Bold is an online fitness platform for adults over 65 that found its business model by selling through Medicare Advantage plans rather than directly to consumers.
ENTRY ANGLES
B2B2C model: sell individual behavior-change products to institutions (insurers, employers, Medicare) rather than directly to consumers · Target institutional buyers with direct financial stake in outcome (reduced costs from behavior change) · Apply financial wellness distribution model to other health/wellness domains with diffuse long-term benefits
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
B2B sales and distribution to large institutional buyers (insurers, employers, Medicare), Ability to quantify ROI and financial impact for institutional buyers, Product design that delivers measurable behavior change
Bold is, technically, another online fitness platform – one that [covered previously](/review/ne-padat) when it raised its first round. Since then it has raised two more, for a total of $27 million. The latest $17 million round is more than the prior two combined, and the reason why illuminates something important about how health-adjacent startups find their business model.
Bold offers online fitness programs specifically designed for adults over 65. New users complete an intake assessment; the platform generates a personalized program sequencing the relevant workouts in the right order. The catalog includes pre-recorded sessions alongside regular live-streamed classes – live content is the engagement lever that keeps users from drifting. Progress metrics track adherence to the prescribed program.
The training content is not generic senior fitness. Bold focuses on three outcomes specific to aging: improving balance and coordination to prevent falls, managing arthritis that limits independent movement, and reversing the effects of sedentary behavior that accumulates over time. The 46% fall reduction figure is the number the company leads with in institutional conversations, and for good reason.
Falls among older adults are not a minor quality-of-life issue – they are a major cost center for the US healthcare system. One in three people over 65 experiences a fall each year. The combination of impaired coordination and age-related bone brittleness makes those falls disproportionately serious: two-thirds of fall-related ER visits result in hospitalization. As of 2019 data, an older adult was arriving at emergency services with fall-related injuries every 11 seconds in the US; roughly 27,000 died from fall complications annually.
Medicare spent $67.7 billion covering fall-related medical costs in 2020 – more than double the prior year's figure of $31 billion. With the 65-plus population continuing to grow as life expectancy rises, that spending trajectory is not improving without intervention. The average hospital bill for fall-related treatment exceeds $30,000, and it rises with age.
That spending context is what drove Medicare to include Bold in several of its insurance programs, making the platform accessible to approximately 10 million Medicare beneficiaries as a covered benefit. Medicare's calculation is straightforward: the cost of subsidizing Bold's platform is substantially lower than the cost of covering the hospitalizations that the platform demonstrably reduces. The company reports that 8 in 10 older adults actively choose insurance plans that include Bold's programs.
This partnership is almost certainly what triggered the larger current round. The prior two rounds – $3 million and $7 million – were raised while Bold was operating primarily as a direct consumer product. The Medicare deal changed the unit economics entirely: instead of acquiring users one paid subscription at a time, Bold now has institutional access to a population of 10 million.
Bold's trajectory traces the same arc as Sempre Health (medication adherence) and a cluster of financial wellness startups: a product that is genuinely useful to individuals cannot find sustainable scale selling to those individuals directly, because people are poor buyers of diffuse long-term benefit. Shifting to B2B – selling to Medicare, employers, or insurers who have a direct financial stake in the behavior change – unlocks both distribution and willingness to pay.
Financial wellness follows the same pattern. Startups like Origin (which raised $72 million) and LearnLux ($17.1 million) found their scale not by selling budget management tools to employees, but by selling employee financial stress reduction to employers – who understand that an employee distracted by personal financial problems is a less productive, less engaged worker. The benefit is real for the individual; the buyer is the institution.
The general principle: if you are building something genuinely useful that people consistently fail to pay for, the question is not how to persuade them – it is who else benefits from the behavior change and can be persuaded instead. Insurers, employers, Medicare, banks, and housing providers all have measurable financial exposure to behaviors their customers or employees engage in. That exposure is the distribution channel.
Bold, Sempre, and their peers are templates rather than finished markets. The combination of an aging population, rising chronic condition prevalence, and institutional payers under cost pressure creates a large and growing surface area for this model across many health-adjacent categories.