Wellthy connects employees caring for family members with experts who handle paperwork and care coordination – sold to companies where 75% of staff carry some caregiving responsibility.
ENTRY ANGLES
Caregiving support service sold as employee benefit to HR departments · Focus on reducing absenteeism and improving retention metrics · Target employer partnerships over direct consumer marketing
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Caregiving support service delivery, Enterprise sales to HR buyers, Workforce analytics and retention measurement
WELLTHY FOUNDER
“less work, more love”
Wellthy's latest $25.5M round pushed its total funding to $78M – a number that signals the company is doing something that genuinely works.
The service connects people who are caring for family members with experts who help them navigate the logistics and emotional weight of that responsibility. The scope is deliberately broad: power of attorney and estate documents, benefits and insurance claims, medical specialist referrals, vetted home care providers, transportation, temporary housing for caregivers taking leave, and emotional support including peer groups.
Wellthy is built as a platform – essentially a CRM for the caregiving process. Users communicate with experts, maintain shared care schedules, store medical documents, and coordinate with others involved in their family member's care. The tagline is "less work, more love": the goal is to take the administrative and logistical burden off caregivers so they have more capacity for the relationship itself.
The company started by selling directly to individuals, then pivoted to selling through employers – landing Salesforce and Snap as early clients. The B2C channel is now barely advertised; it exists mainly as a retention mechanism for users who've left companies that carried a Wellthy contract. A [related review](/review/kto-pomozhet-tem-kto-pomogaet) covered ianacare, which operates with very similar product logic and has built out a B2B track in parallel.
From 2019 to 2022, Wellthy's user base grew from 100,000 to 2 million. Revenue increased 17x over the same period. Two of the lead investors in the current round are existing corporate clients – a useful signal that the product delivers measurable enough value that customers want equity in the outcome.
75% of employees at US companies manage some caregiving responsibility for a family member. 83% of those people have taken time off specifically to handle care. 92% report that caregiving creates additional stress that affects their work performance. That is not a niche benefits problem – it is a workforce productivity problem at scale.
The B2B model works here for the same reason it works in financial wellness and mental health: the employer absorbs the cost because the alternative – losing the employee, or absorbing reduced output – is more expensive. What has made timing particularly favorable is the competitive labor market of recent years, which pushed companies to differentiate on benefits. Retaining a stressed but capable employee is dramatically cheaper than recruiting and onboarding a replacement when candidates have options.
Caregiver responsibilities will increase structurally. Population aging is accelerating, and the cohort entering age ranges that require regular care is large. Every year, roughly 20 million Americans take on caregiving responsibilities for the first time – meaning platforms like Wellthy have a continuously replenishing addressable market.
The potential audience is real and growing: 50 million caregivers in the US today, trending toward 70 million. The demographic shift is happening now – the steepest part of the curve falls between 2020 and 2030, making this an unusually well-timed market entry window.
The B2B channel has proven to be the right mechanism. Wellthy's near-abandonment of consumer marketing in favor of employer partnerships reflects where the unit economics work. The template is replicable: build a caregiving support service, sell it to HR departments as an employee benefit, and measure impact in reduced absenteeism and higher productivity retention.
The functional overlap between Wellthy and ianacare suggests there is no need to reinvent the product architecture. The opportunity is in execution – specifically in how the service is packaged and sold to enterprise buyers, and in which vertical or company size to target first.