them
Clare and Me
Clare and Me is a German conversational AI company focused on behavioral health. Its chatbot, Clare, has been studied with users interested in AI self help. Beyond the consumer side, the company offers a Clinical LLM API built specifically for clinics and healthcare businesses, letting care providers embed mental health conversations, AI-powered intake, and anonymous employee support directly into their own services.
Clare is built for mental health conversations, intake support, and scalable self help. A 2025 study examined 527 users of Clare and looked at user motives, expectations, and therapeutic alliance. That gives the product more research context than many new AI mental health chatbots with only app store claims.
Public pricing is not listed, which reflects where the company focuses. Its best fit is clinics, healthcare companies, and digital care teams that want conversational AI inside their own mental health services.
- Best for: clinics, behavioral health APIs, structured self help
- How it helps: conversational support, intake, clinical workflow tools
- AI style: clinical large language model and mental health chatbot
- Price: business focused, public pricing not listed
- Safety note: should be used inside clear care boundaries
Conclusion
There is something useful about having a place to say, “I’m not okay” without having to explain everything perfectly. That is where AI mental health chatbots can help. They can make support feel less intimidating, especially for people who would otherwise stay silent.
The therapy apps and chatbots we reviewed in this article show how wide this space has become. Some tools help people track moods. Some help them write. Some are built for work settings or health services. None of that makes them equal to therapy, but it does show that people are looking for softer, easier ways to start.
The best chatbot is honest about its place. It helps with the first layer: stress, worry, reflection, small coping steps. When the pain goes deeper, it should lead the person toward real help, not keep them inside the app.
FAQs
Can an AI mental health chatbot replace a therapist?
No. A chatbot can ask questions, suggest coping steps, and help you name what you are feeling. It cannot diagnose you, respond to a crisis, or build the kind of ongoing care that therapy provides. It does not know your history, the things you almost say and then delete, or when something has shifted in a way that needs a real response. For everyday stress and reflection, it can be enough. When things feel unsafe or too heavy, you need a trained person.
Which AI mental health chatbot is best for daily stress?
There is no single best option because the right tool depends on how you actually cope when you are stressed. People who want structure tend to do well with Wysa. Those who prefer speaking over typing may find Earkick more natural. Spanish-speaking users are often better served by Yana, which was built for that audience from the start. If you already use mindfulness tools, Headspace Ebb fits into a routine you already have. The best daily stress app is the one that feels light enough to open on a hard day.
Are AI mental health chatbots safe to use?
For everyday stress, mood tracking, and emotional reflection, yes. The main risks are privacy and over-reliance. Before using any app, check how it stores your data, what it does when a user mentions self-harm, and whether it has a clear path to human help in a crisis. Apps that are vague about those things are worth avoiding. If a situation becomes urgent, do not keep typing. Contact someone who can actually act.
Why do people use AI chatbots instead of talking to someone?
Because reaching out to a person carries weight that an app does not. Friends worry. Family members judge. A doctor feels like a formal step. A chatbot asks nothing of you socially, it is available at midnight, and it does not remember anything beyond the session unless you want it to. That low barrier is genuinely useful for people who are not yet ready to say the words out loud to another human. The risk is that the chatbot becomes the place where everything stays hidden rather than a step toward real support.
What should I look for when choosing an AI mental health app?
Start with privacy. The app should be clear about how your data is stored and whether it is used to train models. Then check its honesty about limits. A trustworthy tool states plainly that it is not therapy and not a crisis service. Beyond that, fit matters. Some people process through writing, others through voice, others through structured check-ins. Pick the format that matches how you naturally work through things. If an app promises more than it can deliver, that is a reason to keep looking.

