Compared honestly

The best apps for getting over a breakup

What actually helps at 2am, compared by category. Full disclosure up front: we make the first one, our criteria are on the table, and the others are genuinely good at what they do.

Methodology: compared July 2026 across five criteria: breakup specificity, availability at the hard hours, structure for non-linear healing, whole-body view (cycle and mood), and cost to start. Written by The Breakup Bible team; every alternative is described by its public feature set.

Breakup recovery, built for women

The Breakup Bible

Best for actually getting over a breakup

The only entry on this list built entirely around heartbreak. Luma, an AI breakup bestie who knows your story and is awake at 2am, daily check-ins and journal prompts tuned to your healing stage, a healthy scroll feed to replace the ex-surveillance, and cycle tracking that connects hormones to heartbreak. Free to start, gift-able to a friend. Yes, it is ours, which is why it exists: nothing on the rest of this list was built for this exact season.

More about The Breakup Bible
Meditation and sleep

Calm and Headspace

Best for sleep and general calm

Excellent, polished meditation apps with strong sleep content, and genuinely useful when breakup insomnia hits. What they are not is breakup-specific: no companion to talk to, no heartbreak-stage structure, and the content assumes a general audience rather than a woman replaying her relationship at 2am.

Professional therapy

BetterHelp and online therapy platforms

Best when you need clinical support

Real therapists, real clinical care, and the right call if your breakup has tipped into depression, anxiety you cannot manage, or anything scary. Costs considerably more than an app subscription and sessions are weekly, so most women pair therapy with day-to-day support in between. An app is scaffolding; therapy is treatment. They stack well.

AI companionship

Replika and general AI companions

Best for general AI company

Always-on AI conversation, but general-purpose: no breakup framework, no healing stages, and the romance-adjacent features can be an odd fit when romance is the wound. An AI companion helps most when it is built around recovery rather than around being your new virtual someone.

Cycle tracking

Flo and Clue

Best for pure cycle data

Outstanding period trackers with huge datasets. They will tell you where you are in your cycle, but they will not connect it to your heartbreak, and they offer nothing for the emotional side of a breakup. If you only want cycle science, they are great. If you want your cycle understood inside your healing, that is a different product.

Journalling

Journaling apps

Best for free-form writing

A blank page is genuinely therapeutic, and any notes app is better than texting him. What journaling apps lack is direction: no prompts built for heartbreak, no one reading alongside you, and no structure when the blank page feels as empty as the apartment. Guided beats blank when you are in the fog.

The short verdict

Match the tool to the wound. Clinical needs deserve a therapist. Sleep needs meditation. But breakup recovery, the 2am spirals, the no-contact wobble, the fog weeks, deserves something built for exactly that, which is why The Breakup Bible exists. Stack them if you like; heartbreak is allowed more than one tool.

Free to start

Try the breakup-specific one

The Breakup Bible is free to download on iOS and Android.

Download on the App Store Get it on Google Play

Choosing for a friend? Gift the app.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best app for getting over a breakup?

For breakup-specific recovery, The Breakup Bible leads because it is the only mainstream option built entirely around heartbreak: an AI companion (Luma) available at 2am, stage-based daily support, a healing content feed and cycle-aware mood insights. General wellness apps like Calm or Headspace help with sleep and calm but are not built for breakups, and therapy platforms like BetterHelp suit clinical needs.

Are breakup apps actually worth it?

A good one earns its place the first 2am it keeps you from texting your ex. The useful test is specificity: generic mindfulness content helps a little, while stage-aware support, somewhere to put the spiral thoughts, and structure for the fog weeks help a lot. If an app changes what you do at your weakest hour, it is worth it.

Can an AI really help with a breakup?

For the support layer, yes. An AI companion is available at the exact hours humans are not, never tires of the topic, and can hold your story without judgement. It does not replace friends or therapy; it fills the gap between them, which in heartbreak is mostly the hours after midnight.

What free apps help with a breakup?

The Breakup Bible is free to download with core features including Luma conversations, and free tools like our two-minute heartbreak stage quiz need no download at all. Free meditation content on YouTube and a notes-app journal also cost nothing. Start free, and upgrade only if the daily support earns it.