Medoro

For the long arc of mood medication

See what's actually working.

Medoro is a private, on-device tracker for medications that affect mood, focus or sleep. Check in for a minute a day, and watch the pattern come together over weeks.


The trouble with subtle change

Finding the right medication for depression, anxiety, ADHD or bipolar is rarely smooth. Doses change. Medications get swapped. Some weeks feel worse than others, even when things are moving in the right direction.

The changes are usually small. A bit more motivation. Clearer thinking. Better sleep. Easy to miss day to day, and easy to forget by your next appointment.

Medoro makes the small changes visible. A minute a day, over weeks, until the pattern shows up on its own.

The product

Sixteen dimensions of how you feel.

01

The 60-second check-in

Twelve moods (seven on the down side, five on the up side) and four daily check-ins for energy, motivation, concentration and sleep. Each rated 1–10. A minute, start to finish.

02

Medication journeys

Every medication you try is its own journey, broken into stages: starting dose, dose changes, side effects, and when it ends. The same things your prescriber asks about — already written down when you walk in.

03

Events on the timeline

Therapy sessions, life events, side effects, the night you didn't sleep — laid alongside the mood chart, so you can tell the noisy weeks from the ones where the medication is actually working.

04

Patterns, not predictions

Medoro looks at your last few weeks and points out what tends to lift you and what tends to pull you down — in plain language, from your own data, and nowhere else's.

05

Concentration curves

An educational chart of how each medication's half-life shapes your day. It's a rough model based on the typical half-life — useful when the 3pm slump finally has a name.

06

Compare two journeys

Put an old medication next to a new one, day by day, on the same chart. See if you're actually better, or just remembering it that way.


A guided tour

Sixty seconds, four screens.

The four screens you'll use most. Each does one thing well, and asks for as little as it can.

Medoro home screen showing today's check-in card and current journey

Home

Where the day begins.

Today's check-in, the active medication journey, and the streak — the only three things that need to be a tap away.

Medoro mood check-in showing the ten-point intensity scale for a single mood

Daily check-in

Twelve moods, four functions.

One card per mood or dimension, rated 1–10. About a minute once you're in the rhythm of it.

Medoro timeline showing mood lines over weeks with medication concentration overlay

Timeline

Weeks laid side by side.

EMA-smoothed mood lines, dose changes, and the optional half-life concentration curve — for when the 3pm slump finally has a name.

Medoro event log showing therapy, side effects, and lifestyle entries

Events

The week's other variables.

Therapy, side effects, life events, the night you didn't sleep — shown alongside the mood chart, so you can tell what's the medication and what's just life.


Built this way from day one

Your data never leaves your phone.

No accounts. No cloud. No analytics. Medoro stores everything in a local database on your device. There's no server of ours that ever sees it.

We can't see what you track. There's no server holding your data, so there's nothing for us to peek at — even if we wanted to.

Medoro makes no network calls about you. The medication reference database is bundled with the app and refreshed via App Store / Play Store updates — nothing is fetched at runtime, and nothing about you ever leaves your device.

  • No accounts, ever
  • No analytics SDKs
  • No advertising
  • No analytics
  • Monthly, yearly or once
  • Delete = it's gone

Read the full privacy policy


Available now

A quieter way to notice.

Free 7-day trial, then your choice: $2.99/month, $17.99/year, or $29.99 $14.99 once — launch offer, first 3 months only.

Medoro is a personal tracking tool, not a medical device. Always consult your doctor or psychiatrist before making changes to your medication.