User Acquisition for Health-Tech & Telemedicine Apps
Health-tech UA is gated by trust, privacy and heavy ad-policy limits. High intent and high LTV, but you measure to activated patients, not installs.
Key takeaways
- Health-tech UA is gated by trust, privacy and heavy ad-policy restrictions.
- Intent and LTV are high, but sensitive categories limit targeting and creative.
- Measure to activated, retained patients and clinical engagement, not installs.
Health-tech (telemedicine, mental-health and clinical apps) is a different animal from consumer fitness. The stakes, the regulation and the trust bar are all higher, and UA has to respect that from the first impression.
Trust and regulation
Privacy rules and platform policies tightly limit how you can target and what you can claim about health outcomes. Credibility, clinical backing and careful messaging do conversion work that aggressive performance creative cannot.
High-intent, sensitive channels
Apple Search Ads and Google capture people actively seeking care, which is where the strongest intent lives. But creative and audience setups must stay within strict health-advertising rules, so the usual playbook needs adapting.
The activation funnel
An install means little until the user completes onboarding, a consult or a first session. Optimize campaigns to that real activation event, because the path from download to engaged patient is where most of the drop-off hides.
The economics
Retained patients (especially in chronic care or ongoing therapy) carry high, durable LTV that can justify a substantial CAC. The funnel is longer and more considered, so set payback expectations and measurement around retained care, not signups.
Growing a health-tech app inside strict trust and policy limits?
See the UA service