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Real-World Meditation App Engagement: Longitudinal Study of the Medito Meditation App.

Julia Adams, Jonathan Davies, Prai Wattanatakulchat, Julieta Galante, Simon D'alfonso, Nicholas T Van Dam

JMIR mHealth and uHealth June 8, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.2196/79366 via PubMed

Abstract

Meditation apps are increasingly popular but face significant engagement challenges. Most research does not meaningfully capture real-world engagement or associated user characteristics. Engagement patterns and reasons for engaging or disengaging remain relatively unexplored. This study aimed to examine Medito app user engagement over the first 30 days after download and how intended use, demographics, user traits, and mental health factors predict engagement. A prospective online survey was conducted among 668 Medito app users from 30 countries. Factors assessed included demographic factors (eg, age, sex, education, employment, and country of residence); user factors (eg, number of apps tried, hours of experience, meditation-related adverse events, expectations, readiness to change, and personality); and mental health factors (eg, quality of life, perceived stress, psychological distress, well-being, and satisfaction with life). Detailed engagement data included days of use, meditations completed, app opens, and minutes of use obtained via a data-sharing agreement with Medito. Minutes of use in the first 30 days after download served as the main outcome variable. App use was relatively low, with 50% (328/655) of users engaging for a total of 16 minutes or less in the first month after download (median 16.11, IQR 0-74.51 min). Fewer than 20% (124/655, 18.86%) of users continued using the app after 14 days. Intended use (mean 418.56, SD 472.5) significantly exceeded actual use (mean 70.02, SD 176.81; d=0.710; P<.001). In terms of user factors, expectation match (ie, extent to which outcomes from the app matched initial expectations; ρ=0.214; P=.002), expectations for anxiety (ρ=0.102; P=.01), expectations for attention or focus (ρ=0.091; P=.02), and conscientiousness (ρ=0.124; P=.003) were associated with higher engagement. Neuroticism was negatively associated with engagement (ρ=-0.103; P=.010). For mental health factors, satisfaction with life (ρ=0.123; P=.002) and well-being (ρ=0.135, P<.001) were associated with higher engagement, while perceived stress (ρ=-0.107; P=.007), psychological distress (ρ=-0.138, P<.001), and quality of life (ρ=-0.100; P=.011) were associated with lower engagement. Only readiness to change showed unique associations with higher engagement (semipartial r=0.156; P<.001). Regression analysis showed that only perceived stress predicted higher engagement (β=.020; P=.04). However, when mental health was included as a single component, expectations for anxiety (β=.015; P=.049) and readiness to change (β=.011; P=.048) predicted greater engagement, and mental ill health predicted lower engagement (β=-0.008; P=.049). Overall, app engagement is generally quite low. Acute stress motivated meditation app use, while chronic stress disrupted it. Engagement is optimal when experiences match expectations and users are prepared to make a change. More transparency is necessary in the promotion of meditation apps so that users have a realistic understanding of the time and effort required to achieve benefits.

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