Do Hypnosis Apps Work? What the Research Actually Shows

Last updated: March 2026

There are hundreds of hypnosis apps available on iOS and Android. Most promise better sleep, less stress, weight loss, or freedom from anxiety — often for a fraction of the cost of a single therapy session. The question isn’t whether the promises sound appealing. It’s whether any of them deliver.

A 2025 systematic review from Baylor University examined 679 unique hypnosis apps and found that only 168 met basic criteria for delivering some form of hypnotherapy. Of those, just 20% indicated that the developer or person providing hypnosis was actually trained in hypnosis. And only four apps — four out of 679 — had been included in any clinical efficacy trial (Scheffrahn et al., 2025).

That’s the landscape. This guide separates what the evidence actually supports from what the marketing suggests.

Table of Contents

The state of the evidence

The research on app-delivered hypnosis is still in its early stages, but what exists is more encouraging than the overall app market would suggest. The problem isn’t that digital hypnosis doesn’t work — it’s that most apps haven’t been tested, and many aren’t built on clinical protocols. The largest dataset to date comes from a 2025 retrospective study of 84,395 users who completed 282,893 stress reduction sessions using the Reveri app (developed by Stanford neuroscientist David Spiegel). Pre-to-post session stress reduction was consistent across the first 10 sessions, with effect sizes ranging from Cohen’s d = −0.71 to −0.78 — a moderate-to-large effect. Greater stress reduction was observed with interactive sessions, higher hypnotizability, and regular-length sessions compared to brief ones (Spiegel et al., 2025). Separately, a retrospective analysis of the Nerva app (gut-directed hypnotherapy for IBS, developed by Mindset Health) found that app-delivered hypnotherapy improved IBS symptoms in self-reported outcomes. The Manchester gut-directed hypnotherapy protocol — the most studied IBS hypnotherapy approach — has been adapted for app delivery with positive preliminary results. For self-hypnosis more broadly, a systematic review of 22 RCTs found medium-to-large effects across pain, anxiety, stress, and childbirth outcomes — but critically, the effects were strongest when self-hypnosis was taught as an independent skill, not when participants simply listened to recordings (Eason & Parris, 2019). This distinction matters for apps: passive listening may be less effective than apps that actively teach self-hypnosis skills.

What makes a hypnosis app credible

Given that most apps haven’t been tested, how do you evaluate which ones are worth your time and money? Based on the Scheffrahn et al. (2025) systematic review and the broader clinical literature, several factors separate credible apps from questionable ones.
Credibility signal What to look for % of apps that have it
Trained hypnosis providerDeveloper or voice is a licensed professional with hypnosis training20.2%
Evidence-based claimsApp description references clinical research or evidence-based protocols7.7%
Clinical trial inclusionApp has been tested in at least one published efficacy study2.4% (4 apps)
Specific treatment targetsTargets conditions supported by hypnosis research (sleep, stress, pain, IBS)Most apps
Unsupported claimsPromises like "attract wealth" or "manifest love" — no evidence supports theseCommon

The numbers are striking. Fewer than 1 in 5 hypnosis apps can demonstrate that the person providing the hypnosis has relevant training. Fewer than 1 in 12 make evidence-based claims. And fewer than 1 in 40 have been tested in any kind of clinical study. This doesn’t mean untested apps are useless — it means there’s no way to verify their claims.

The most reliable signal is whether the app’s content was developed by or in collaboration with researchers or clinicians who publish in peer-reviewed journals. Reveri (Stanford/Spiegel), Nerva (Mindset Health/Monash University for IBS protocol), and a small number of others meet this bar. The vast majority do not.

Apps vs in-person hypnotherapy

A common question is whether apps can replace seeing a hypnotherapist in person. The honest answer: it depends on what you need.

For stress reduction, relaxation, and sleep improvement, app-delivered hypnosis has the most direct evidence. The Spiegel et al. (2025) dataset of 84,395 users showed consistent stress reduction effects across repeated sessions — and the scale of this data (nearly 283,000 sessions) provides a level of confidence that smaller clinical trials can’t match, even with the limitations of a retrospective, non-controlled design.

For clinical conditions like anxiety disorders, IBS, chronic pain, or depression, in-person hypnotherapy with a qualified practitioner remains the better-supported option. Clinical trials in these areas use individualized protocols, real-time adjustment to the client’s responses, and therapeutic relationships that apps can’t replicate. A 2024 umbrella review found that hypnosis produced positive effects across nearly all conditions studied, but the evidence base was built almost entirely on practitioner-led interventions (Rosendahl et al., 2024).

The practical middle ground: apps are a reasonable starting point for general stress, sleep, and relaxation. They can also supplement in-person treatment — for example, using an app for daily self-hypnosis practice between weekly sessions. But for a specific clinical issue, they shouldn’t be your only intervention. For more on what to expect from professional sessions, see what hypnotherapy is and how it works.

What apps can and cannot do

Based on the current evidence, here’s an honest assessment of what hypnosis apps can and cannot realistically offer.

Apps may help with general stress reduction (strongest evidence — large-scale data from Reveri), sleep improvement (supported by smaller studies and IBS app data), building a daily self-hypnosis practice (consistent with self-hypnosis research showing skill-building is key), and supplementing professional treatment between sessions.

Apps are unlikely to replace professional treatment for diagnosed conditions, work for targets not supported by hypnosis research (wealth attraction, height increase, etc.), produce lasting change from a single session (research consistently shows multiple sessions are needed), or deliver the same level of personalization as a skilled clinician.

The self-hypnosis research offers an important nuance here. The Eason & Parris (2019) review found that simply listening to audio recordings of someone else performing hypnosis was less effective than learning self-hypnosis as an active skill. The best apps seem to understand this — they teach users how to enter a hypnotic state and apply suggestions, rather than just playing relaxation audio. For techniques you can practice independently, see our self-hypnosis techniques guide.

How to evaluate an app before subscribing

Before paying for a hypnosis app, run through this checklist:

Check who created the content. Is the app developed by or in collaboration with a licensed clinician or researcher? Can you find their credentials independently? If the app description doesn’t mention who created the hypnosis content, that’s a red flag.

Look for published research. Has the app itself been included in any published study? A few apps cite hypnosis research in general — which is different from the app being tested. “Hypnosis works for anxiety” doesn’t mean “this app works for anxiety.”

Try before you commit. Most credible apps offer free sessions or a trial period. Use this to assess whether the style works for you, whether the session structure matches what clinical research supports (induction, suggestion, emergence), and whether you feel genuinely focused or just relaxed.

Check the treatment targets against the evidence. Sleep, stress, anxiety, pain, and IBS are conditions with meaningful hypnosis research behind them. “Attract abundance” or “increase your IQ” are not. The Scheffrahn et al. review specifically flagged that many apps target conditions with no supporting evidence.

Read reviews critically. App store ratings reflect user satisfaction, not clinical efficacy. A 4.8-star app may make people feel good without producing measurable therapeutic change. Look for reviews that describe specific, sustained improvements rather than vague positive feelings.

For our detailed assessment of the top apps, see best hypnotherapy apps. For safety considerations, see is hypnotherapy safe?

Frequently asked questions

Are free hypnosis apps worth trying?

Some are — particularly as a low-risk way to explore whether hypnosis resonates with you. However, free apps are more likely to rely on generic relaxation audio rather than structured hypnotherapy protocols. If the free version gives you a meaningful experience, the paid tier of a credible app may be worth the investment. If not, don’t assume hypnosis itself doesn’t work — the app may simply be poorly designed.

Research on self-hypnosis suggests a minimum of three practice sessions before effects become meaningful (Milling et al., 2018). For stress reduction via the Reveri app, consistent effects were observed from the very first session, but the practice benefits from repetition. Give any app at least 1–2 weeks of daily use before evaluating. For more on session expectations, see how many sessions do you need.

Yes — and this may be one of the most effective uses of hypnosis apps. Using an app for daily self-practice between weekly sessions with a therapist reinforces the work done in-person. Discuss this with your practitioner so the app content aligns with your treatment goals.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Hypnosis apps are not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. If you are managing a mental health condition, consult a qualified healthcare provider before relying on any app-based intervention.

Sources

1. Scheffrahn, K., Alldredge, C. T., Snyder, M., & Elkins, G. R. (2025). Hypnosis apps: A systematic review. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 73(1), 79–95. DOI: 10.1080/00207144.2024.2434085

2. Spiegel, D., et al. (2025). Effects of app delivered self hypnosis on stress management. npj Digital Medicine. DOI: 10.1038/s41746-025-02182-0

3. Eason, A. D., & Parris, B. A. (2019). Clinical applications of self-hypnosis: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Psychology of Consciousness: Theory, Research, and Practice. DOI: 10.1037/cns0000173

4. Rosendahl, J., Alldredge, C. T., & Haddenhorst, A. (2024). Meta-analytic evidence on the efficacy of hypnosis for mental and somatic health issues: a 20-year perspective. Frontiers in Psychology, 14, 1330238. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1330238

This website is for informational and educational purposes only. The content on HypnoNews does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new therapy, including hypnotherapy.