Everyday Health is a leading American digital media company and online publication dedicated to providing accessible, medically reviewed health and wellness information to consumers, covering topics such as chronic conditions, nutrition, fitness, mental health, and preventive care.[1][2]Founded in 2002 by Ben Wolin and Mike Keriakos in Brooklyn, New York, the company initially operated under the name Waterfront Media before rebranding and expanding its portfolio of digital health properties.[2][3][4]In December 2016, Everyday Health was acquired by Ziff Davis, a division of J2 Global, in a cash transaction valued at approximately $465 million, establishing it as a core brand within the Everyday Health Group.[5][6]Headquartered in New York City, the platform attracts approximately 64 million unique monthly visitors through its website, mobile apps, newsletters, and social channels, offering tools like symptom checkers, personalized health trackers, and expert advice from a network of physicians and specialists.[7]At its core, Everyday Health's mission is to inspire and empower individuals to live their healthiest lives every day by delivering evidence-based content that addresses physical, emotional, and lifestyle aspects of well-being.[6][8]The company's editorial guidelines emphasize accuracy, transparency, and independence, with all articles reviewed by board-certified physicians and subject matter experts to ensure reliability and adherence to medical standards.[8][6]Over the years, Everyday Health has expanded through strategic acquisitions, including MedPage Today in 2010 for professional medical news and EQAL in 2012 to enhance social media capabilities, with continued growth via recent purchases such as Lose It! and theSkimm in 2025, broadening its reach across consumer education and healthcare marketing.[9][10][11][12]Today, as part of the Everyday Health Group—which also includes provider solutions and pharmaceutical commercialization services—Everyday Health continues to innovate in digital health, integrating data analytics and personalized recommendations to support better health outcomes for diverse audiences.[13][14]
History
Founding and Early Development
Everyday Health was founded in January 2002 as Agora Media, Inc., by entrepreneurs Benjamin Wolin and Michael Keriakos, with the goal of creating an online platform dedicated to consumer health education and information.[15][2][16]The company was incorporated in Delaware and initially operated from a modest setup in Brooklyn, focusing on delivering accessible digital content to empower individuals in managing their health.[3][17]The initial business model relied on advertising-supported content, providing free resources on key areas such as disease management, nutrition, fitness, and general wellness to attract and engage users.[3][18] This approach positioned Agora Media as a pioneer in the emerging online healthmedia landscape, where monetization through targeted ads from pharmaceutical and healthcare sponsors helped sustain operations without subscription barriers.[19]In its formative years, Agora Media encountered challenges in cultivating a substantial user base amid the underdeveloped state of digital health resources in 2002, a period before social media platforms like Facebook gained prominence and transformed online engagement. The limited internet penetration for health-related searches and competition from traditional print media required innovative strategies to build trust and visibility in a fragmented market.[20]Key early milestones included the launch of its core website shortly after incorporation, which served as the foundation for delivering vetted health articles and tools to consumers.[15] Additionally, the company established initial partnerships with medical experts to ensure content credibility, forming the basis of what would become an extensive network of board-certified physicians and healthcare professionals for review and validation.[6][18]
Mergers, Renaming, and Expansion
In October 2008, Waterfront Media merged with Revolution Health Group in a deal valued at approximately $300 million, significantly expanding its portfolio by integrating Revolution's extensive health information resources with Waterfront's existing platforms, including email newsletters derived from its earlier acquisition of Streetmail.com capabilities. This consolidation enhanced content distribution through personalized email outreach combined with web-based health articles, enabling broader audience engagement and reach across consumer health topics.[21][22]The merger resulted in the formation of the Everyday Health Network, which operated under the Waterfront Media name and quickly became a leading online health destination, attracting over 25 million unique monthly visitors by late 2008. To support this growth, the company invested in expansion by hiring additional editorial staff to bolster content production and developing specialized verticals focused on areas like nutrition, fitness, and chronic condition management, thereby diversifying its offerings beyond general healthinformation.[23][24]In January 2010, the company rebranded as Everyday Health, Inc., shifting its identity to emphasize accessible, everyday wellness solutions for consumers seeking practical health guidance. This renaming aligned with the evolving brand's emphasis on user-centric content that supported daily health decisions, moving away from the more corporate-sounding Waterfront Media moniker.[23]From 2008 to 2015, Everyday Health experienced rapid scaling, with average monthly unique visitors rising from around 15 million in 2008 to approximately 54 million by mid-2015, fueled by optimized search engine strategies and strategic content syndication across partner sites and platforms.[15][25] This period marked a transition to a multi-site network exceeding 25 properties, solidifying its position as a dominant player in digital health media. Key expansions included the acquisition of MedPage Today in December 2010, which added professional medical news capabilities, and EQAL in September 2012, enhancing social media and video production tools.[18][9]
Acquisition and Ownership Changes
On October 21, 2016, Everyday Health, Inc. announced a definitive agreement to be acquired by Ziff Davis, LLC, a subsidiary of j2 Global, Inc., for $10.50 per share in cash, representing an approximate enterprise value of $465 million.[5] The transaction was completed on December 5, 2016, making Everyday Health a wholly owned subsidiary of Ziff Davis.[26]Following the acquisition, Everyday Health was integrated into Ziff Davis's digital media portfolio, leveraging the parent's advanced advertising technology and distribution networks to expand reach and monetization opportunities across health and wellness content.[26] This integration combined Everyday Health's consumer-focused health platforms with Ziff Davis's strengths in technology, gaming, and lifestyle verticals, fostering enhanced audience engagement and cross-promotional synergies.[27]In the wake of the acquisition, Ziff Davis established the Everyday Health Group as its dedicated health and wellness division, positioning Everyday Health as a core subsidiary centered on delivering consumer health education, tools, and services.[27] The group consolidates various health-oriented brands under Ziff Davis, emphasizing patient engagement, provider resources, and wellness solutions to serve a broad audience in the evolving digital health landscape.[13]Since 2016, Everyday Health has experienced no major ownership changes, remaining stably under Ziff Davis's ownership even after j2 Global's 2021 restructuring, which separated its cloud services into an independent entity and rebranded the digital media arm as Ziff Davis, Inc.[28] This continuity has supported sustained operations within the Everyday Health Group, aligning with the rapid expansion of the global digital health market to over $288 billion as of 2024.[29]
Operations and Business Model
Revenue Streams and Monetization
Everyday Health Group primarily generates revenue through digital advertising, which includes display ads, video ads, and performance marketing targeted at health and wellness audiences. A significant portion of this advertising revenue comes from the healthcare industry, particularly pharmaceutical companies, medical device manufacturers, and health services providers, who leverage the platform's reach to promote products and services. For instance, integrations of drug information and sponsored medical content allow for tailored advertising opportunities.[30][31]Sponsored content represents another key advertising stream, where partnerships with brands result in co-created articles, videos, and other media influenced by advertisers, clearly labeled to maintain transparency. This model is governed by Everyday Health's advertisingpolicy, which ensures sponsored materials align with editorial standards while providing value to pharmaceutical and wellness partners. In 2024, advertising and performance marketing accounted for approximately $299.5 million within the Health & Wellness segment, underscoring its dominance in the company's income.[32][30]The company also employs a freemium model for its health tools and mobile applications, such as the Lose It! calorie-tracking app, offering basic features for free while charging for premium subscriptions that unlock advanced functionalities like personalized meal plans and progress analytics. Annual premium memberships for Lose It! cost $39.99, enabling users to access customized health guidance, which contributes to subscription and licensing revenue of $49.5 million in the Health & Wellness segment in 2024. This approach encourages broad user adoption before upselling enhanced services.[33][34][30]Affiliate marketing supplements these streams by incorporating product recommendations within articles, such as supplements, fitness equipment, and wellness gear, through referral links to partner retailers. These links generate commissions on purchases without additional cost to users, integrating seamlessly with content on topics like nutrition and exercise. The Everyday Health Marketplace facilitates these partnerships, focusing on trusted health-related products.[35]Following its 2016 acquisition by Ziff Davis for $465 million, Everyday Health's monetization has been bolstered by integration into the parent company's broader ad network and digital media ecosystem, enabling cross-promotion and expanded reach. This has supported sustained growth in the Health & Wellness segment, with annual revenues exceeding $100 million by 2020 and reaching $362.4 million in 2024, driven by enhanced advertising efficiencies and diversified partnerships.[36][37][30]
Organizational Structure and Headquarters
Everyday Health Group maintains its world headquarters at 360 Park Avenue South, 17th Floor, in New York City, New York, serving as the central hub for executive leadership and core operations.[13] The company also operates additional offices, including one in Asheville, North Carolina, which supports specialized teams in editorial production and technology development.[38]Since its acquisition by Ziff Davis, Everyday Health has been led by President and CEO Dan Stone, who joined in April 2018 and oversees the division's strategic direction as an experienced healthcare media executive.[39] The leadership structure includes key executives such as Tom Dehn, Chief Financial Officer; Deborah Goetz, Senior Vice President of Human Resources; and George Wukoson, General Counsel, who collectively manage finance, talent, legal affairs, and business strategy.[13] An editorial board comprising board-certified physicians and specialists from over 30 medical fields provides oversight to ensure clinical accuracy and credibility in content decisions.[6]As of 2025, the organization employs between 501 and 1,000 staff members, distributed across functional units including editorial, sales and marketing, engineering, and dedicated medical review teams.[38] This structure enables collaborative efforts between content creators, technical developers, and sales professionals to support the company's digital health media platform, with medical reviewers playing a critical role in validating health-related information.The operational workflow follows a rigorous content pipeline, beginning with ideation and research by specialized writers, progressing through multi-stage reviews for accuracy and objectivity, and culminating in publication after approval by medical experts.[8] This process incorporates credentialed contributors focused on health topics and relies on trusted, evidence-based sources to maintain high standards.[6] For user data, including any health-related information collected with explicit consent, the company implements technical and organizational measures to protect privacy in compliance with applicable regulations such as GDPR.[40]
Content and Media Offerings
Core Topics and Article Production
Everyday Health focuses on a broad array of core health topics designed to address common consumer concerns, including chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart health, rheumatoid arthritis, cancer, and inflammatory bowel conditions like ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease; mental health issues encompassing anxiety disorders and bipolar disorder; nutrition topics like dietary sequencing, salt intake, and vitamin benefits; fitness and physical activity, including exercise comparisons and posture improvement; skincare concerns such as wrinkle reduction and scalp psoriasis management; and preventive care, featuring guidance on vaccinations, PSA testing, and fertility impacts of health interventions.[41][42]The article production process begins with writing by a dedicated editorial team of health journalists, patient advocates, and healthcare professionals, who craft content aimed at providing actionable, empathetic guidance for readers at various stages of their health journeys.[8] Each article undergoes rigorous review by board-certified physicians, medical experts, and patient advocates from the Health Expert Network to verify medical accuracy and balance.[8] Content draws exclusively from evidence-based sources, including peer-reviewed studies, National Institutes of Health (NIH) publications, government health agencies, and reputable advocacy organizations, with all supporting facts hyperlinked and listed at the end of articles for transparency.[8]Everyday Health maintains a high publication cadence, updating the site with new articles several times daily to deliver timely information, while also incorporating seasonal focuses such as expanded coverage of influenza prevention, symptoms, and vaccination during flu season.[43][44] Articles receive regular reviews by the editorial team and experts, with the last "reviewed" date clearly indicated to reflect ongoing updates based on emerging research and health developments.[8]A distinctive aspect of Everyday Health's approach is its commitment to consumer-accessible language that avoids medical jargon, employing clear, empathetic phrasing to make complex health concepts understandable for a general audience, often supplemented by visuals like infographics to illustrate key ideas.[8] This method ensures that textual content remains the foundation, with multimedia elements serving as supportive extensions where appropriate.[8]
Digital Formats and Multimedia
Everyday Health extends its health and wellness content beyond traditional articles through diverse digital formats, including videos, newsletters, podcasts, and interactive elements designed to engage users in dynamic ways. These multimedia offerings complement the core topics of conditions, treatments, and lifestyle advice by providing visual, auditory, and participatory experiences that enhance understanding and retention.[6]Video content forms a cornerstone of Everyday Health's multimedia strategy, beginning with the launch of its official YouTube channel, "Everyday Health," in 2011 as part of YouTube's Original Channel Initiative. This channel features a range of programming, such as workout tutorials, expert interviews with physicians and nutritionists, and patient stories highlighting personal health journeys. By 2025, the channel has amassed over 200,000 subscribers and hosts thousands of videos optimized for search and algorithmic discovery on platforms like YouTube. Production is handled through Everyday Health Studios, the company's in-house video division established around the same period, which includes dedicated facilities modeled after television production setups to ensure high-quality output.[45][46][47]Newsletters and email digests represent another key format, originating from the 2008 merger with Streetmail.com that formed Waterfront Media, the precursor to Everyday Health. These communications deliver daily and weekly summaries on topics like nutrition, mental health, and disease management, tailored to subscriber preferences for personalized health guidance. Historically, the newsletters reached over 8 million subscribers across more than 30 titles by 2012, providing targeted content that builds ongoing userengagement. In March 2025, Everyday Health Group acquired theSkimm, a leading digital media brand with a suite of newsletters focused on news and lifestyle for women, further expanding its newsletter portfolio.[48][49][50]In addition to videos and emails, Everyday Health incorporates podcasts focused on emerging wellness trends, such as mindfulness practices and preventive care strategies, often featuring discussions with health experts to explore evidence-based approaches. Interactive quizzes further boost user involvement, offering tools like symptom checkers, risk assessments, and personality-based wellness evaluations that deliver customized insights and encourage self-reflection on health habits. These elements are produced with an emphasis on accessibility and platform-specific optimization to maximize reach and interaction.[51][52]
Products, Tools, and Partnerships
Mobile Applications and Health Tools
Everyday Health has developed a portfolio of over 23 mobile applications focused on personal health management, spanning categories such as general wellness, pregnancy, fitness, nutrition, and beauty, with these apps achieving millions of downloads since their rollout in the early 2010s.[53][49][54] By 2021, the company maintained this suite of apps, which continued to receive updates through 2025 to ensure compatibility with iOS and Android platforms while adhering to enhanced data privacy standards, including compliance with regulations like GDPR and CCPA for user health data protection.[55][56]Among the key mobile apps are those supporting weight loss and nutrition tracking, such as Lose It!, acquired by the Everyday Health Group on June 24, 2025, which provides personalized calorie budgeting, food logging, and AI-driven recommendations based on user goals and activity levels.[11] Other notable apps include the What to Expect pregnancy tracker for trimester-specific advice and OMFIT for quick workout routines tailored to fitness preferences. These apps emphasize personalized recommendations generated from user inputs like age, goals, and activity preferences, helping individuals track progress and integrate health content topics such as exercise and diet into daily routines.Complementing the mobile offerings, Everyday Health provides web-based health tools for preliminary self-assessment and management. The Symptom Checker is an AI-powered utility that evaluates over 1,500 symptoms across 800 conditions, offering users personalized insights and next-step recommendations based on inputted details like symptom severity and duration, developed in collaboration with physicians and data scientists.[57] The Drugs Resource Center includes a comprehensive database on drug interactions, detailing potential risks between medications, supplements, and foods to guide safe usage.[58] Additionally, the Nutritional Supplements section serves as a guide to vitamins, minerals, and herbal remedies, providing evidence-based information on benefits, dosages, and interactions to support informed supplementation decisions.[59]A core feature across these tools and apps is integration with wearable devices for enhanced activity tracking, as seen in apps like Lose It!, which syncs with devices such as Fitbit and Apple Health to monitor steps, calories burned, and heart rate, enabling real-time personalized feedback on physical activity and nutrition.[13][60] This connectivity allows users to aggregate data from wearables into a unified health profile, fostering proactive management of wellness metrics without requiring manual entry.
Collaborations and External Integrations
Everyday Health has established a notable partnership with TrialReach, a clinical trial matching platform, to facilitate user access to relevant medical research opportunities. Launched on June 12, 2013, this collaboration integrates TrialReach's technology into Everyday Health's network, particularly through MedPage Today, enabling users to explore ongoing clinical trials in a patient-friendly format tailored to their medical conditions and geographic location.[61] The tool functions via an online clinical trial finder that simplifies complex research information, allowing users to complete quizzes or searches on the website to identify potential matches without providing direct medical advice.[61] This initiative, active throughout the 2010s and beyond, aims to boost patient engagement and accelerate treatment development by connecting millions of Everyday Health visitors to trials efficiently.[62]In the pharmaceutical sector, Everyday Health engages in collaborations focused on sponsored content and co-branded educational tools to promote drug awareness and adherence. For instance, the company partnered with Medisafe, a medication management platform, in 2020 to deliver targeted COVID-19 updates and health resources integrated into Medisafe's app, enhancing user education on treatment protocols while upholding editorial standards.[63] Similarly, Everyday Health has worked with Videology to launch TVRx in 2015, a data-driven video advertising solution specifically designed for pharmaceutical advertisers to create compliant, educational campaigns around druginformation.[64] These efforts often involve sponsored articles and tools, such as adherence apps, that provide balanced information on medications without influencing clinical recommendations, as outlined in Everyday Health's advertising policy which requires clear labeling and separation from editorial content.[32]Beyond pharma, Everyday Health maintains integrations with health insurers to support wellness initiatives. A key example is the 2015 strategic alliance with Wildflower Health, which embeds Everyday Health's pregnancy and maternity content into Wildflower's platform to assist health plans and employers in engaging expectant users earlier with personalized resources.[65] More recently, in 2025, Everyday Health integrated its wellness guidance into the CVS Health app, enabling seamless access for CVS Health plan members (including Aetna beneficiaries) to medically reviewed articles on everyday health topics, fostering tie-ins with insurer-led programs.[66] These API-driven connections allow for data-secure content delivery that aligns with insurer wellness goals, such as preventive care tracking.These collaborations collectively enhance user value by broadening access to vetted resources and tools, all while preserving Everyday Health's commitment to editorial independence and avoiding the provision of personalized medical advice.[6] By partnering with external entities like TrialReach, pharmaceutical firms, and insurers, the platform extends its reach without compromising its core mission of delivering trustworthy, non-prescriptive health information.[6]
Recognition and Impact
Awards and Accolades
Everyday Health received a nomination for a Daytime Emmy Award in 2012 for its YouTube video series focused on health education, recognizing excellence in lifestyle programming.[67]In 2021, the platform earned a Webby Award in the Health/Wellness category for Best Websites and Mobile Sites/General Websites and Mobile Sites, honoring its comprehensive digital health resources.That same year, Everyday Health was awarded Gold in the Digital Health Awards for Social Media (Instagram), specifically for its engagement in public health campaigns amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[68]Beyond these, Everyday Health has garnered multiple honors in industry publications, including features in Forbes highlighting its role as an innovative leader in consumer health information and solutions since the early 2010s.[69]In 2024, Everyday Health received recognition in the W3 Awards for its digital content. The following year, it won Gold and Silver in the 2025 W3 Awards for Best Video and Best Editorial Experience, respectively.[66][70] Also in 2025, the platform was honored at the FOLIO: Eddie & Ozzie Awards. In 2024, Everyday Health was named the winner in the Healthcare Consumer Media Brand category at the MM+M Awards.[71][72]
Audience Reach and Influence
Everyday Health reaches a substantial global audience, attracting approximately 64 million monthly unique visitors as of 2025, positioning it as a leading digital platform for healthinformation.[7] This broad reach is driven by its focus on accessible, expert-reviewed content that addresses everyday wellness needs. The platform's user base is predominantly female, accounting for 59.68% of visitors, with notable engagement from women aged 25-54 who frequently seek information on topics such as preventive care, nutrition, and lifestyle management.[73]The platform's influence extends to enhancing public health literacy, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic, where it disseminated verified information on vaccines, side effects, and myths to counter misinformation and support informed decision-making.[74] Everyday Health has also been referenced in media outlets for its research and reporting on emerging health trends, such as weight management and emotional well-being, amplifying its role in shaping public discourse.[75] Engagement metrics underscore this impact, with average session durations surpassing 4 minutes per visit and robust social media presence—including over 284,000 Instagram followers.[76][77]In the post-pandemic landscape, Everyday Health has evolved its content strategy to prioritize mental health support and telehealth advancements, reflecting sustained user demand for resources on virtual care and psychological resilience.[78] This adaptation has reinforced its influence in guiding audiences toward holistic wellness amid shifting healthcare norms.