Getting blood tests is easy. Understanding what they mean — and tracking them over time — is where most people get stuck. You get a PDF from the lab, maybe your doctor explains a few numbers, and then the rest sits in a folder.

These apps are changing that. Here’s what’s available in 2026.

1. Bevita — Best for lab results and doctor visits

What it does: Upload any lab result (photo or PDF). AI extracts every biomarker, stores it with timestamps, tracks trends, and generates a Health Passport PDF for your doctor.

Standout features:

Best for: People who want to understand their labs and share insights with their doctor.

Price: Free tier available. Pro: $9.99/mo or $89/yr.

2. Ornament — Best for biomarker catalog

What it does: AI-powered health coach that digitizes lab results and provides personalized health insights.

Standout features:

Best for: People who want a large biomarker database and don’t mind paying $99/yr.

Limitations: No doctor sharing, no body symptom map, limited wearable integration beyond Apple Health.

3. InsideTracker — Best for actionable recommendations

What it does: Blood biomarker tracking with personalized diet and supplement recommendations based on your results.

Standout features:

Best for: People who want specific dietary advice based on their biomarkers.

Limitations: Expensive ($199-$589/yr), no export to doctor, recommendations are generic (not personalized to your medical history).

4. Bevel — Best for wearable data

What it does: AI health coach that connects wearable data (sleep, recovery, strain) with lab results and nutrition tracking.

Standout features:

Best for: Athletes and fitness enthusiasts who want wearable data in one place.

Limitations: Lab results are secondary to wearable data. No doctor sharing, no data export, nutrition tracking has significant issues. Price doubled to $100+/yr.

5. MyFitnessPal — Best for nutrition (not labs)

What it does: Food and calorie tracking with a massive database.

Standout features:

Best for: People who primarily want to track nutrition.

Limitations: No lab result tracking, no health insights, no doctor sharing.

How to choose

Your needBest app
Track lab results over timeBevita
Get doctor-ready PDFsBevita
Large biomarker databaseOrnament
Specific supplement adviceInsideTracker
Wearable data + fitnessBevel
Just nutrition trackingMyFitnessPal

The trend: health records are getting smarter

The biggest shift in 2026 is from “track your data” to “understand your data.” It’s not enough to store your lab results — you need an app that:

  1. Extracts values automatically (no manual entry)
  2. Tracks trends over time (not just snapshots)
  3. Connects symptoms to labs (the real insights)
  4. Exports for your doctor (the whole point of tracking)
  5. Reminds you when to retest (so you don’t forget)

Try a few. Upload the same lab result to 2-3 apps and see which interpretation is most useful. Your health data deserves better than a folder in a drawer.