Mighty Health is a wellness platform for people over 50, combining fitness programs, nutrition plans, live classes, and personal coaching into an integrated offer targeting a demographic that most wellness apps have largely ignored.
ENTRY ANGLES
Health and wellness apps designed specifically for 50+ demographic · Edtech platforms tailored to older adults' learning goals and communication preferences · Social connection platforms for post-career life and retirement
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Understanding 50+ demographic's goals, context, and communication preferences, Recurring subscription model implementation, Platform design that accommodates aging users' needs
Mighty Health is a wellness platform built exclusively for people over 50 – and it's one of the few apps in the category that treats fitness, nutrition, and emotional support as a single integrated offer rather than three separate products.
Users get access to fitness programs adapted specifically for older bodies – exercises filterable by position (standing, seated, lying down) and body area, so the barrier to starting is minimal. Live online classes run periodically, with slots reserved in advance due to group size limits. Between sessions, users can reach a personal coach via chat for motivation support and help managing the everyday mental friction that derails most health programs.
The nutrition layer adds meal plans, healthy recipes, and online cooking classes. A community forum lets users share progress, swap recipes, and ask questions – building the social accountability that sustains long-term behavior change.
The health outcomes Mighty Health reports are concrete: users lose weight, improve blood pressure readings, and reduce joint pain. The subscription runs $29/month with a 7-day trial.
The current round raised $7.6M, bringing total funding to $10.4M across 4 rounds.
The aging population isn't a niche – it's a demographic wave. In 2021, the US had 54 million people over 65; by 2030, that number reaches 74 million. By 2034, Americans over 65 will outnumber those under 18 for the first time in the country's history.
The economic weight of this cohort is proportionally significant. Adults over 50 contributed $8.3 trillion to the US economy in 2018 and that figure is projected to reach $28.2 trillion by 2050 – making this population, if counted as a standalone economy, the third largest in the world after the US and China. The spending power is there, and health is where older consumers direct a disproportionate share of it.
Mighty Health sits in a broader trend: the bundled wellness offer is winning over single-category approaches. Standalone gym apps, standalone meditation tools, and standalone nutrition trackers are all being absorbed into comprehensive platforms. LunaJoy ([related review](/review/i-rynok-bolshoj-i-sposob-horoshij)) bundles therapy, meal planning, and medication management for mental health. Herself Health ([covered here](/review/a-vot-tak-ono-poletit)) wraps primary care around nutrition and fitness for women. The pattern is consistent: the most defensible position in consumer health is the one that handles the whole person, not just one metric.
Other funded companies in the 50+ wellness segment include Bold ($7M), InsideTracker ($18.2M), Modern Age ($33M), and Herself Health ($7M). The category is becoming established enough that the market question has shifted from "will this audience pay" to "which bundled offer wins their loyalty."
The 50+ market is substantially underserved relative to its purchasing power and demographic size. Health and wellness is the most visible entry point, but it's far from the only one.
Two adjacent categories worth serious consideration: education and social connection. People over 50 often have significant discretionary time and strong motivation to keep learning – but most edtech platforms are designed for younger career builders and don't speak to this cohort's goals or context. Similarly, retirement and post-career life often means the social networks built around work dissolve, creating real demand for platforms that facilitate new connections in a format that fits how older adults actually communicate.
The wellness angle Mighty Health has chosen is also the simplest and most direct: the app addresses a near-universal concern (health) for a rapidly growing audience, using a recurring subscription model. Simplicity isn't a weakness here – it's clarity. A focused wedge into the right demographic, with a monetizable subscription relationship from day one, gives the platform an audience relationship that can carry additional services over time.