Fitness wearables company Whoop on Wednesday announced a partnership with health platform HealthEx. This will allow users to connect their medical records directly within the Whoop app, combining medical history and biometric data.
The companies say the partnership “meets the growing need” for a “more connected health experience” for users. The new integration allows for various factors such as chronic disease, recent procedures, etc. to be considered alongside tracking metrics such as performance and sleep.
“Whoop has always been focused on turning data into meaningful insights,” said Alex Vannoni, Whoop head of healthcare products, in a statement. “This partnership extends that approach by bringing medical history into the Whoop experience, giving our members a more complete picture of their health and enabling more personalized and relevant coaching based on who they are, not just what happened on a given day.”
This integration is enabled by the Whoop AI and My Memory features. Announced last month, the artificial intelligence-driven My Memory feature provides users with context to manage personalized coaching.
Users can choose whether to connect records, see what data is shared, and disconnect the feature at any time. Both companies say they “prioritize the handling of security data and transparency.”
HealthEx CEO and co-founder Priyanka Agarwal, M.D., said in a statement that Whoop users are “tracking their health in incredible detail,” which can be “transformative when combined with a complete medical record.”
“Bringing a comprehensive health history into the Whoop experience along with daily recovery, strain, and performance metrics will give members a complete picture of their health,” said Agarwal, a former associate professor at the University of California, San Francisco. “This is the foundation for personalized, consumer-driven care that responds and puts people in control where they already manage their health.”
The partnership with HealthEx comes as Whoop expands from a fitness tracker to a clinical health platform. Last month, the company introduced on-demand video consultations with licensed clinicians through its app.
Whoop currently has 2.5 million members worldwide and raised a whopping $575 million in funding at the end of March, Fierce Medtech reported. The increase raised Hoop’s valuation to $10.1 billion.
According to a recent analysis from Rock Health, wearable ownership in the U.S. has increased by 33% since 2015.
In Rock Health’s 2025 Digital Health Consumer Adoption Study, 46% of respondents specifically reported owning a wearable, and 57% of respondents reported owning at least one wearable or other connected device. However, the report notes that the growth in first-time wearable users has slowed over time.

