Whoop brings in-app video consultations to its app

Whoop app – Whoop says it will add on-demand in-app video consultations with licensed clinicians, EHR syncing, and new AI coaching features.
A fitness tracker is getting closer to becoming a gateway for medical care, with Whoop planning in-app video consultations for users in the US.
Starting this summer. Whoop users in the United States will be able to book on-demand video consultations with licensed clinicians directly from inside the Whoop app.. The company is positioning the feature as a more continuous approach to healthcare than the short. disconnected visits many people are used to.
Whoop said these consultations are designed to start with a broader view of a member’s health rather than relying on quick snapshots.. It says clinicians will be supported by months of continuous data collected through the wearable. and where available. by bloodwork and medical history.. In other words, the pitch is that the consultation begins with a richer baseline before any conversation about next steps.
The company also announced that it is adding Electronic Health Record (EHR) syncing.. With that capability. members and the clinicians they connect with will be able to pull up medical histories more easily. linking what the wearable tracks with information already stored in healthcare systems.. Whoop has not said yet what the rollout timeline will look like beyond the broader “this summer” framing.
On pricing, Whoop hasn’t revealed how much the consultation service will cost. That uncertainty matters for users deciding whether they’ll see the feature as a new add-on, part of an existing plan, or something that could reshape how they budget for both fitness and health support.
Alongside the clinical changes, Whoop is also rolling out new AI-driven features inside the app.. One of them is My Memory, which lets users customize the “personal context” that flows into their coaching.. The idea, according to Whoop, is to tailor how recommendations are informed based on what users choose to share.
Whoop is also introducing Proactive Check-Ins.. The feature is meant to deliver training and recovery recommendations that reflect what’s going on in a user’s life.. Rather than focusing only on workout performance or recovery trends. the company is aiming to incorporate lifestyle signals into how the coaching responds over time.
These product updates arrive at a moment when screenless wearables are getting more attention in the market.. The announcement follows Google’s unveiling of Fitbit Air. a screenless fitness wearable that. like Whoop’s device approach. leans into lightweight tracking without requiring a dedicated display.
For Whoop, moving from purely wellness-oriented guidance toward clinician-linked care is a notable expansion of its role.. If the EHR syncing works as described. it could reduce friction for both sides—users may spend less time collecting documents. while clinicians may have quicker access to historical context.
At the same time. the success of on-demand video consultations will likely hinge on how well the system translates continuous wearable data into clinical decision-making.. Whoop’s framing suggests it wants clinicians to start with more context than they typically get at the beginning of a brief appointment. but the practical outcome will depend on what data is available. how it is presented. and how users manage consent.
For users watching these changes. the combination of AI coaching personalization and clinician access also points to a shifting expectation: wearables are being treated less like standalone gadgets and more like interfaces for health information.. As Whoop rolls features out this summer and clarifies pricing. it will be worth watching how the company balances automation with human oversight—especially when the conversation turns from training goals to medical histories.
Misryoum
Whoop app in-app video consultations EHR syncing wearable AI digital health fitness tracker